Children beside dozens of colorful water jerrycans in Ghor
Our Work & Impact

What we build, and
what changes because of it.

The approach

We focus on transferring capacity, not delivering handouts. Programs are designed to grow income, stability, and long-term resilience through locally-driven solutions.

We prioritize dignity, ownership, and accountability in everything we build. Each program is designed to be scalable and adaptable — so a model proven in one place can be replicated across regions and contexts, while staying grounded in local needs.

Program models · In development

Three repeatable models for local economic growth.

Model 01

Women-led microenterprise

Skills training, mentorship, and access to resources so women can launch and grow small, locally-rooted businesses — strengthening household income and local ownership.

Model 02

Agriculture & local production

Education, tools, and market connections for farmers and producers — strengthening local value chains to unlock sustainable demand and fair pricing.

Model 03

Youth skills & workforce

Practical skills aligned with local employment and entrepreneurship — raising young people’s long-term earning potential and economic participation.

Flagship pilots · Afghanistan

Where the models meet the ground.

Each pilot is shown three ways: how it works, what it changes for people, and what we’ll track to prove it. These are early-stage pilots, so figures are targets set with each community — not results claimed in advance.

01Water · Ghor

The Smart Water Pipeline

How it works
Solar-powered pumping Elevated storage tanks Gravity-fed distribution IoT leak & flow sensors
What changes

Hours of daily walking for unsafe water become a tap close to home — permanent infrastructure, not a delivery truck that leaves.

What we’ll track
Litres delivered / daySystem uptimeWalking time savedLeak alerts resolved
02Opportunity · Daykundi

The Women’s Attar Collective

How it works
Locally grown flowers Alcohol-free attar production Shared branding & packaging Cooperative, women-led
What changes

Skill and natural resources that had no market become a women-led micro-industry — earned income, not aid.

What we’ll track
Women earning incomeUnits produced / seasonAverage monthly earningsMarket orders fulfilled
03Survival · Faryab

The Frugal Maternity Care Pilot

How it works
Phase-change infant warmers Solar-supported oxygen Battery backup for outages Paid biomedical technician
What changes

Survivable births stop ending in loss when the power fails — warmth and oxygen that hold even when the grid goes dark.

What we’ll track
Newborns supportedWarmer hours loggedClinic uptime in outagesTechnician callouts closed
Measuring impact

Donors deserve clarity, honesty, and accountability.

As an early-stage organization, we’re building a strong foundation for impact measurement. As programs launch, we’ll track outcomes that reflect meaningful economic change — individuals trained, enterprises supported, income stability, and market access created. Transparency and learning are central to how we work.

Baseline figures are being established with our field partners and will be published as each pilot launches.
A long line of children beside water jerrycans along a mud-brick wall in Ghor

Help build the proof.

Support a pilot