30. Oct. 2019
On 24 October, after three years of work, the Foundation inaugurated Borehole 2 in Nyarugusu Refugee Camp. With the last of three boreholes in use, the Foundation's water projects provide drinking water for almost 150,000 refugees in Western Tanzania. The Foundation could also celebrate having reached over 50,000 Tanzanians in poor rural communities outside the camp.

In 2016, the Foundation and the American NGO Water Mission partnered up to show the international community that it is possible to provide drinking water for large refugee camps with solar pumping solutions. Later on, we added a host community program to bring drinking water to poor rural communities outside the refugee camp, as we became aware of political discussions concerning the distribution of resources in and around such camps.

Three refugee camps, Nyarugusu, Nduta, and Mtendeli, lie in Tanzania’s nortwestern province bordering with DR Congo and Burundi, from where the refugees came. Since the project began, we have brought water to 200,000 people in and around Nyarugusu Refugee Camp.

Inauguration of Borehole 2, 24 October 2019. At the ceremony were Nyarugusu’s camp leaders and WASH coordinators, the Danish ambassador to Tanzania, representatives from Water Mission, Grundfos and the Poul Due Jensen Foundation. The three solar-powered water systems in the camp are formally run by NRC (Norwegian Refugee Council) with assistance from local Water Mission staff. Photo: Poul Due Jensen Foundation

We help inside and outside the camp

Disputes over access to resources between different population groups is as old as the history of mankind. In Western Tanzania, the issue is as relevant as ever, because Nyarugusu Refugee Camp is placed in an area where many poor rural communities struggle to make ends meet every day. Through our host community program, we have now reached 7 communities with more than 50,000 residents who can now enjoy drinking water directly from the tap. One of these is Zeze Community, co-financed by the Foundation and Niels Due Jensen, son of our Founder, former Grundfos CEO and former Foundation Chairman. The system was commissioned in September 2018 and formally handed over to the community on 23 October 2019.

Handover ceremony Zeze 2019 from Poul Due Jensen Foundation on Vimeo.

We were able to see for ourselves how we make a massive difference at the handover ceremony.

Since the Commissioning last year, the residents have managed to save up a whopping 30,000 DKK (4,000 EUR) for future operation, maintenance and expansions of the tap system. It is a wonderful example of how we think financial sustainability as part of the offer.
Nils Thorup, Programme Manager, Water

One of the local employees of the Danish embassy had also noticed that the village now had access to a luxury that most people in Tanzania do not: drinking water directly from the tap!

Zeze Community Safe Water System provides drinking water for over 5,000 inhabitants. The system is owned by the community. Photo: Poul Due Jensen Foundation

Unique partnership for sustainability

To the Foundation, it has been extremely important that our partners in Water Mission in Tanzania as well as globally have been able to shoulder this enormous task, both when it comes to technical expertise and community development, but also a sense of finesse and integrity when it comes to navigating in a complex political landscape. Grundfos has also developed a smart “power blend” control which secures a sustainable utilization of the diesel-driven backup system, cutting unnecessary fuel costs from the refugee camp budget.

Grundfos and the Poul Due Jensen Foundation | Water Mission from Water Mission on Vimeo.

We continue the work in the host communities and turn our attention to nearby Nduta Refugee Camp, where partners from Aarhus University are mapping the underground before we start drilling for water.