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Hydrophilanthropy: What Can YOU Do? NGWA 10 th Annual Groundwater Summit Denver, CO – 6 May 2014 Michael E. Campana College of Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Sci. Oregon State University Founder, Ann Campana Judge Foundation www.acjfoundation.org “The road to help is paved with good intentions.” -- Tracy Baker
Transcript
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Hydrophilanthropy: What Can YOU Do?

NGWA 10th Annual Groundwater SummitDenver, CO – 6 May 2014Michael E. Campana

College of Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Sci.Oregon State University

Founder, Ann Campana Judge Foundationwww.acjfoundation.org

“The road to help is paved with good intentions.” -- Tracy Baker

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Outline• Introduction – got water?• What is Hydrophilanthropy?• MDGs & WaSH• Examples of Hydrophilanthropy –

Well Guidelines; Panamá Project; Honduras Project - Students

• Hydrophilanthropy: Mistakes Made & Lessons Learned

• Admitting & Learning from Failure• What YOU Can Do• Final Thought & Thank You!

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Why is that woman smiling? She’s got a job!

got water?Job opening: Water-CarrierRequirements: must be able to balance 45

pounds on your head while trekking rocky dirt roads for miles.

Hours: up to 8 hours a dayWages: $0Only women & children (girls) need apply!

(courtesy Ray Newmyer)

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Hydrophilanthropy - 1

Term coined by David Kreamer of UNLV around 2005. Never really defined it.

[See DK’s article ‘The Meaning of Hydrophilanthropy’ in September 2010 Water Resources IMPACT]

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Hydrophilanthropy -2 Definition: Altruistic concern

for the water, sanitation, and related needs of humankind,

often manifested by contributions of work, money, or

resources. -- M. Campana

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Hydrophilanthropy – 3 (Broader)• Does not necessarily imply working in ‘classic’

developing regions (Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, Asia, etc.)

• Includes volunteering as water expert for tribal, state, local, Federal government commissions/committees; watershed councils; NGOs; etc.

• Can involve applied or basic research, e.g., water purification (pathogens, arsenic, fluoride, etc.); latrine, stove, pump design & engineering; rapid assessment techniques; remote sensing;

• Can be relief or development work• Education & outreach

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Hydrophilanthropy - 4 Alternate definition: “I can’t

define hydrophilanthropy, but I know it when I see it.”

-– M. Campana (apologies to former Supreme

Court Justice Potter Stewart)

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Hydrophilanthropy Readings1) September 2010

Water Resources IMPACT(http://bit.ly/9ColgZ)

2) August 2010 J. of. Contemporary Water Research & Education (JCWRE)

(http://is.gd/w1VrvK)

3) Editorial in Water Well Journal November 2013, p. 8 - http://is.gd/kSSQkA

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MDGs, WaSH, etc.“There are probably more annoying

things than being hectored about African development by a wealthy Irish rock star in a cowboy hat, but I can’t think of one at the moment.” – Paul Theroux, referring to Paul Hewson (aka Bono), The Honolulu Advertiser, 8 January 2006

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Millennium Development Goals(8 MDGs; see http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals)

• Promulgated in 2005: Target 7.C: WatSan - by 2015, reduce by 50% the number of people without access to improved drinking water (~ 1.1B) or sanitation (~ 2.4 B) Note: DW number likely too low; ‘improved’ v. ‘safe’?

• WatSan goal: not ‘rocket science’ but requires $$ and political will

• Drinking water MDG recently met (??)• Sanitation MDG: fall short by 700M?

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Hydrophilanthropy in Practice: Projects

“Beyond mountains there are mountains.” – Haitian proverb

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‘S-cubed’ (Steve Schneider Style) Hydrophilanthropy http://is.gd/V4juTr

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Panamá Project• In 1999–2000 working under the auspices

of Lifewater International, taught team of Embera Indians to drill and complete wells, install pumps.

• Team of four gringos – Loring Green, Bob Jarrett, Craig Woodring, and I

• In May 2000 conducted training trip; drilled two wells, left equipment, supplies

• No return – issues with FARC guerrillas• Out of touch till 2008; contact via PCV• 2014 – team still drilling!

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Southern Darién – looking west

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Loring Green Instructing on the LS-100

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Examining Cuttings

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Installing the Gravel Pack

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Finished!

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Accomplishments• Trained 6-man Embera team• Team drilled three wells: two producers (c. 25 gpm) and one dry hole (< 1 gpm)• Team installed one submersible and one hand pump• Provided one LS-100, mud pump, 500 feet

of 4” ID PVC, drilling mud, 3 Bush hand pumps, cement, submersible pump, tools

• Renewed contact via Peace Corps in 2008 • Team still drilling – 2014!

