Xylem, a leading global water technology provider committed to solving water, has been a partner to the Stockholm Junior Water Prize since the beginning in the late 1990s. Over the years, the number of participating countries has grown from eight to nearly 40 and it is now a truly global event.
“It makes me so proud to have so many young people here, from Bangladesh, from Germany, from Canada, Australia, India… They come together to solve a similar set of issues because the water challenges are not limited to a geography or set of countries anymore,” Hayati says.
His own lifelong passion for water stems from a childhood in the mountainous northeast of Turkey where the day would start with his family walking together to the local river to fetch water in buckets. “At that time, I didn’t think people could have water and sanitation at home because in our village of 50 houses, no one did.”
Later, Hayati decided that water was his calling, and he recognizes the same commitment to solving real-world problems when he meets the 15-20-year-olds participating in the Stockholm Junior Water Prize. But in other ways, he feels that they are quite different from his own younger self “I see this both professionally and in my private life. We have two daughters who are 21 and 18, so I guess they are Generation Z. A couple of characteristics differentiate them from previous generations. First, they have a huge environmental consciousness that I think we lacked in my generation. Second, they are very digitally savvy. They have the knowledge at their fingertips and the cost of information is rapidly falling. And third, they are not patient with policy or just talk, they want to be involved in taking actions.”