Learning and Feasibility Study: Carbon Credits for WASH Interventions
Comprehensive learning paper covering carbon market fundamentals, WASH-eligible methodologies, a feasibility assessment for Ethiopia, and strategic guidance including a Go/No-Go decision tree for integrating carbon credits into WASH programs. Includes case studies from Rwanda (Virridy), Tanzania (Water Mission), and Kenya (DRIP FUNDI).
Download PDF →Carbon Markets & Climate Finance 6
Research on voluntary carbon markets, climate finance mechanisms, and their application to water security and infrastructure.
Decarbonizing Water: The Potential to Apply the Voluntary Carbon Market toward Global Water Security
Identifies potential for 1.6+ billion annual carbon credits from water security projects, enabling $160+ billion in investment over a decade.
Decarbonizing Water: Full Report — Applying the Voluntary Carbon Market toward Global Water Security
Comprehensive report commissioned by WaterAid, VCMI, and HSBC identifying pathways to improve global water security through voluntary carbon markets.
Applying Climate Reparative Finance Toward Water Security
Explores climate finance mechanisms to redirect capital toward climate-positive water infrastructure with sustainable funding streams.
The Potential of Carbon Markets to Accelerate Green Infrastructure Based Water Quality Trading
Green infrastructure could save $15.6 billion, 21.2 TWh of electricity, and 29.8 million tonnes of CO₂e annually while generating carbon revenue.
Turning Global Water Security Research into Policy and Action
Argues that research must integrate into policy to drive change; highlights carbon credit mechanisms for water security.
Carbon Farming in Türkiye: Challenges, Opportunities and Implementation Mechanism
Proposes digitally-enhanced measurement framework for agricultural carbon farming, reducing GHG output where farming represents ~14.9% of national emissions.
WASH Evidence: Safe Drinking Water Interventions 13
Peer-reviewed evidence from carbon-financed water filter and cookstove programs, primarily from Rwanda's Tubeho Neza program—directly relevant to safe drinking water methodologies for LAC.
Health, Livelihood, and Environmental Impacts of a Carbon-Credit-Financed Water Filter and Cookstove Programme in Rwanda
Tubeho Neza program: childhood diarrhea reduced 29%, respiratory infection reduced 25%, with significant fuel use and environmental gains.
Effects of Adding Household Water Filters to Rwanda's Community-Based Environmental Health Promotion Programme
Integrating water filters into sanitation program significantly improved drinking water quality and reduced diarrheal disease.
Assessing the Impact of Water Filters and Improved Cook Stoves on Drinking Water Quality and Household Air Pollution: A Randomised Controlled Trial in Rwanda
RCT achieved 97.5% reduction in fecal water contamination and 48% reduction in cooking area air pollution.
Designing and Piloting a Program to Provide Water Filters and Improved Cookstoves in Rwanda
Pilot demonstrated high uptake and sustained adoption (>90%) through free distribution, community health messaging, and carbon credit funding.
A Cost-Benefit Analysis of Livelihood, Environmental and Health Benefits of a Large Scale Water Filter and Cookstove Distribution in Rwanda
Health and livelihood benefits substantially outweighed program costs; fuel savings and healthcare cost avoidance were largest economic gains.
Use, Microbiological Effectiveness and Health Impact of a Household Water Filter Intervention in Rural Rwanda
LifeStraw Family 2.0 filters demonstrated high use rates, significant E. coli reduction, and reductions in self-reported diarrhea.
Study Design of a Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial to Evaluate a Large-Scale Distribution of Cook Stoves and Water Filters in Western Province, Rwanda
Methodological framework describing the design of a large-scale RCT across Western Province, Rwanda.
Process Evaluation and Assessment of Use of a Large Scale Water Filter and Cookstove Program in Rwanda
Community health worker distribution achieved high coverage; identified challenges including incomplete exclusive use of improved technologies.
Use of Remotely Reporting Electronic Sensors for Assessing Use of Water Filters and Cookstoves in Rwanda
Electronic sensors revealed sensor-reported use substantially lower than self-reported use, highlighting the value of objective monitoring for MRV.
Integration of Household Water Filters with Community-Based Sanitation and Hygiene Promotion in Rwanda
Combined hardware distribution with community health infrastructure improved water treatment practices and offered a scalable model.
Geospatial-Temporal, Demographic, and Programmatic Adoption Characteristics of a Large-Scale Water Filter and Cookstove Intervention in Rwanda
Geographic accessibility, household demographics, and community health worker engagement were key adoption determinants.
Assessing Use, Exposure, and Health Impacts of a Water Filter and Improved Cookstove Distribution Programme in Rwanda
Comprehensive assessment of household use, personal exposure to contaminants, and health outcomes among women and children.
Lessons from Rwanda on Tackling Unsafe Drinking Water and Household Air Pollution
Tubeho Neza program: water filters and improved cookstoves reduced diarrhea 29% and respiratory infections 25% in children.
Water Security & Drought Resilience 9
Evidence on groundwater monitoring, drought response, and water service sustainability in arid and rural contexts—relevant to understanding O&M challenges in LAC.
The Drought Resilience Impact Platform (DRIP): Improving Water Security Through Actionable Water Management Insights
DRIP combines sensors, remote sensing, and early warning systems to shift from reactive to preventive groundwater management, monitoring 3 million people.
Reducing Drought Emergencies in the Horn of Africa
Mitigating drought requires safe water at strategic groundwater locations, combining early warning and policy reform.
