Green consumerism

 

Here's a story about how members of the Changemakers community are using text messaging to promote green consumerism:

How many times have you whipped out your cell phone and texted a message that could help save the planet? Probably never, right? Well branch out from all those lols and xoxos and send a text to FishPhone.

Read more about this solution, or discuss this topic below.
 

Ação concreta sustentável

1) aumentar a consciencia sustentável coletiva (Uma pesquisa realizada pelo Instituto Akatu-Ethos 2010 mostra que fatia de consumidores conscientes permanece em 5% da população. Entretanto, houve crescimento (de 25% para 37%) do segmento mais distante do consumo consciente, o grupo chamado de “Indiferente”. Outro desafio, segundo a pesquisa, é traduzir o termo sustentabilidade para o dia-a-dia dos brasileiros – 56% dizem que nunca ouviram falar.)
2) formar o maior número de consumidores conscientes e inteligentes!

About You

Organization: Natureza Brasil Pesquisas Desenvolvimento e Comércio LTDA ME Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Daniela

Last Name

Pinto Duarte

Twitter

http://twitter.com/#!/naturezabrasil

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Natureza Brasil Pesquisas Desenvolvimento e Comércio LTDA ME

Organization Website

Organization Country

Brazil, SP

Country where this project is creating social impact

Brazil, SP

Is your organization a

For‐profit

How long has your organization been operating?

1‐5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

Ação concreta sustentável

What change do you want to bring to the world?

1) aumentar a consciencia sustentável coletiva (Uma pesquisa realizada pelo Instituto Akatu-Ethos 2010 mostra que fatia de consumidores conscientes permanece em 5% da população. Entretanto, houve crescimento (de 25% para 37%) do segmento mais distante do consumo consciente, o grupo chamado de “Indiferente”. Outro desafio, segundo a pesquisa, é traduzir o termo sustentabilidade para o dia-a-dia dos brasileiros – 56% dizem que nunca ouviram falar.)
2) formar o maior número de consumidores conscientes e inteligentes!
Caminhada internacional para a sustentabilidade com reflorestamento urbano e projeto semente de desenvolvimento da cidade sustentável
3) diminuição da poluição urbana. Promoção de eixos verdes.

What are the primary activities of your project?

1) Sensibilização da população de Campinas e região para a mudança de atitude despertando a consciência para a importância de um consumo mais consciente.
2) Reflorestamento de áreas degradadas com plantas nativas da mata atlântica, diminuição do efeito estufa. Formação de canteiros – circuito verde com a Placa “Natureza Brasil”. Sendo que cada árvore do canteiro terá a placa com o nome da instituição ou empresa doadora da muda. Cada canteiro formado deverá ter uma área para cursos permanentes nas áreas: orientação à população quanto ao uso racional da fitoterapia e alimentação viva nutracêutica para a prevenção de doenças. Essas áreas serão denominadas: Oficina Escola Natureza Brasil
3) Divulgação da Revista BLOG IMPRESSO NATUREZA BRASIL levando informações atualizadas para a população de Campinas e Indaiatuba sobre ciência e sustentabilidade. Canal de cursos, palestras, divulgação de empresas ecologicamente corretas e projetos de sustentabilidade. Esta revista é elaborada pela empresa Natureza Brasil.
4) Caminhada para incentivar e divulgar práticas saudáveis
5) Caminhada: integração com o evento Sustentar - Campinas
6) Divulgação da marca da sustentabilidade Natureza Brasil
7) Expansão da caminhada modelo com reflorestamento para outros países.
8) Incentivo para se inserir pontos de coleta para descarte de medicamentos vencidos consumidos pela população (farmácias e drogarias).

Apoio:
* Solicitação: Patrocínio - Parceria das Prefeituras de Campinas, Indaiatuba e Instituições afins na realização do projeto para:
- Distribuição da revista gratuita Blog Impresso Natureza Brasil em torno de 100 mil exemplares mais ou menos ou mais.
- Muda de árvores nativas da Mata Atlântica a ser doado por instituições afins.
- Camiseta de garrafa PET para a realização da caminhada.
Obs: só poderá participar da caminhada aquele que comprar a camiseta.
Obs: só poderá participar do reflorestamento crianças de escolas públicas.

