* ‘Artisan,’ a person skilled with their hands, is not to be confused with ‘artesian,’ a well that flows under its own pressure. In this description, we are describing wells that have been drilled, cased, finished and fitted with a pump, all by the hands of a newly-trained rural craftsman.
*Over 2,000 total WFA wells in 7 countries have been drilled by and for the poor so far in Bolivia, Nicaragua, Cameroon, Sri Lanka, Kenya, Ethiopia, and Mexico. WFA also executes a long term Christian rural development program in Bolivia working directly with very poor Quechua homestead families in and around the village of San Julian.
* Water for All also develops, tests, and teaches complementary low cost water and agricultural technologies to help rural families, farmers, and their communities in developing nations. WFA has developed and manufactures very low cost “family friendly” windmills, micro irrigation systems, light zero till tractors, sprayers, and seeders.
* WFA’s drilling and pump technologies allow for mobilization of existent family and community assets. This results in end user ownership of water solutions and in rapid replication with a minimal need for external technical help and bureaucracy.
* All cultures and people groups have indigenous methods of organizing themselves to help each other do special projects. In North America it is called a “barn-raising.” In Bolivia among the Quechua it is called “Ayni.” Our technologies capitalize on this indigenous community asset.
* Our very low cost manual drilling approach means that, for the first time, many individual family or community compound wells are a real possibility.
* Prospects for an individual family water supply greatly increase enthusiasm and local ownership of drilling attempts.
* Local owner enthusiasm facilitates the mobilization of existing community and/or family assets for collective drilling.
* Many family wells drilled in an area means that water resources are spread out over a larger area.
* Less pressure on individual water points means families can be taught to build and maintain their own pumps. Expensive, heavy duty pumps require special technical skill to repair - this expertise is not always available.
*Teaching a whole community to drill many wells ensures long term, sustainable water security for families and communities.
* WFA’s focus on direct training of rural families often results in the spontaneous creation ofartisan well drilling businesses. These will continue to ensure local water supply, at an
affordable price, for the long term.
*Training families to drill their own wells with WFA’s “family friendly” method makes individual family wells possible and keeps cost very low. The low cost and simplicity creates huge local demand and fosters spontaneous replication. In Bolivia and elsewhere our program of training families to drill has created many spin off artisan well drilling and tool making enterprises. These are started, owned and operated by and for the poor themselves.
* If many people in a community are trained to drill wells and make pumps, healthy competition keeps prices low.