Clarice Odhiambo: Clean Water Maven

By: Melanie Lasoff Levs (View Profile)

Clarice Odhiambo has a vision: To dance with the “old and frail people, especially women in Africa,” as they celebrate their escape from the poverty stricken lifestyles “that they had known all along until I came into their lives.”

As Africa Water Partnership Manager for the Coca-Cola Company, Odhiambo, based in her native Kenya, works to realize that vision every day. Each year, an estimated 3 to 5 billion episodes of diarrhea-related diseases in developing countries kill more than 2 million people, more than 90 percent of them of children. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), some 88 percent of the sickness is due to bad water, sanitation, and hygiene.

Coca-Cola, along with several partners, including CARE, UNICEF, Proctor & Gamble, and other non-profits and corporations, created the Global Water Challenge (GWC) in 2005 to “deliver clean water, sanitation, and hygiene education projects…share best practices, and raise global visibility and support” for the issue, according to globalwaterchallenge.org.

Odhiambo, who has been with Coke since 1997, oversees the beverage giant’s clean water projects in 56 countries in Africa. Before taking her current role in January 2006, she was the supply chain improvement manager for South Central Africa, which includes Zimbabwe, Zambia, and Malawi. But, she says, after visiting the clean water projects and observing how they transformed poor and unhealthy communities into healthy ones, “it started dawning on me that there is more to life than just working and earning a paycheck,” Odhiambo says. “Everyone has an opportunity to make a difference in someone’s life, and this may be my calling.”

The GWC, part of Coke’s Community Water Partnership, launched its pilot project in Kenya in February 2005. The project has two components:

• Water for Schools: Provides small blue bottles of locally produced sodium hypochlorite solution to clean contaminated water; trains and employs local women to create clay storage containers with narrow mouths and spigots—no more large bowls that villagers dipped dirty hands in for a drink; and educates school children—who then teach their families—about better hygiene practices, including washing hands after visiting the toilet.
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