Idealização e organização do evento: Como será???
Breve explicação: O Sapinho Muiraquitã é o mascote da empresa Natureza Brasil, ele representa a lenda do Muiraquitã, do nosso folclore brasileiro. É também a marca de camiseta artesanal da empresa Natureza Brasil. No site da empresa www.naturezabrazil.com tem um vídeo do Sapinho Muiraquitã jogando sementes no jardim, das sementes nascem flores e cada flor tem o nome de uma virtude: paz, amor, etc...no final do vídeo aparece a frase: plante esta semente, ela é a “Natureza Brasil”, desperte sua sensibilidade para a beleza e a importância da vida. Dentro deste contexto propomos que esta caminhada seja liderada pelo Sapinho Muiraquitã. Aqui poderíamos colocar algum voluntário com a fantasia de sapo. Este voluntário seria o responsável para entregar a muda na mão de cada criança para o plantio das árvores nativas. A caminhada tem o intuito de promover o reflorestamento de áreas degradadas a ser estipulado pelas prefeituras locais.
Nota: Desenvolvemos rede de negócios como a representação de artesanato de produtos sustentáveis com o objetivo de fomentar o desenvolvimento de projetos sociais e ambientais no Brasil. Em comum, em ambas as linhas de atuação: empresa de prestação de serviços em pesquisa e desenvolvimento de produtos farmacológicos ou de representação comercial de produtos sustentáveis, a empresa atua em nível de capacitação e gestão junto aos artesãos ou de comunidades produtoras ou extrativistas, sendo também especializada na transferência de tecnologias sociais.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

É inovador porque a população brasileira não tem costume de devolver medicamentos vencidos de volta para as farmácias e sim jogam diretamente no esgoto doméstico. Esta atividade da prática da sensibilização da caminhada com incentivo para pontos de coleta nas farmácias contribui com diminuição dos agravos na saúde pública.
A destinação final dos resíduos de origem farmacêutica é tema relevante para a saúde pública, devido às diferentes propriedades farmacológicas dos medicamentos que inevitavelmente se tornarão resíduos. Estudos demonstram que diversas substâncias não são totalmente removidas durante os processos convencionais de tratamento de esgotos. Uma das classes de substâncias que mais preocupam os cientistas é a classe dos antibióticos, pelo potencial de promover o desenvolvimento de bactérias resistentes no meio ambiente, e por serem usados em grandes quantidades. Com o aumento do uso indiscriminado, pode haver uma significativa contribuição para o aumento da resistência das bactérias aos antibióticos, o que tem sido observado nos últimos anos, tornando-se um problema de saúde pública.
O projeto Ação concreta sustentável está baseado nos artigos da lei do município de Campinas n 15 de 27 de dezembro de 2006 e tem o objetivo de atingir a consciencia sustentável coletiva. O projeto visa semear o desenvolvimento da cidade sustentável com revitalização de áreas degradadas associado a um programa de saúde para a prevenção de doenças e outros agravos.

What stage is your project in?

Idea phase

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

Estamos solicitando apoio da prefeitura de Campinas e região para promover a conscientização e sensibilização coletiva em massa da região de Campinas.
* Solicitação: Patrocínio - Parceria das Prefeituras de Campinas, Indaiatuba e Instituições afins na realização do projeto para:
- Distribuição da revista gratuita Blog Impresso Natureza Brasil em torno de 100 mil exemplares mais ou menos ou mais.
- Muda de árvores nativas da Mata Atlântica a ser doado por instituições afins.
- Camiseta de garrafa PET para a realização da caminhada.
Obs: só poderá participar da caminhada aquele que comprar a camiseta.
Obs: só poderá participar do reflorestamento crianças de escolas públicas.
Caso ganhe este premio terei argumento para implantar o projeto na cidade de Campinas com expansão internacional.
Caminhada para a sustentabilidade com reflorestamento urbano e projeto semente de desenvolvimento da cidade sustentável no ano 2011. Projeção para a caminhada com reflorestamento urbano: expansão internacional. Este projeto semente do desenvolvimento da cidade sustentável está de acordo com a lei do desenvolvimento sustentável da cidade de Campinas, lei n 15 de 27 de dezembro de 2006
Ações da prefeitura de Campinas:

* LEI COMPLEMENTAR N0 15 DE 27 DE DEZEMBRO DE 2006

Art. 3º - São diretrizes da política de desenvolvimento do Município de Campinas:

VI – estimular parcerias entre os setores público, privado e OSCIP´s – Organizações da Sociedade Civil de Interesse Público, em projetos que promovam a melhoria da qualidade de vida da população;

IX – desenvolver ações articuladas com as cidades integrantes da Região Metropolitana de Campinas, de outras Regiões Metropolitanas, com os governos estadual e federal, visando a equacionar e buscar soluções dos problemas de interesse comum.
Art. 5º - São diretrizes para o desenvolvimento econômico, além do disposto no art. 3º desta Lei Complementar:

XII – estimular a responsabilidade sócio–ambiental;
XVI – estabelecer parcerias entre agentes públicos e privados.

Art. 6º - Os objetivos e diretrizes do desenvolvimento econômico do Município contemplam os seguintes eixos:

VII – Ambiental, com a requalificação de áreas degradadas e criação e preservação de parques públicos e eixos verdes.
Art. 8º - Sustentabilidade é o desenvolvimento local socialmente justo, ambientalmente equilibrado e economicamente viável, visando garantir qualidade de vida para as presentes e futuras gerações
Art. 21 - O Macrozoneamento tem por finalidade ordenar o território, dar base para a reformulação das áreas de atuação dos gestores públicos e possibilitar a definição de orientações estratégicas para o planejamento das políticas públicas, programas e projetos em áreas diferenciadas, objetivando o desenvolvimento sustentável do Município, que será dividido em 09 (nove) Macrozonas.

