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Lasse Leponiemi

Chairman, The HundrED Foundation
first.last@hundred.org

Save Drop

Youth-led water conservation education reaching 1 million+ people worldwide

Most students waste water without realizing it, and millions drink lead-contaminated water at school daily. Save Drop is a youth-led education initiative founded by an 11-year-old that turns students into water conservation advocates through school clubs, civic action, and science. Result: 1 million+ people reached, 100+ clubs started, 450+ students engaged weekly worldwide.

Overview

Information on this page is provided by the innovator and has not been evaluated by HundrED.

Updated April 2026
Web presence

2

Countries
All students
Target group
The change I hope to see through Save Drop is simple but profound, a world where every student understands that their daily actions directly affect the planet's water supply, and feels empowered to do something about it. Right now, most environmental education stops at awareness. Students learn that water is scarce, that climate change is real, that resources are limited, but they are rarely given the tools, the confidence, or the opportunity to actually act. Save Drop proves that this gap can be closed. I hope Save Drop helps shift education from passive learning to active citizenship. When a student starts a water conservation club, writes to a governor, builds a water filter, or teaches their family about water waste, they are not just learning about the environment, they are becoming environmentalists. That identity shift is what lasts beyond the classroom. I also hope Save Drop changes what students believe is possible for someone their age. When an 11-year-old from New Jersey can reach over one million people worldwide, receive endorsements from leading scientists, speak at the UN, and invent a water filter from moss, it signals to every other child that age is not a barrier to meaningful change. Most importantly, I hope Save Drop helps education systems recognize that students are not just the future, they are powerful agents of change right now. The classroom is not preparation for the real world. It is the real world.

About the innovation

Why did you create this innovation?

I created Save Drop at age 9 after a simple discovery, every shower wasted clean cold water while we waited for hot water to arrive. The average American family wastes over 25,000 gallons yearly this way. A $500 solution existed, a hot water recirculation pump, yet fewer than 1% of homes had one. Nobody was talking about it. I decided someone had to.
The more I learned, the bigger the contrast became. While families wasted water without realizing it, 2.1 billion people worldwide had no access to safe drinking water. Millions of children drank lead-contaminated water at school every single day.

Save Drop became my answer, a youth-led education initiative turning students into water conservation advocates in their own schools and communities. I believed if I could understand this at age 9, any student could. And if every student taught three more, the impact would be unstoppable.

That belief proved true. Save Drop has reached over one million people worldwide, built entirely by young people, one club at a time.

Save Drop also taught me that education alone is not enough. So I invented BioLayer, a moss-based water filter removing up to 95% of lead from school drinking water for under $38, zero plastic waste. Because saving water and cleaning water both matter.

What does your innovation look like in practice?

In practice, Save Drop operates through three connected layers.

First, student-led water conservation clubs. Nithya recruits student volunteers who start clubs in their own schools. Each club leader learns the core message, how much water is wasted daily, why it matters, and what simple actions can fix it, then teaches their peers. This peer-to-peer model means Save Drop spreads without needing central coordination. Over 100 clubs now operate independently across schools, engaging 450+ students every week through leadership and sustainability sessions.

Second, civic action. Students do not just learn, they act. Save Drop participants write letters to local officials, share water-saving tips with their families, and advocate for practical solutions like hot water recirculation pumps in new home construction. Nithya personally wrote to all 50 US governors and launched a petition that has collected 650+ signatures.
Third, science and invention. Save Drop recently expanded into water quality through BioLayer, a moss-based water filter students can build themselves for under $38. Five student co-scientists are currently building and testing prototypes independently across multiple locations. Results are documented and shared openly through savedrop.org so any student anywhere can replicate the experiment.

Save Drop also reaches families and communities through two published children's books, media outreach, and digital programs, all created by students, for students.

How has it been spreading?

Save Drop spreads through a deliberately simple model, any student anywhere can replicate it with no funding, no technology, and no adult permission required.