Estimating Groundwater Use and Demand in Arid Kenya through Satellite Data, In-Situ Sensors, and Machine Learning
69-borehole sensor network combined with satellite data produced first sub-seasonal groundwater demand estimates with up to 80% accuracy.
A Contribution to Drought Resilience Through Groundwater Pump Monitoring with In-Situ Instrumentation, Remote Sensing, and Ensemble Machine Learning
Sensors on 480 pumps achieved 82-84% functionality classification; integration could improve drought-period uptime from 60% to ~85%.
Improved Drought Resilience Through Continuous Water Service Monitoring — A Longitudinal Analysis of Motorized Boreholes in Northern Kenya
Analysis of ~120 boreholes serving 2.5 million people found strategic sites ran 1.31 hours less per day than non-strategic sites.
Quantifying Increased Groundwater Demand from Prolonged Drought in the East African Rift Valley
221 water points serving 1.34+ million people revealed 23% increase in borehole runtime following rainless weeks.
Household Water Security, Emotional Well-Being, and Reliability of Water Supply in the Ethiopian Lowlands
469-household survey found water insecurity and emotional distress strongly correlated with limited service levels and borehole reliability.
Electronic Sensors to Monitor Functionality and Usage Trends of Rural Water Infrastructure in Nigeria
200 sensors across 397 sites achieved 91.7% accuracy predicting functionality; hand-pump and borehole accuracy exceeded 93%.
Who Pays for Water? Comparing Life Cycle Costs of Water Services Among Low, Medium and High-Income Utilities
Life cycle cost analysis revealed funding gaps of $7-$43 per capita; none of the utilities studied spend enough on maintenance to sustain service levels.
Digital MRV & Monitoring Technology 11
Technologies for monitoring, reporting, and verification (MRV) that support carbon credit generation—critical for assessing MRV readiness in LAC countries.
Digital MRV Technologies Supporting Carbon Credit-Generating Water Security Programs: State of the Art and Technology Roadmap
Reviews digital MRV technologies for water security carbon credit programs, assessing current state and proposing an improvement roadmap.
Lume — Continuous Water Quality Monitoring Technology
First single-unit fluorimetric sensor for continuous microbial contamination monitoring using tryptophan-like fluorescence to estimate E. coli.
Demonstration of Tryptophan-Like Fluorescence Sensor Concepts for Fecal Exposure Detection in Drinking Water
Low-cost continuous sensor demonstrated TLF-E. coli correlation, detecting "high risk" fecal contamination (>10 CFU/100 mL) in remote settings.
Assessing the Functionality of a Water-Vending Kiosk Network with High-Frequency Instrumentation in Sierra Leone
High-frequency monitoring of 2,947 kiosk-days found 34% operational, 30% offline, 35% empty; identified demand and storage determinants.
Development and Validation of an In Situ Groundwater Abstraction Sensor Network, Hydrologic Model, and Blockchain Trading Platform
Agricultural groundwater pump sensors achieved high correlation (R²=0.706) with flow meters; prototype blockchain trading platform developed.
Turn up the Dial: System Dynamics Modeling of Resource Allocations toward Rural Water Supply Maintenance
Models calibrated with 245 sensor-monitored boreholes showed increasing repair budgets from 30-85% could yield 83 additional working boreholes.
Using Feedback to Improve Accountability in Global Environmental Health and Engineering
Sensor technologies and performance-based contracting enhance accountability and sustainability of environmental health interventions.
Validation and Intercomparison of Satellite-Based Rainfall Products over Africa with TAHMO In Situ Observations
Six years of data from 596 rain gauge stations validated satellite rainfall products; CHIRPS showed 15.5% daily bias.
The Association Between Rainfall, Temperature, and Reported Drinking Water Source: A Multi-Country Analysis
Cross-country analysis found higher temperatures associated with decreased drinking water access across Gambia, Mozambique, Pakistan, and Kenya.
Monitoring Methods for Systems-Strengthening Activities Toward Sustainable Water and Sanitation Services
Reviews systems approaches and evaluation methodologies for WASH programs in East Africa, presenting outcome mapping findings.
Sensor Informed Predictive Model for Total Organic Carbon and Nutrients on the Upper Yampa River
Machine learning integrating fluorescent dissolved organic matter sensors with land use data predicts TOC and nitrogen with <8% error.
Watershed Restoration & Nature-Based Solutions 4
Evidence on nature-based solutions, wildfire-water quality linkages, and carbon market applications for watershed restoration.
Leveraging the Voluntary Carbon Market to Improve Water Resilience in the Colorado and Mississippi River Basins
Water projects in these basins could generate 45+ million annual carbon credits, attracting ~$4.5 billion over a decade for resilience improvements.
Mitigating Wildfire Impact on Water Quality through Climate-Based Financing: Provo River Watershed
Single wildfire subwatershed generated ~350 metric tonnes annual CO₂e from increased treatment energy; potential $88,500 annual carbon credit revenue.
The Nature-Based Paradigm Shift: Identifying and Overcoming Barriers to Sustainable Water Quality Solutions
Mixed-methods research identified regulatory constraints and funding availability as primary barriers to implementing nature-based water quality solutions.
Development and Evaluation of a Digital Behavioral Economics Game for Groundwater Conservation in Southern Colorado
Behavioral economics game found financial incentives significantly influenced crop choices and water use; transparency promoted collaborative conservation.
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