Working through the 2030 Water Resources Group Bangladesh Water Multi-Stakeholder Partnership, Unilever’s Pureit brand has launched a month-long youth challenge to find solutions to drive better water use through awareness, benchmarking and behaviour change. The aim is support the Dhaka Water and Sewerage Authority with improved infrastructure investments. Applications close on 31 March 2021.
Meanwhile, in India, where the practice of flooding rice fields is a major cause for Punjab’s declining water table, the Hindustan Unilever Foundation and a partner NGO are working with rice paddy farmers using digital solutions to help rural communities tackle water insecurity.
Customised soil moisture sensors are placed in farmer fields, and each sensor measures moisture levels and sends data in real time to servers in the cloud. When moisture levels drop in the soil, the farmer receives a text message to irrigate his fields. Once soil moisture reaches the correct level, they get another message to stop the pump. This detailed and precise advice allows the farmers to let the fields dry up and flood alternately, saving 50% of water, electricity and fertiliser.
“#Water2Me is the unifier for our collective future,” says Reshma Anand, CEO of the Hindustan Unilever Foundation. ‘It’s a source of deep inequity and great joy. A source of conflict and immense collaboration. How you harness all of that into meaningful change is probably the most important problem that we should set ourselves to solve.”
Find out more about why people at Unilever value water in this film created to celebrate World Water Day.