Bringing Clean Water to Communities in Southern Madagascar
In the arid south of Madagascar, access to clean drinking water is a daily challenge. Many families spend hours walking long distances to collect unsafe water, often forced to ration what little they have. With Save the Youth Madagascar, this reality is steadily changing.
In 2025, with the support of SNI, 16 water wells were completed, providing reliable access to clean, drinkable water for thousands of people. This work builds directly on the 12 wells constructed the previous year, demonstrating a growing, sustained commitment rather than a one-time intervention.
Access to a reliable water well transforms daily life. Families can drink safely, maintain hygiene, prepare food, and irrigate small gardens. As one community member simply shared:
“Having water is the end of so many problems.”
From the First Dig to Flowing Water
Every well begins with patient, physical labor. In the village of Andrambalo, work started with basic tools — a shovel, rope, iron stake, and bucket. Workers dug by hand, meter by meter, until they reached the water table. For 3,000 villagers, this moment marked the beginning of lasting change.
In Ambatovaky, the completion of the final well of the year was met with visible joy. Villagers passed around the first cup of water, washing their hands and faces, laughing and celebrating. With clean water now close by, daily life immediately became easier — especially for children.
Schools Transformed
At the EVOVO North school, a 7-meter-deep well now serves 400 students and staff. Before its construction, children and teachers walked up to two kilometers each day to collect water of uncertain quality just to prepare school meals.
Today, clean water is available on site. Children can drink safely, wash themselves in better conditions, and focus on learning rather than long daily water journeys. The school community expressed their deep gratitude.
One Well Effects Hundreds of Lives
Southern Madagascar is extremely dry. Poor farmers and villagers struggle with hunger, illness, and poor sanitation due to lack of water. A single well can serve up to 500 people, providing long-term access to a resource that sustains health, education, and livelihoods.
These wells are not temporary solutions. They are durable infrastructure, designed to support communities year after year.
SNI is Planning on Expanding the Initiative in 2026
The success of this initiative has reinforced the importance of steady, long-term investment. Together with Save the Youth Madagascar, SNI plans to continue and expand the well-building program in 2026, with the goal of reaching even more villages in the region.
Each additional well represents hundreds of lives changed — and another step toward resilience in one of Madagascar’s most water-scarce regions.