Dig Deep: Clean water, safe sanitation, and hygiene for families in rural Kenya
Improving health, nutrition, and livelihoods for families in one of Kenya’s most underserved counties through clean water access, hygiene education, and sustainable community-led sanitation.
Reduce hunger and poverty, and improve livelihoods
Improve access to healthcare
Africa and Middle East
2025-2027
UN Sustainable Development Goals
The objective
To reach 27,000 people in Bomet County with clean water, safe toilets, and hygiene education improving school nutrition, reducing disease, and strengthening sustainable WASH systems.
The issue
Bomet County, Kenya – home to 1 million people – has the third lowest access to clean water in the country. Two out of three people lack safe drinking water, and over half live without safe toilets. For many, daily life revolves around collecting contaminated water and living with the health consequences. Children miss school, women lose time and income, and diseases linked to poor sanitation overwhelm already stretched health systems.
Dig Deep (Africa) has worked in Bomet for over a decade, collaborating with government, schools, and communities to deliver low-cost, high-impact WASH (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene) services. Their work is rooted in local partnerships and driven by the belief that everyone has a right to clean water, safe toilets, and good hygiene.
This second grant from the Croda Foundation builds on measurable success from 2024 and supports a two-year scale-up across 60 villages.
The partner: Dig Deep
Dig Deep is a UK registered charity transforming access to clean water and sanitation for rural communities in Kenya. Their locally-led model integrates health, education, agriculture and sustainability – delivering smart infrastructure alongside community training and government alignment.
Find out more at digdeep.org.uk
Find out more at kadinisi.org

The project
With a grant of £99,758 over two years, the Foundation is supporting Dig Deep to:
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Install rooftop rainwater harvesting systems and kitchen gardens at four schools, giving 1,000 children clean drinking water and improved nutrition
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Protect four natural springs in rural communities, supplying clean water to 5,000 people
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Deliver hygiene and menstrual health education to 27,000 people across 60 villages, using a culturally adapted version of the Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) model
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Achieve Open Defecation Free (ODF) status for all 60 villages, verified and certified by Kenya’s national government
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Strengthen systems through partnerships with the Bomet County Government and Ministry of Agriculture
The education component trains families, teachers, artisans and local entrepreneurs in hygiene practices, toilet construction, water safety, menstrual health, and environmental protection – building a movement of change-makers who will carry the work forward.
Impact
- 29 direct beneficiaries in 2026
- 2,949 indirect beneficiaries (entire Navajo Nation population)
- Over 10,000 clients served since 2014
- Every £1 invested in yields nearly £5 indirect economic benefits
- Improved health, dignity and economic opportunity for indigenous families
Croda Foundation, established in 2020, is an independent charitable company set up by FTSE 100 specialty chemicals company, Croda International Plc, and is registered in England and Wales (number: 1196455). The Foundation is solely funded by generous donations from Croda International Plc and led by an independent Board of Trustees.