'Water stewardship should always be a standalone topic within sustainability, but I think its tenets and data will become increasingly valuable to business-as-usual functions as we navigate an unpredictable business, climate and political environment."
Abby McGuckin, Water Impact Manager, Apple

We spoke with Abby McGuckin, Water Impact Manager at GSK, an AWS Member, about her role, water stewardship and what International Women’s Day means to her.
How would you describe your role?
What drew you to working in water in particular?
Water doesn’t behave the way humans want or expect it to. It expands when it freezes. It always finds a crack in the dam. It’s not there when we need it most. Yet, it is the foundation of life, economies and a just future. Given its paradoxical nature, I studied water in both of my degrees.
Now, I have the pleasure of working in water full time. It’s clear that water problems need many different solutions – industrial collaboration, improved valuation, technology, and a convergent policy landscape. I was drawn to water because it allows me to think across these challenges and trends and identify insights to improve our business resilience and contribute to a nature positive world. Personally, I am excited about the water impact technology space – these innovations will help us see, think and do better to solve wicked water problems.
What does a day in your job look like?
What does water stewardship mean to you?
What stage would you say you are at in your water stewardship journey?
How have you found working with the Alliance for Water Stewardship (AWS) and/or the AWS Standard?
What achievement are you most proud of when it comes to water?
Our approach to water stewardship at water-stressed sites is to 1) avoid or reduce the site’s operational impacts, 2) replenish or restore the site’s operational footprint, and 3) collaborate with stakeholders in the basin on shared water challenges towards collective action wherever possible.
We’re delivering on this approach in the Godavari Basin, where our GSK Nashik site and key suppliers are located in India. This is made possible through dedicated on-site teams and local and international partners, such as the Watershed Organisation Trust (WOTR) which is delivering water replenishment and WaterAid’s Women+Water Collaborative (established alongside Gap and Cargill) which is increasing climate resilient WASH access. To amplify our impact, GSK has formally committed to become Godavari’s Basin Champion, a Water Resources Coalition initiative to drive positive water impacts in 100 priority basins by 2030. We are also stepping up our commitment with Lisa Martin, GSK’s Chief Procurement Officer, taking on the role of Basin Champion for the Godavari basin. This C-Suite endorsed initiative solidifies our ongoing commitment to the Godavari. For this, I am extremely proud!
What does International Women’s Day mean to you?
IWD 2024 asks us to ‘Inspire Inclusion’. Have you experienced moments in your career where feeling included led to positive outcomes?
In the context of your work on water stewardship, are there any other female leaders in this space who you think others should know about?
Definitely!
- Madhavi Kadrekar – WOTR, Fundraising Strategist
- Caroline Black – Gilead, Climate and Water Stewardship Senior Manager (formerly WRI)
- Sharai Gossart – GSK, Sustainability Project Lead (facilitating AWS implementation at GSK)