Karolina Himalayan Clouds, India 2025 (Team Griffon)
Karolina Macner
My Story
In April 2025, I will trek through the southern Himalayas over a course of 5 days and will have toddled a total of 100km (62 miles) by foot with my fellow colleagues from around the world. With no access to our daily luxuries such as hot showers, WiFi and a comfortable bed, we will instead be taken of the beaten path to a road less traveled in efforts to fund raise for this charity.
With a large population, high levels of inequality and poverty and a unique geo-climatic condition, India is highly vulnerable to climate change. As a direct result of climate change, millions of Indians face exceptional water shortages in the summer months, while disasters induced by climate change curtail usability and sustainability of the water supply and sewerage infrastructure, affecting the quality of drinking water, and presenting an environmental risk and compromising access to essential services in the long run.
Bihar and Utter Pradesh are the third and first most populated states in India and both suffer water stress as a result of floods and pollution. Many inhabitants rely on handpumps for their water supply and it is typically women and girls who spend long durations travelling to collect water and queuing at overcrowded pumps. Access to water for sanitation and hygiene is an even more serious problem with inadequate sanitation and lack of sewage treatment further polluting the water sources.
The HSBC x WaterAid project in India aims to tackle these chronic issues to improve access to sustainable water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH).
The project has a focus on sustainability and the engagement and empowerment of women and young people.
On sustainability the project will focus on supporting ongoing operation and maintenance (O&M) of key WASH systems, developing key skills in the community to support O&M and undertaking behaviour change campaigns to embed improved practices linked to WASH.
Both women and young people will have key roles in the project, including leading the community engagement, assessments, developing water security plans, implementation, and monitoring.
Traditionally, women and young people have a limited or no role in development planning, whilst they experience the most significant burdens caused by climate change, so it is important to include these two groups in the project from the very beginning.
The project has 5 key aims:
- Strengthen and improve functionality of village water sanitation committee and governance institutions at village level.
- Improve source sustainability and rejuvenation of surface water bodies.
- Improve operation and maintenance (O&M)
- Undertake water quality testing.
- Undertake a behaviour change campaign through social art forms.
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Target
$2,000
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Raised so far
$842
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Number of donors
21
My Story
In April 2025, I will trek through the southern Himalayas over a course of 5 days and will have toddled a total of 100km (62 miles) by foot with my fellow colleagues from around the world. With no access to our daily luxuries such as hot showers, WiFi and a comfortable bed, we will instead be taken of the beaten path to a road less traveled in efforts to fund raise for this charity.
With a large population, high levels of inequality and poverty and a unique geo-climatic condition, India is highly vulnerable to climate change. As a direct result of climate change, millions of Indians face exceptional water shortages in the summer months, while disasters induced by climate change curtail usability and sustainability of the water supply and sewerage infrastructure, affecting the quality of drinking water, and presenting an environmental risk and compromising access to essential services in the long run.
Bihar and Utter Pradesh are the third and first most populated states in India and both suffer water stress as a result of floods and pollution. Many inhabitants rely on handpumps for their water supply and it is typically women and girls who spend long durations travelling to collect water and queuing at overcrowded pumps. Access to water for sanitation and hygiene is an even more serious problem with inadequate sanitation and lack of sewage treatment further polluting the water sources.
The HSBC x WaterAid project in India aims to tackle these chronic issues to improve access to sustainable water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH).
The project has a focus on sustainability and the engagement and empowerment of women and young people.
On sustainability the project will focus on supporting ongoing operation and maintenance (O&M) of key WASH systems, developing key skills in the community to support O&M and undertaking behaviour change campaigns to embed improved practices linked to WASH.
Both women and young people will have key roles in the project, including leading the community engagement, assessments, developing water security plans, implementation, and monitoring.
Traditionally, women and young people have a limited or no role in development planning, whilst they experience the most significant burdens caused by climate change, so it is important to include these two groups in the project from the very beginning.
The project has 5 key aims:
- Strengthen and improve functionality of village water sanitation committee and governance institutions at village level.
- Improve source sustainability and rejuvenation of surface water bodies.
- Improve operation and maintenance (O&M)
- Undertake water quality testing.
- Undertake a behaviour change campaign through social art forms.