Unsafe water remains a major driver of childhood diarrheal diseases in rural Indonesia. Contaminated rivers, poor sanitation, and plastic pollution expose children to infection, dehydration, and malnutrition. Improving access to clean water and hygiene education is essential to protect child health.
Do you know what actions Fair Future is taking to solve the problem of lack of clean water?
The Water Connections program aims to provide fair and safe access to clean water. This initiative not only prevents diseases and reduces health risks, but also sustains lives, decreases infant mortality, and promotes economic prosperity.
The Water Connections category documents long-term interventions designed to ensure safe and reliable water access in ultra-rural settings. Articles describe the planning, construction, and maintenance of wells, gravity systems, reservoirs, and distribution points, combined with basic sanitation and hygiene measures. These actions follow WHO water and public health standards, recognizing clean water as a core determinant of health. By reducing exposure to waterborne diseases, supporting hygiene, and improving daily living conditions, water connections contribute directly to lower morbidity, child health protection, and community resilience.
Water Connections Reservoir Funding | Clean Water Sumba
Clean water remains one of the most urgent public health challenges in East Sumba. Through the Water Connections program, Fair Future Foundation and Kawan Baik Indonesia aim to build 12 new rainwater reservoirs, bringing safe filtered water to rural families and improving health for hundreds of people.
Laindatang Water Reservoir Report | 114.5 m³
Laindatang Water Reservoir Report documents the construction of a 114 m³ reinforced concrete rainwater system in East Sumba. Built to secure dry season water for more than 200 people and a local school, the reservoir is now full and operational, confirming structural reliability and community management.
Health Without Infrastructure Fiction | Rural Care
Health Without Infrastructure Fiction describes a simple reality in ultra-rural East Indonesia. When roads, water, and electricity are absent, diagnosis is delayed and preventable disease becomes lethal. Infrastructure is not secondary to healthcare. It is healthcare.
Water Connections Laindatang and Hambarita
Builds community water reservoirs in East Sumba, securing safe water for families in Laindatang and Hambarita while reducing infections, dehydration, and long-term child malnutrition.
Water Reservoir Graduation Scale Protecting Community Health
Inside the Laindatang reservoir, a graduation scale measures every ten-thousand litres of stored water. This precise tool allows safe monitoring, controlled use, and long-term protection of clean water. In ultra-rural villages, measuring water accurately is not technical detail. It is prevention and survival.
Laindatang Water Filtration System | Preventive Health
Before water reaches the tank in Laindatang, it is filtered by hand. Custom-built filtration modules remove debris, organic matter, and insects, reducing contamination risks. This system turns rainwater harvesting into preventive medicine for families living far from any medical infrastructure.
Clean Water Roof in Laindatang | Medical Water Safety
A light steel roof now protects the Laindatang reservoir, shielding filtered rainwater from heat, light, and contamination. Built with villagers by Fair Future and Kawan Baik Indonesia, this structure turns rainfall into safe drinking water and prevents avoidable disease.
Laindatang water reservoir work – sealed interior
Laindatang water reservoir work required transforming raw concrete into a sealed chamber through seven protective layers. Each layer prevents contamination, stabilises the structure, and protects the health of families. This technical process is essential for long term safe water in East Sumba.
Laindatang water reservoir construction improving access
In Laindatang we build a 115000 litre reservoir by hand with villagers, shaping steel, timber, and concrete on a remote plateau. This work brings clean water to families who have lived without it and strengthens community health for the years ahead.
Hill access for water in Laindatang begins
Repairing Laindatang’s hill road was essential to bring clean water. The slope was broken and unsafe, but now machinery can finally reach the site. A first step toward reducing disease and improving daily life.
Rainwater tank Wai La Padang protects village health
In Hambarita the rainwater tank Wai La Padang changes how water and health begin each day. Before this project families rode kilometres on scooters for a few jerrycans. Now 5 300 litres of rooftop rain stand beside three small homes, saving money, energy, and clinic visits while protecting every child from dirty water.






