Rainwater harvesting project expands in Tanay
From its initial beneficiaries — 200 students of Rawang Elementary School in Barangay Tandang Kutyo — the Hyundai Rainwater Harvesting Facility is out to expand its reach to other water-challenged areas in Tanay, Rizal as partners in sustainability, Hyundai Motor Company (HMC), Better World Korea, Hyundai Asia Resources, Inc. (HARI), H.A.R.I. Foundation Inc. (HFI) and the Tanay local government enter the second phase of the partnership.
Better World Korea, the corporate social value arm of HMC, through HFI, the CSR arm of HARI, recently donated a Hyundai HD36 light truck customized into a potable water delivery truck. The formal turnover ceremony took place last Oct. 23 at Tanay Municipal Hall.
The water delivery truck is expected to be a regular sight in Tanay as it shuttles to and from Rawang Elementary School to collect and deliver potable water to neighboring communities, starting with Barangay Plaza Aldea.
In his remarks, Tanay Mayor Rex Tanjuatco thanked Hyundai, noting that said communities have been in dire need for a source of pure water prior to the installation of the facility.
“In the first three months after the rainwater harvesting facility was installed, the people were hesitant to drink. So, the teachers and the students of Rawang were the first ones to make use of the water. The rest of the community decided to draw water only when they saw that the children were not getting sick and that they were needlessly spending on buying water from other places. In the next few years, we realized that Rawang was producing excess water, so the donation of this water delivery truck is a great help to us,” Tanjuatco said.
HFI president Maria Fe PerezAgudo said, “We have an early Christmas present to the residents of Tanay. This is close to the heart of H.A.R.I. Foundation because we can truly see and feel the benefits derived from the pilot Rainwater Harvesting Project. Now, it is on its phase two, which will provide more clean water to more people — one community at a time. My dream is to multiply the success of the Rainwater Harvesting Project to the various islands of this country.”
Rawang Elementary School head teacher, Catherine Resurrecion, considers this development as a blessing to Tanay.
“Our partners ensure that our water is potable. We were helped to maximize (the gifts of) nature — rain water. The water truck will be a channel for our school to be of service to more communities,” she said.
Resurrecion also pointed out an increase in the enrollment in her school, from 150 (2017) to 200 (2019) because people have seen how the school is meeting the basic needs of the community: the availability of drinking water, as well as water to clean the toilets, water to bathe in, and water to sustain the community’s vegetable farming.
It also enables the school to properly implement the Department of Education’s “Wash in Schools” hand-washing program, which helps safeguard the health of underprivileged school children in remote areas.
The pilot Rainwater Harvesting Facility was launched in Rawang Elementary School on March 22, 2017, fruit of the partnership of HMC, Better World Korea, HFI, and the Institute for Global Education, Exchange and Internship (IGEEI).
An invention of Prof. Han Moo Young of the Engineering College of Seoul National University, the facility uses a filtration method capable of producing and storing as much as 25 gallons of potable water a day from rain gathered in roof gutters.