24/01/2026
SOURCE OF WATER:
DEEP WELL VS. LOCAL WATERWORKS
Many people are unaware that not all drinking water starts from the same place. ​Most people assume that as long as drinking water is clear, it is safe. We trust the filtration machines in the window, but we rarely consider the quality of the water before it is filtered. The "Raw Water" source is the most critical factor in determining the final safety of the product.
​In a developing municipality, there are two primary sources, each with different risks:
​1. LOCAL WATERWORKS (NAWASA)
This water is managed by the city and must meet strict government safety standards before it ever reaches a refilling station. It is pre-treated and monitored for bacteria. When a station uses this source, the filtration system acts as a secondary layer of protection, significantly reducing the chance of contamination.
​2. DEEP WELL (GROUND WATER)
Many stations draw water directly from the ground beneath the community. In crowded residential or commercial areas, groundwater is highly vulnerable to seepage from nearby septic tanks and underground runoff. Furthermore, deep well water is often "hard," containing heavy minerals that can saturate filters quickly. If those filters are not maintained perfectly, the purification process can fail.
​THE REALITY OF WATER SAFETY
A filtration system is a barrier, not a guarantee. If the source water is heavily compromised, the risk of waterborne contaminants increases. Most consumers cannot tell the difference by looking at a sealed jug, but the source determines the baseline of what you are drinking.
​Safety is not defined by the clarity of the liquid, but by the reliability of the source.
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