Pilot Project Yayu.

A visit to our first Green Academy at the Prepatory School of Yayu, a rural village in the Southwest of Ethiopia, gave us the chance to converse with the students, teachers and the principal. We held workshops and focus groups in which the students opened up to us about their concerns and aspirations for their school and their town. They brought us to the watering hole from where they supply the water for their school and they showed us the no-longer functioning plumbing that was implemented without regards for longterm planning.

The water source down the hill [fig. 1 & 2, from left to right] where the students supply their water from[ fig. 3]. The no-longer functioning plumbing on the school grounds [ fig.4].

A Green Academy will be implemented first in the Yayu Preparatory school with the generous help of the Ministry of Innovation and Technology Ethiopia.

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UNESCO Green Academies engage youth and their communities into transforming existing buildings, for example schools, into climate-resilient structures, equipped with simple, affordable and replicable changes. In this way, active youth participation will achieve a sustainable lifestyle in their schools which feeds back to their communities.

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Starting with the installation of rainwater harvesting capabilities to give 1000 students access to water on campus. Furthermore, with schools being a focal point of any community, the new Green Academy serves as a learning platform for the community members to empower themselves to become more sustainable global citizens.

Interview with the School Director of Yayu Preparatory School

The majority of the students come from villages, and their families depend on farming activities.
The school only got water service one day per month during the summer season and during winter season there is no water supply at all.

Documentary.

Green Academy in Ethiopia.

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Selam Project