Water purification plan

by One Foundation
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan
Water purification plan

Project Report | Sep 4, 2025
From Late-Night Boiling to Safe Drinking

By JiaQi Qian | Supervisor of Partnership Development

At the beginning of 2025, a brand-new water purifier arrived at a project school in Jiangxi Province under the Water Purification Plan. Even before the machine was switched on, Director Shi already looked visibly relieved. Standing at the classroom door, watching workers adjust the equipment, he smiled and said, “This purifier has truly lifted such a heavy burden off my shoulders.”

Before the purifier, the school’s drinking water relied solely on him. Every evening, he boiled two large pots of water on a stove, cooled them, and then carried them bucket by bucket into thermal containers. To make sure the children could drink warm water the next day, he often stayed up past midnight—boiling, cooling, and hauling water. He had done this for years.

“To be honest, it wasn’t good for anyone,” he admitted. “The water wasn’t safe enough for the children, and for me, it was simply exhausting.”
But in rural schools with limited staff, drinking water safety had long been sustained by “doing a little more.”

Now with the new purifier installed, children drink more frequently, and Director Shi is finally free from the burden: “Don’t underestimate this small machine—it means I no longer stay up late at night, and I no longer worry about not having enough safe water.”

This cup of clean, safe water has lifted years of worry from teachers’ minds—and marks the beginning of healthier growth for children.

Four Rounds of Upgrades: Ensuring Clean Water Reaches Remote Mountains

The specially designed water purification equipment for rural schools has gone through four rounds of technological upgrades: from basic filtration, to child-friendly design, and now to smart IoT systems. Each upgrade came directly from real needs.

For example, after receiving a plea from a principal in Yunnan’s mountains, the project team drove for hours to visit schools deep in the highlands. They discovered that many relied on open-air pools to collect rainwater—leaving them dry on sunny days and muddy on rainy days. To improve such conditions, the project decided to install a new batch of IoT-enabled purifiers in these schools, along with child-friendly courses to help students truly access safe, clean water.

Delivering equipment is not the end, but the beginning. The real challenge lies in keeping clean water flowing—making sure the system runs reliably in distant mountains, accompanying children as they grow up.

A Complete Support System: Making Change Sustainable

Over the past 14 years, the One Foundation’s Water Purification Plan has not only delivered equipment but also built a full ecosystem:

End-to-end transportation and installation: ensuring devices reach remote schools on time

Three-year warranty and filter replacement: preventing “use it until it breaks” situations

Water quality monitoring: regularly testing for safety

Health education courses: teaching children how to spot contamination and wash hands

Volunteer training: empowering communities to maintain systems themselves

These solid safeguards ensure the project is far more than just “delivering a machine.” It’s about creating a sustainable, high-quality operation.

At one school, the project team tracked an unusual filter usage pattern. Working with the school and the local water company, they fixed issues in the municipal pipeline. From then on, the utility company scheduled weekly flushing, improving water quality for the entire area.

Clean water changes more than just a campus—it quietly drives improvements in the wider community’s water environment.

“Water Treasure Class”: When Drinking Becomes a Health Ritual

The project’s water and hygiene courses help children form habits through play. Fifth graders step into the role of “little teachers,” demonstrating the seven-step handwashing method, explaining how to spot bacteria in water, and encouraging peers: “Clean water is the best friend of your body.” At that moment, she was both a student and a guardian.

Drinking water is no longer taken for granted—it has become a health ritual.

Through the years of the project, the astonishment in children’s eyes when they first tasted filtered water, the focus of teachers checking water pressure and temperature—all these moments prove: the simplest details of daily life shape growth, day by day.

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook

About Project Reports

Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.

If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can receive an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.

Sign up for updates

Organization Information

One Foundation

Location: Shenzhen, Guangdong - China
Website:
Project Leader:
SU Shasha
Shenzhen , Guangdong China

Learn more about GlobalGiving

Teenage Science Students
Vetting +
Due Diligence

Snorkeler
Our
Impact

Woman Holding a Gift Card
Give
Gift Cards

Young Girl with a Bicycle
GlobalGiving
Guarantee

Get incredible stories, promotions, and matching offers in your inbox

WARNING: Javascript is currently disabled or is not available in your browser. GlobalGiving makes extensive use of Javascript and will not function properly with Javascript disabled. Please enable Javascript and refresh this page.