27 August 2025

Protect working animals as water crisis ravages communities

Donkeys and horses are the only way to access water for many communities worldwide.

In the UK, the impacts of water scarcity are increasingly visible - but for millions of people in developing countries, the stakes are far higher. 

This World Water Week (24-28 August 2025), Brooke is calling on global governments and international organisations to urgently recognise the role of working animals in meeting the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.

This includes SDG 6, access to clean water and sanitation. 

Communities living in rural areas of developing countries often travel vast distances to obtain fresh water and for many, this journey is made possible by owning a horse or donkey.

The water is used by families for drinking, to cook, maintaining basic hygiene standards, watering crops and providing drinking water for other farm animals. 

The water transported by working equines is used to irrigate crops. It is also given to other species of farmed animals. This helps the owners increase crop yield and farmed animal production, leading to improved livelihoods and health. 

Working animals are a lifeline to many women and girls, helping them transport more water across large distances.

As climate change and the global water crisis deepen, the poorest and most vulnerable communities are worst affected.

Brooke’s Global Head of Policy and Advocacy, Anna Marry

Working animals may also be the only source for bringing life-saving water to people and farmed animals. In the groundnut basin and the sylvo-pastoral zone in Senegal, donkeys supply water to 400,000 small ruminants every day. 

Animals are often simply forgotten in these metrics. But, if the contribution of working animals isn’t recognised in policy and planning, then millions of rural communities risk losing access to vital water resources, with devastating impacts on human and animal health, food security and livelihoods. 

Donkey skin trade fuels gender disparity

The global donkey skin trade is also having a devastating knock-on effect on communities in West and East Africa and Pakistan, as working animals are stolen to meet the horrific trade – often leaving women and children responsible for collecting water.  

In many communities across Africa, Asia and Latin America, women and girls must walk long distances to fetch water from a water hole or a pump. This means they have less time for other tasks, and many girls are pulled out of school to help with water provision and other household chores.  

Equines can transport more water across large distances, freeing women’s and girls’ time for other activities, from community meetings to education, thus leading to greater gender empowerment. 

The donkey skin trade is devastating communities, as working animals are stolen for the trade.

In Pakistan, women who own a donkey cart can bring water, wood and fodder home in an hour and a half, as opposed to four hours for women who do not have a donkey. 

The rising number of donkeys stolen to fuel the illegal trade in skins to obtain ‘ejiao’ – a gelatine used in traditional Chinese medicine that is made by boiling down donkey skin.  

With many countries banning the practice and trade, working animals are being stolen to fuel the illegal trade, leaving communities at risk and, in many cases, leading women and girls to take on the role of water gatherer.

There is no food without water, there is no life without it.  

Anna Marry

Brooke’s Global Head of Policy and Advocacy, Anna Marry, said: “For many (communities), their working donkey or horse is the only lifeline they have to help them fetch water, put food on the table and be more resilient in the face of climate disasters.  

“Thanks to Brooke's advocacy, the UN now recognises the role working animals play in agriculture and in disaster resilience.  

“This is great, but not enough.

“In light of the UN’s 2025 World Water Development Report spotlighting how climate stress is shrinking water sources, we urge immediate recognition of working animals’ role in water resilience and a commitment to their welfare.” 

Learning from working animals' critical role in water transport can help communities worldwide adapt.

Even in the UK, the impacts of water scarcity are increasingly visible. For many of us, these restrictions might mean a watered-down garden or a temporarily brown lawn - but for millions of people in developing countries, the stakes are far higher. 

Protecting working animals abroad, and learning from their critical role in water transport, can help communities worldwide adapt to climate pressures and secure a future where water is both available and sustainably managed.  

Working animals are a vital connection to water sources

In Ethiopia, water pumps and cattle troughs built by Brooke are benefitting nearly 250,000 people in the Oromia region and 71,500 people in the Southern Nations, Nationalities and People’s Region.

This new infrastructure is managed by water committees made up of local people, with the support of local authorities. 

In La Esperanza community in Guatemala’s ‘Dry Corridor’ (a region suffering from severe water shortages), Brooke and its partner ESAP have constructed a water spring that has benefitted 150 animals and more than 200 families.  

This spring is the only source of safe water for the families in La Esperanza and neighbouring villages of El Cujito, El Morrito and La Candelaria.

Water transported by animals can irrigate crops and allow families to cook and clean. 

In Burkina Faso, Brooke and its partner Inades-Formation have built a new borehole that includes a solar pump for people and a water trough for cattle in the village of Silmiougou.  

The new infrastructure provides clean drinking water to an estimated 5,000 people in Silmiougou and neighbouring villages of Tangasgo, Tansega and Tansablougou. 

Learn more about how Brooke brings water to communities and animals