By Oyo Amebo


In many households across Oyo State, life used to begin and end with a question: Will there be water today? Mothers would rise before dawn to queue at unreliable boreholes, children missed school because fetching water took hours, and small businesses struggled to operate amidst constant scarcity.


Today, that narrative is changing, dramatically and quietly, under the leadership of Honourable Adeojo, Commissioner for Water Resources.


Where pipes once lay dry and boreholes stood neglected, a new rhythm of life is taking hold: one defined by reliability, innovation, and opportunity.


Adeojo’s vision extends far beyond fixing broken infrastructure. For him, water is not a commodity, it is a catalyst for empowerment, health, education, and economic growth.


He understands that access to clean water underpins every facet of development, shaping daily life for millions while creating the conditions for long-term prosperity.



When he took office, the state’s water sector was fragmented, underfunded, and underperforming. Urban pipelines leaked, rural boreholes failed, and countless communities relied on unsafe streams or shallow wells.

Adeojo recognised that piecemeal repairs would not suffice; what was needed was a holistic, sustainable strategy.
He introduced a phased plan that prioritised community participation, technological innovation, and good governance. In villages, residents now take part in constructing, maintaining, and managing water facilities.
This shared responsibility transforms beneficiaries into custodians, ensuring that every borehole, mini-network, or water hub endures.
Urban networks have not been left behind. Ageing pipelines are being replaced with modern, durable materials; treatment plants are upgraded to meet higher quality standards; and smart monitoring systems now detect leaks and pressure issues in real time.
This proactive approach reduces waste, speeds up repairs, and marks a clear departure from the reactive, stopgap methods of the past.
One of Adeojo’s flagship initiatives is the “Community Water Hubs” programme. These are not mere water points, they are centres of empowerment.
Staffed by trained locals, each hub combines clean water access with educational outreach on hygiene, sanitation, and water conservation.
Children, women’s groups, and local entrepreneurs learn not only to use water safely but also to leverage it for productive ventures.
Small bakeries, vegetable farms, and other micro-enterprises are thriving thanks to this reliable supply.
Equity remains central to his work. Through detailed mapping, Adeojo’s team identifies “water deserts” and directs investments to communities that have historically been neglected.
Subsidised tariffs and flexible payment schemes ensure that even the most vulnerable residents can access water without financial strain.
Beyond infrastructure, Adeojo’s approach addresses health and sustainability. Solar-powered boreholes bring clean water to areas with unreliable electricity, rainwater harvesting supplements existing networks, and hygiene education reduces the prevalence of water-borne diseases.
Clinics, schools, and local volunteers collaborate to teach safe water practices, creating a seamless link between access and wellbeing.
The commissioner’s focus on resilience and innovation has also transformed crisis response. Pre-positioned emergency supplies and rapid-deployment teams prevent service interruptions during droughts or pipeline failures, ensuring communities are never left vulnerable.
The impact is tangible. Farmers report higher yields thanks to consistent irrigation; schools see improved attendance, especially for girls; entrepreneurs expand operations with confidence; and healthcare costs tied to water-borne illnesses are falling. Water is no longer a daily struggle, it is a springboard for opportunity.
Equally important is the cultural shift Adeojo is nurturing. Communities now view water as a shared resource rather than an endless entitlement.
Conservation, responsible usage, and local stewardship are becoming ingrained habits, complementing technical upgrades with behavioural change that secures long-term sustainability.
Challenges remain: rapid urbanisation strains networks, climate change affects water availability, and maintenance demands constant vigilance.
Yet Adeojo’s blend of technical expertise, foresight, and community engagement positions Oyo to meet these challenges more effectively than ever.
The “People’s Water Revolution,” as it is increasingly called, exemplifies what happens when public service is guided by vision, competence, and empathy. Pipes are no longer inanimate conduits, they are lifelines. Boreholes are no longer isolated structures, they are beacons of hope.
Water provision has become a platform for sustainable development, transforming health, education, and economic opportunity simultaneously.
Ultimately, Adeojo’s legacy is measured not just in infrastructure, but in lives transformed. Mothers no longer spend hours fetching water; children attend school without interruption; entrepreneurs operate with confidence; farmers irrigate reliably; communities flourish.
In turning dry pipes into lifelines, Adeojo has shown that water governance, when done right, is more than engineering, it is the art of enabling life itself.

