By Nancy Spitler
Photography by Sean Sheridan & Craig Mahaffey ’98
Safe water and sanitation are considered basic needs for people all over the world. In most of the United States, we turn on the faucet and expect clean water. We walk down the hall to a bathroom with a toilet, sink and soap. We take those things for granted.
But about 2.1 billion people — close to 30 percent of the world’s population — don’t have safe water to drink. Double that for sanitation and the number of people who don’t have access to a bathroom or a safe way to flush waste. It’s a massive challenge.
An organization led by George Greene IV ’01 is committed to meeting that challenge.
In a fairly modest building in the warehouse district of North Charleston, South Carolina, Water Mission, a nonprofit Christian engineering ministry, is putting a dent in those numbers. The outward appearance of Water Mission, where Greene serves as president and chief operating officer, belies the magnitude of the mission that the folks at Water Mission have undertaken.
Water Mission has nearly 70 U.S. employees, and most of them are based in the Charleston office. An additional 290 staff members work internationally — 95 percent of whom are local to the communities they serve. Together, they are providing communities with clean water and sanitation — whether those communities are in the 10 locations where Water Mission has permanent country programs, or in refugee camps and disaster areas around the globe.
Since its founding in 2001, Water Mission has provided more than 4 million people with safe water and more than 148,000 with sanitation. More than 2,500 safe water and sanitation projects have been built, and more than 550 projects are underway.