Philanthropist and environmentalist Nanette Medved-Po sets the bar high when it comes to resolving critical issues such as plastic pollution, problems in education and sustainable livelihood
It all started with a bottle of water. In 2012, Nanette Medved-Po, founder of the impact company HOPE, was focused on proving that products that invest in social good will get public support. A dozen years later, besides proving that she was right, she has also made an impact on education, the environment and the livelihood of the many communities she works with. She continues to do so through various efforts under HOPE and the global platform Plastic Credit Exchange (PCX). But despite her part in all these endeavours, she refuses to take credit.
“This is not my story,” Medved-Po says as she walks with me into the studio for Tatler’s cover shoot. “This is their story. Everything was made possible by my team and all the Aling Tinderas whom I am really proud of.” More on those individuals later.


“I was worried that while I was trying to help solve one problem in education, I was creating another in the environment with our bottles,” Medved-Po continues, recalling how concerned she was that HOPE’s flagship project might exacerbate the plastic pollution crisis despite its good intentions. A little background: HOPE sells purified water in plastic bottles—hence the HOPE in a Bottle initiative—and donates 100 per cent of its profits to building public school infrastructure in partnership with the Department of Education. To date, HOPE has built 128 classrooms and has impacted 41,628 students around the Philippines.
Medved-Po’s concern was real. The more plastic bottles they sell, the more they contribute to the already alarming 61,000 million metric tonnes of waste the Philippines generates daily. According to a statement by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR).
Read also: 10 exemplary Filipinas who have been making a mark in their respective fields