Skip to content

Project Profile: The Warm Springs Reservation Water-Generating Hydropanels Farm, Oregon

Water-generating hydropanels farm

Water-generating Hydropanels installed on the reservation to provide clean drinking water for its residents. Project is the result of a unique partnership between one2one USA Foundation and SOURCE Global, the developer of an innovative drinking water system
Source Credit to the SOURCE Global, PBC, the company that makes the panels

Project Name Warm Springs Reservation Water-Generating Hydropanels Farm, Oregon

Location

Warm Springs Reservation, Oregon

Project Sponsor / Borrower

Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs & One2One USA Foundation

Program Areas

Alternative Project DeliveryValue Capture

Value Capture Techniques

Private Contribution, Right-of-Way Use Agreements, & Solar Energy Use

Mode

Other: Resilient Infrastructures, Hydropanels Water Farm

Description

The Warm Springs Indian Reservation, straddling Highway 26 east of Mt. Hood, is 640,000 acres of high desert and forest in Oregon. About 5,000 people live on the reservation that's home to three native tribes: the Warm Springs, Wasco and Paiute. There are rivers and creeks, but most homes either are not hooked up to utility pipe infrastructure or what water they do get isn't safe to drink.

Residents of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation face on-going issues with water shortages and contaminated water. Either they are not piped to the existing infrastructure or they are connected but the infrastructure is old, and water delivered to the residents is not drinkable. When pipes and pumps failed, residents resorted to purchasing bottled or tanked water if available and, if not, simply boiled water to make it drinkable.

In partnership with the one2one USA Foundation and the Warm Springs Economic Development Corporation, two Donors, Source Global, residents of Oregon, have initiated a multi-staged SOURCE Field project which is underway to provide a centralized clean drinking water supply for the entire community. A Hydropanels Water Farm is an innovative one-of-a-kind renewable water technology that uses the power of the sun to extract clean, pollutant-free drinking water from the air. Collected water is then mineralized for ideal composition and taste, making premium-quality drinking water a readily available resource. The technology developed and installed by Source Global.

The first wave of a new solution to providing drinking water came in the summer of 2021, when private donations covered the cost of installing 200 hydropanels that create drinking water by absorbing water vapor out of the air. The panels, mounted either on a roof or on the ground, purify the water through heat from the sun while also adding necessary minerals. The 200 panels were installed in the Warm Springs community, producing 160 gallons of drinking water per day. Residents can drive up to the site and fill up for free. By the end of 2021, the project site, referred to as the reservation’s hydropanel “farm”, is expected to encompass an acre’s worth of land through the purchase of 300 additional hydropanels using COVID relief money. With this expansion, the reservation’s hydropanels are predicted to produce 720 gallons per day.

While the Hydropanels are an ideal solution for the Warm Springs Tribe, the purchase and installation cost would have been insurmountable without additional assistance. To make the project a reality, the community and SOURCE Global partnered with one2one USA Foundation, a nonprofit with a unique model that allows individual donors to develop and fund programs they care about. Donors worked through One2One to provide the funding needed to purchase and install a field of Hydropanels with an eye towards a larger project in the future.

The project site is accessible to the public once a week, on Mondays and is operated by Warm Springs Ventures, a non-profit organization that develops business opportunities for the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs.
For those not located close to the center of the reservation, fifty homes were chosen to have two panels installed and now benefit from 16 gallons of drinking water per day available right at their tap.

The 4-by-8-foot panels cost around $2,000 each. Private donations funded the purchase of the first 200 panels, as well as the internal system and storage site. The first phase allows the tribes to produce 160 gallons of water per day.

The 35 families who received the panels at their homes were chosen based on need and access to water, said Goddard. Another 15 families expect to receive panels at their homes this year.

The technology: The SOURCE® Hydropanel is a technology that incorporates multiple patented inventions alongside proprietary trade secrets, making it a one-of-a-kind renewable water technology that uses the power of the sun to extract clean, pollutant-free drinking water from the air. Collected water is then mineralized for ideal composition and taste, making premium-quality drinking water a readily available resource.

  • Solar energy powers the panel completely off-grid
  • Fans draw in ambient air and push it through a hygroscopic, or water-absorbing material, that traps water vapor from the air
  • The water vapor is extracted and passively condenses into liquid that is collected in the reservoir
  • Minerals are added to make perfect drinking water

The cost is about 46 cents per gallon compared to a 24-pack of 16.9 ounce Nestle water bottles runs on Amazon for $12.25, or $3.92 per gallon. At Walmart, a gallon of purified drinking water is 80 cents. So even at $2,000 per panel, 200 panels producing 160 gallons a year comes out 46 cents per gallon over the 15-year lifetime of the panels, significantly cheaper than retail bottles and without the environmental burden of single-use plastics.

Cost

$1 million

Funding Sources

Anonymous donors and COVID relief money paid for them to be installed in Warm Springs. These donors fronted the money for 200 hydropanels, at $2,000 each.

  • A pair of anonymous donors brought the project to the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs government and paid for its first phase. Private donations funded the purchase of the first 200 panels, as well as the internal system and storage site. The first phase allows the tribes to produce 160 gallons of water per day.
  • The Tribal Council agreed to spend COVID relief money on an expansion
Project Delivery / Contract Method

Design-Build

Private Partner SOURCE Global and the one2one USA Foundation
Project Advisors / Consultants

N/A

Lenders

N/A

Duration / Status

The first wave of a new solution to providing drinking water came in the summer of 2021 is operational in 2022

Financial Status/Financial Performance

Operational since 2022

Innovations
  • Provide local residents access to free and uncontaminated drinking water. The "water farm" of 200+ hydropanels made by Source Global in the town of Warm Springs where residents can come and fill up containers for free with fresh, clean drinking water from vapor out of the sky.
  • Use innovative hydropanel technology extracts moisture from the atmosphere that create drinking water by absorbing water vapor out of the air and helping alleviate water crisis on the reservation
  • Increased Warm Springs’ water supply without the need to build major infrastructure
  • Created 14 jobs to service and build out the hydropanel project site. Source Global, the company that makes the panels, is training Warm Springs contractors as technicians to maintain the array. The company says most of the installation was done by tribal members.
  • 50 households on the reservation outskirts now receive drinking water from roof-installed hydropanels
  • Public-Private Partnerships make the project a reality, the community and SOURCE Global partnered with one2one USA Foundation, a nonprofit with a unique model that allows individual donors to develop and fund programs they care about.
  • Model to communities whose unreliable sources of water lead them to look for alternative water sources without building major infrastructure
Related Links / Articles
Contacts

Jim Souers, CEO, Warm Springs Economic Development Corporation/Warm Springs Ventures, a nonprofit organization that develops business opportunities for the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs

Colin Goddard, Co-Founder & Managing Partner of Source Global PBC, the company that builds the panels

Wendy Prager, Executive Director and Counsel, one2one USA Foundation

back to top