Mukono Borehole Rehab
Thank you for bringing safe water to Mukono Diocese School, Lukojo, Uganda!
A borehole well is a simple hand pump well that typically ranges from 30 to 250 ft deep. Even though this mechanical pumping system is the most common method of water delivery across Africa, the wells include so many moving parts and endure so much natural wear and tear that many fall into disrepair after only a couple of years of regular use. Additionally, many broken boreholes in Uganda use cheap galvanized pipes, which are not only prone to corrosion and rupture (leading to untenable ongoing costs for replacement after replacement) but also have been known to leak heavy metals into the drinking water. By bringing in our crew to repair the broken parts of the Mukono Borehole, upgrading its materials to stainless steel, and working with the community’s leaders to train them in how to care for it, we will fix the primary water source and prevent similar problems from occurring in the future.
Check out your impact!
- Based on community reports, approximately 439 students and staff use the borehole you sponsored as one of their main sources of water
- Using GPS coordinates and population density maps, we estimate that 1,798 people live within half a mile of the borehole
- Previously, families in Lukojo relied on water from an unreliable piped supply
- The borehole you rehabilitated now supplies the community with safe water from a pump depth of 110 feet