The core spread mechanism is peer-to-peer. Each student who joins Save Drop learns the water conservation message and is encouraged to start their own club, teaching their own their own community. This creates an organic network that grows independently of Nithya's direct involvement. Over 100 clubs now operate this way across schools in multiple states.
Beyond student networks, Save Drop has spread through media coverage across three continents, CBS News in the US, Sky News in the UK, and Eenadu in India, reaching audiences who then independently discover and share Save Drop's message. This media reach contributed significantly to crossing the one million people worldwide.

Civic outreach has also driven spread. Writing personally to all 50 US governors and launching a public petition created awareness among policymakers and their networks in ways that traditional education programs cannot reach.

Two published children's books on Amazon, The Water Bus and The Recirculation Revolution, extend Save Drop's reach into homes and classrooms independently, with all proceeds funding the initiative.

Most recently, BioLayer's open-source design, published freely at savedrop.org, means any student anywhere in the world can build the filter themselves, creating a new layer of global spread beyond the original model.

How have you modified or added to your innovation?

Save Drop has evolved significantly since launching as a water conservation awareness initiative in 2024.

The biggest addition is BioLayer, a moss-based inline water filter for school drinking fountains that removes up to 95% of lead from drinking water for under $38, with zero plastic waste. This expanded Save Drop's mission from water quantity to water quality.
A second evolution is the BioLayer Bottle, a portable version requiring no plumbing, designed for the 2.1 billion people worldwide without safe water access.

Save Drop also expanded through two published children's books, The Water Bus and The Recirculation Revolution, making water conservation accessible to younger audiences while generating funding.

Finally, civic engagement grew from local awareness to direct policy advocacy, outreach to all 50 US governors, a 650+ signature petition, and active conversations with state legislators about making recirculation pumps mandatory in new home construction.

If I want to try it, what should I do?

Getting started with Save Drop is completely free and requires no special training, technology, or funding. Here is how any school or educator can begin:

Step 1: Visit savedrop.org. Everything you need is there, water conservation resources, educational materials, the BioLayer filter build guide, and information about starting a Save Drop club at your school.

Step 2: Start a Save Drop water conservation club. Recruit 3-5 students who care about the environment. Give them the core message, American families waste 25,000 gallons of water yearly waiting for hot showers, and simple solutions exist. Let them teach their peers. No curriculum required, just curious students and a willingness to act.

Step 3: Take civic action together. Encourage students to write letters to local officials, share water-saving tips at home, and advocate for practical infrastructure solutions like hot water recirculation pumps. Save Drop provides letter templates and petition resources.

Step 4: Build BioLayer. For schools ready to go further, the complete BioLayer build guide is available free at savedrop.org/biolayer. All materials cost under $38 and are available at any hardware store or pet store. Students can build, test, and document their own results: becoming genuine co-scientists in a growing multi-site study.

Step 5: Connect with Nithya directly at nithya@savedrop.org. She personally responds to every school that reaches out and loves connecting with fellow young water advocates.

Implementation steps

Visit savedrop.org
Visit savedrop.org to access all free resources, educational materials, water conservation guides, the BioLayer build instructions, and club starter kits.
Identify 3-5 motivated students
Identify 3-5 motivated students at your school who care about the environment and want to make a difference in their community.
Share the core Save Drop message with your student group
Share the core Save Drop message with your student group, American families waste over 25,000 gallons of water yearly waiting for hot showers, and simple affordable solutions exist that most people do not know about.
Launch a Save Drop water conservation club at your school
Launch a Save Drop water conservation club at your school. Students meet regularly to learn, discuss, and plan water conservation actions in their school and community.
Take civic action
Take civic action, students write letters to local officials, share water-saving tips with families, and advocate for practical solutions like hot water recirculation pumps in new home construction.
Build BioLayer
Build BioLayer, using the free guide at savedrop.org/biolayer, students build a moss-based water filter for under $38, test it, document results, and share findings with the global Save Drop network.
Connect with Nithya
Connect with Nithya directly at nithya@savedrop.org to join the growing worldwide community of Save Drop student advocates and co-scientists.

Spread of the innovation

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