What is the Global Water Crisis?
Facing the Global Water Crisis: 2.2 billion people lack access to safe drinking water. Learn how we fight water scarcity with sustainable rainwater harvesting.
Facing the Global Water Crisis: 2.2 billion people lack access to safe drinking water. Learn how we fight water scarcity with sustainable rainwater harvesting.
Discover how Save the Rain is transforming lives in Northern Tanzania with new rainwater harvesting tanks, upgraded systems, and a 5.5-acre farm expansion.
This Mother's Day, discover how Save the Rain is empowering women to thrive spark boundless opportunities for change, like Eliaseni on the farm.
Explore how Save the Rain's Farm embodies Earth Day every day, nurturing sustainability and community through organic farming and innovative water solutions.
Celebrate World Water Day with us! Read how Anna's team builds rainwater tanks in Nsengoni, empowering women and uniting communities for change.
This International Women's Day, witness how solving a critical math problem of time and water scarcity gave Advela and her family a timeless gift of empowerment and freedom
With every rainwater system we install, we're not just offering clean water; we're returning time, freedom, and possibilities to women and girls.
All the things we are loving at Save the Rain: Full rain tanks, new partnerships and lending cooperatives.
From supporting Māori youth in New Zealand to enhancing rainwater storage in Nigerian communities, we're sowing seeds of change.
As Save the Rain turns 18, we celebrate the generational impact held within each rainwater tank, sending out ripples of positive change.
This Thanksgiving, our tanks overflow with hope, depositing abundance for an empowered future. Each raindrop resonates with possibility.
Mother's Day: Discover the heartwarming story of how women in Tanzania embody the true meaning of 'Mama' beyond motherhood.
Today is Earth Day. We want to celebrate by sharing our knowledge for creating sustainable and affordable rainwater tanks that [...]
There are usually two rainy seasons in northern Tanzania where we work: vuli is the name for the shorter showers in November [...]
Collectively, women and girls spend 200 million hours fetching water every day around the world. This is what that journey looks like for one woman.
There is so much to love at Save the Rain like making waves at new schools, grants for new greenhouses and so much possibility.
Save the Rain built 269,500 liters worth of residential tanks in Kaloleni and set up our third large greenhouse in 18 months.
Lifted from a life on the floor, these girls began to venture outside. The sun began to shine upon them. No one could imagine what would come next.
Nurse Cleo is our newest team member. She is working on a child and maternal health study, interviewing more than 1,160 women.
Our history is sprinkled with moments culminating into puddles of service – all of which were fueled by harvesting the rain for people in need.