Clean water access
ReH2O stations deliver safe drinking water when pipes and grids fail: solar-powered, independent, built to last.
Clean water · Power · Infrastructure · Ukraine
A Los Angeles–based 501(c)(3) bringing solar water stations, emergency power, and rebuilding support to war-affected Ukraine, funded by people who refuse to look away.
EIN 88-2011390 · 100% of public gifts fund programs on the ground.
Why we exist
Every project is built with Ukrainian partners, designed for dignity, scale, and long-term resilience.
ReH2O stations deliver safe drinking water when pipes and grids fail: solar-powered, independent, built to last.
Generators for hospitals, schools, and shelters, keeping lights, heat, and care online through blackouts.
Standing with Ukraine’s human rights institutions (POWs, children, accountability) on the world stage.
We coordinate with municipalities and reconstruction agencies so aid lands where need and impact intersect.
Transparency
Our teams document every deployment: water quality, capacity, and community outcomes. Supporters see what they funded: transparently, honestly, and in real time.
Featured programs
Transparent initiatives with measurable outcomes. Choose a program to see goals, momentum, and how we work with Ukrainian partners on the ground.
Industrial purification where municipal systems have been destroyed. One station can serve entire neighborhoods.
Explore ReH2O
Hospitals and heating hubs receive fuel and hardware before the next cold season.
Explore power program
Policy briefings and diaspora advocacy alongside Ukraine’s human rights leadership.
Explore advocacyBy the numbers
Volunteer-led overhead, donor-funded programs, Ukrainian-led delivery.
Give · 501(c)(3)
Every public dollar ships pipes, panels, and proof, transparently deployed beside Ukrainian partners.
Vertical moments from deployments: swipe the rail like Stories, tap through to the feed.
Swipe or scroll. Tap any frame for @goukraina
Stories
Scaling solar purification with international coordination where access has collapsed.
Clean water as a model for resilient municipal recovery.
Keeping Ukraine’s humanitarian crises visible to policymakers.