Dr. Alain Gachet is the kind of scientist who points space technology at the ground. In 2012, he turned satellite data toward the Turkana desert in East Africa — one of the most remote and arid territories on the planet — and found four of the largest freshwater aquifers ever discovered on the continent. Cities above them have since doubled and tripled in population. Governments and international institutions are still catching up.
That is the first act. The Gachet Foundation was built for the second.
A team of unconventional operators — engineers, community builders, translators, and people who have spent careers working in places that discourage everyone else — takes the discovery and turns it into something a family can live on. They move through East Africa identifying the most capable field organisations already at work in water-scarce regions: teams with a record of execution, not a glossy report. They put direct funding behind them. They help them scale what is already working.
Water comes first. Then food. Then the conditions for a community to build its own future.
The Gachet Fund is how conscious donors become the force multiplier behind people who know exactly what they are doing — and have the courage to keep doing it.