Vessel Convening · May 5, 2026

Global Lessons for
U.S. WASH

Twenty-five years of international practice — what's worked, what hasn't, and what might help close the U.S. water access gap.

Evan Thomas
Professor, CU Boulder · Mortenson Center in Global Engineering & Resilience
CEO, Virridy
The Challenge

Water Quality Impairment at Scale

4B
People

drink microbially contaminated water

60%
of GDP

threatened by water insecurity

10%
of Emissions

half from water management, half from unmanaged human wastewater

50%
U.S. Rivers

fail Clean Water Act standards

Root cause: The gap persists because it's invisible, under-funded, and operationally orphaned — the same conditions the global WASH sector has been wrestling with for 25 years, with mixed results.
The Challenge · Global E. coli Data
10MObservations
180KSites
40Years
7Databases
Pillar 1 · From Visibility to Accountability
The Lume in Action
Seine River · Paris
Pastoralist Boreholes · Kenya
Field Testing · Boulder Creek
In-Situ Monitoring · Bridge Deployment
Hand-Off · What Comes Next

What's working overseas,
ready to come home.

Visibility, government commitment, capacity — each pillar of Vessel's roadmap has international precedent. The next eighty minutes are about which lessons fit here.

Laura, over to you.
Vessel Convening · May 5, 2026
CU Boulder · Mortenson Center in Global Engineering & Resilience
CU Boulder Mortenson Center in Global Engineering & Resilience
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