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Failures

• Poor USA-Panamá communications with locals; made coordination and planning difficult• No follow-up – future trips were canceled because of dangerous conditions (Plan Colombia)• Lost touch with team after training

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Honduras Project – Students • From 2001-2005, I conducted field course for U of

NM Master of Water Resources students in Honduras - three weeks each June. See JCWRE and IMPACT articles (URLs on slide 9)

• Partnered with Hondureños Alex del Cid Vásquez, Rolando López, SANAA, and local villagers to help build gravity-flow water systems (dam, tank, piping) in 5 villages in the Sierra de Omoa.

• Introduced students to hydrophilanthropy and the struggles of many just to obtain clean drinking water.

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Alex del Cid Vásquez, “el jefe de agua”

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Five villages located in the Sierra de Omoa, a rugged mountain range ~30 km NW of San Pedro SulaClimate: Warm and humid with distinct wet and dry seasons. Average annual rainfall of 250 cm (~100 inches)

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Why Work in the Sierra de Omoa?According to my Honduran friends:

•Relatively few people – little political power •Rugged topography, poor roads – politicians, civil servants don’t often want to make the effort to visit or work there (except during election season)•NGOs don’t want to work there – risk of failure is too highSo why work there?

It’s a challenge!

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Rugged Topography, Remote Locations

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Rural Water ProjectSanta Teresa, Honduras

WR573 2004

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Pipe cutting and threading

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Accomplishments• Helped build five gravity-flow potable

water systems serving about 2,000 people• Provided instruction to locals in sanitation

and hygiene• Cross-cultural, life-changing (for some)

experience for 65 students• Empowered local women – can do other

things besides gathering water; girls can go to school

• Gringos can be “good neighbors”

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Shortcomings• No follow-up – SANAA (Honduran

government agency) dropped the ball• Need continued training, support• Sustainability and Monitoring &

Evaluation (see IMPACT articles by Christine Casey Matute and Stephanie Moore)

• Change in social dynamics of villages – gender roles. Is this good?

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Hydrophilanthropy: Mistakes Made, Lessons Learned & Learning from

Failure

“If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go with others.” – African proverb

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Hydrophilanthropy: Mistakes I Made

• See a problem and am inclined to solve it with my methods, because that’s how I do it. How would locals do it? Which is better and why?

• If there is no local input and participation, then there is no community “buy in” - “not my well – not my problem – he’ll come back and fix his well if it breaks.”

• Neglecting economic development: people need means to maintain wells, pumps, etc. Social entrepreneurship!

• Forgot about multidisciplinary perspective and public health!

• Sustainability, Monitoring & Evaluation!

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What I Learned• Use appropriate technology

• Too complicated = unsustainable• Need societal infrastructure

• Effective governance • Need understanding, commitment,

training • Stakeholder involvement required• Failure to learn from mistakes - no

outcomes assessment, monitoring & evaluation (M & E)

• Beware: self-congratulatory, feel-good approach. Need patience; Tranquilo!

• Need partners in-country

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Admitting Failure WWW site – EWB-Canada

http://www.admittingfailure.com/

“Learning from what’s not working. Creating space for what is.”

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Learning from Failure (13-minute video)

David DambergerFounder, EWB – Calgary

http://is.gd/AxvUCW

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What YOU Can Do – Volunteer!Hydrogeologists Without Borders hwbwater.org (Canadian)Lifewater and Living Water

www.lifewater.org and www.water.ccEngineers Without Borders www.ewb-usa.org student/professional chaptersEngineers In ActionRotary Clubs (Rotary International)Water For People - World Water CorpsChurch GroupsVITA – Volunteers In Technical Assistance

NGWA Developing Nations Interest Group Forum

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Final Thought“I really envy you guys. You

have the power to keep people from getting sick. By the time I’m called, it’s really too late.” -- A medical doctor, talking

to some volunteer water professionals, c. 2000

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One More Thought…Unsustainable?

Yes.Why?

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Unsustainable Solutions?

1) Dean Kamen Tackles the Water Crisis http://is.gd/KaQ3s0

2) Crapping on the ‘Gates Toilet’http://is.gd/w3WFyZ

3) Have PlayPumps Played Out?http://is.gd/7HllST

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Thank You!WaterWired blog:

http://www.waterwired.orgWaterWired Twitter:

http://twitter.com/waterwiredFacebook: Michael CampanaLinkedIn: Michael [email protected]

And thanks to Mary Frances Campana for 20+ years of love, encouragement, and support!

"We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give.” – Winston Churchill


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