The Teenagers Solving the World's Water Crisis
Jennifer Gaeng
11 hours agoThe numbers behind the global water crisis are staggering. More than 700 million people lack access to clean water. By 2030, demand could exceed supply by 40%. Every day, women and girls spend 250 million hours just collecting water instead of going to school or work.
But here's what's really amazing: some of the most promising solutions are coming from high school students who see problems differently than adults do. These young innovators are diving headfirst into one of humanity's biggest challenges with nothing but curiosity, creativity, and determination.
Kids Building Tomorrow's Solutions
Take Eshani Jha from California. At age 17, she figured out how to replace expensive activated carbon filters with biochar made from agricultural waste. Her solution removes multiple water contaminants with a single device that communities can manufacture locally.
Or consider Claire Reid from South Africa, who developed "Water Wise Reel Gardening" at age 17. Her seed planting system helps small-scale farmers use water more efficiently. Ten years later, she's turned that high school project into a nationwide business.