Across rural India, climate change is no longer an abstract risk; it is felt as constant disruption – erratic rainfall, rising heat, and ecosystems pushed beyond their limits. In the Northern Western Ghats, this disruption shows up as a paradox: villages receive intense monsoon rainfall, yet face acute water scarcity within months.Basalt rock formations restrict groundwater recharge, while deforestation and soil erosion accelerate runoff. Water moves quickly off the landscape instead of being stored within it.
Raah Foundation exists to make this complexity actionable. Our work is grounded in the understanding that water scarcity, fragile livelihoods, and ecological degradation are deeply interconnected – and that single-issue interventions often fail because they treat symptoms, not systems.
We therefore work through a simple systems lens: help landscapes retain water, make farming less risky and more rewarding, reduce pressure on forests, and strengthen local institutions so solutions endure beyond projects.