By Oyo Amebo
“Thousands have lived without love, not one without water,” the philosopher W. H. Auden might have said, and in Oyo State, this truth has never been more pressing.
For decades, communities struggled under the weight of unreliable water supply, households, schools, farms, and clinics all constrained by a system weakened by neglect, inefficiency, and inequity. Water scarcity was more than an inconvenience; it was a structural barrier to progress.
Enter Honourable Elias Adeojo, whose leadership as the Chairman of the state’s water corporation has transformed scarcity into opportunity and infrastructural weakness into a model of strategic governance.
When he assumed responsibility, the task before him was formidable: ageing pipelines riddled with leakages, communities denied access, and a culture of reactive fixes that offered no long-term solution.
Yet, Adeojo refused quick fixes or political theatre. His vision was audacious, deliberate, and systemic, a blueprint for a water-secure Oyo that other states could emulate.
Central to this transformation are the Community Water Hubs, a concept that marries access with education. These hubs do more than deliver clean water, they empower communities.
Residents are trained in water management, sanitation, and basic maintenance, instilling ownership that guarantees sustainability long after the initial installation. Water became not just a service but a shared responsibility, a collective lifeline that nurtures accountability and resilience.
Equity underpins every initiative. Detailed mapping and rigorous assessments identified “water deserts” communities long ignored by planners and policy-makers alike.
By prioritising these areas, Adeojo ensured that water access was not determined by proximity or political influence but by deliberate, evidence-based policy. In Oyo State, water is now a right, not a privilege.
Technology fuels the revolution. Solar-powered boreholes overcome unreliable electricity, delivering uninterrupted supply even in the most remote communities.
Rainwater harvesting systems offer climate-smart alternatives, enhancing resilience during dry seasons and emergencies.
These innovations are not decorative; they are pragmatic solutions that reduce costs, safeguard resources, and future-proof water infrastructure.
The ripple effects are profound. Farmers now cultivate crops with confidence, schools see higher attendance, and children are no longer burdened with the daily trek for water. Clinics enjoy reliable supplies, cutting waterborne disease and reducing healthcare burdens.
Water, once a source of stress and vulnerability, has become a stabilising force for Oyo’s economy, education, and public health.
Adeojo’s reforms have also reshaped governance itself. Water is no longer treated as mere infrastructure—it is recognised as a pillar of human dignity, economic productivity, and social cohesion.
Policy, technology, and community engagement converge under his stewardship, creating a system that is inclusive, resilient, and strategic. Governance under Adeojo is purposeful, visible, and transformative: water is no longer reactive, it is a catalyst.
In Oyo State, Adeojo’s vision has done more than solve a problem; it has rewritten the narrative. Communities once defined by scarcity now thrive, and the state emerges as a blueprint for how deliberate leadership can turn a basic necessity into a lever for comprehensive development.
Water scarcity has met its match, and in its place rises an enduring testament to what visionary governance can achieve.