Art. 24 - Constituem diretrizes e normas gerais e comuns às diferentes Macrozonas, vinculando todos os órgãos da administração pública direta e indireta e devendo ser observadas na elaboração dos Planos Locais, nas alterações da legislação urbanística e nos planos setoriais:

XVIII – implantar programas de revitalização de áreas degradadas;

Art. 35 - São objetivos da Política de Meio Ambiente, além do disposto no art. 2º desta Lei Complementar:
IV – fortalecimento da conscientização da população quanto aos valores ambientais e à necessidade de recuperação e conservação do patrimônio existente;
VI – estimular a adesão a práticas sustentáveis;

Art. 36 - São diretrizes da política de meio ambiente:

XXII – incentivar o aumento da cobertura vegetal no Município, estabelecendo incentivos para glebas e lotes vagos que atendam sua função ambiental com o plantio de árvores nativas ou frutíferas e hortaliças;
XXVII – promover projetos que se enquadrem nos critérios previstos pelo Protocolo de Kyoto, valendo–se do mecanismo de desenvolvimento limpo – MDL
XXX – garantir a implantação de uma área verde em cada Unidade Territorial Básica (UTB) a ser definida em lei específica.

Art. 37 - São instrumentos da política de meio ambiente:

III – Projetos e Programas de Negócios Sustentáveis
I – Eixos Verdes;
Art. 52 - São objetivos da política de saúde, na forma da Constituição Federal, da Lei Federal n° 8.080, de 19 de setembro de 1990 e das demais normas federais, estaduais e municipais:
I – promoção, proteção e recuperação da saúde individual e coletiva;
II – redução do risco de doenças e outros agravos;

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

Esta historinha nos inspirou: atingir a consciencia sustentável coletiva
Houve uma experiencia em uma ilha japonesa, onde viviam muitos macacos. Os cientistas deixavam na praia algumas batatas, que sujas de areia não agradavam aos bichos. Um belo dia um filhote lavou a batata, provou e aprovou. ensinou à mãe, que sem cerimonia passou a idéia para frente. Quando o centésimo macaco da ilha aprendeu a lavar batatas, todos os outros em todas as ilhas vizinhas, fizeram o mesmo! Moral da história: quando um certo número de indivíduos atinge uma consciencia, ela se espalha por todas as mentes da mesma espécie
A empresa Natureza Brasil foi fundada dentro dos principios da sustentabilidade.É uma empresa de consultoria farmaceutica e cosmética na área de produtos organicos e naturais. Veja no site da empresa www.naturezabrazil.com clique em valores e crenças (values and beliefs. Dentro da pesquisa do Instituto Akatu de 2010 (www.akatu.org.br) onde é citado que 56% da população brasileira não entende sustentabilidade a empresa Natuereza Brasil preocupada com o consumo responsável e na tentativa de sensibilizar a população de Campinas e região para os riscos do consumo desordenado desenvolveu este projeto semente da cidade sustentável (revitalizaçãod e áreas degradadas com programa de saúde associado) baseado na lei n. 15 de 27/12/2006 do municipio de Campinas, lei do desenvolvimento sustentável.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

Este projeto impactará no desenvolvimento semente da cidade sustentável. Estamos articulando com prefeituras locais, ainda não foi implantado estamos buscando apoio. Este projeto já foi finalista do premio de sustentabilidade da Fecomercio. www.fecomercio/sustentabilidade
clique em vencedores depois Natureza Brasil microempresa

How many people have been impacted by your project?

More than 10,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

A intenção é implantar este projeto para outros paises
O projeto piloto queremos implantar na cidade de Campinas
caminhada com reflorestamento urbano e programa de saúde para a prevenção de doenças.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

As barreiras são somente a burocracia da prefeituras para a liberação de recursos para apoio neste projeto. A lei do desenvolvimento sustentável de Campinas preve a parceria entre a prefeitura com empresas. (parceria publico-privada). Como pretendo superar: ganhando este premio terei argumento de sobra para convencer a prefeitura e terei recursos iniciais para tocar o projeto, primeiro distribuindo a revista Blog impresso Natureza Brasil gratuita à população de Campinas como primeiro passo para a sensibilização em massa quanto ao consumo consciente. Uma pequena parcela da população já será mobilizada, e a partir de um pequeno número de pessoas sensibilizadas faz com que aumente para o que chamamos de consciencia coletiva.

Tell us about your partnerships

Sem a parceria com a prefeitura não poderemos implantar o projeto semente do desenvolvimento da cidade sustentável, pois é preciso o apoio da prefeitura para indicar as áreas degradas para o reflorestamento urbano, diminuição da poluição e outros agravos respiratório com a formação de eixos verdes.
* Solicitação: Patrocínio - Parceria das Prefeituras de Campinas, Indaiatuba e Instituições afins na realização do projeto para:
- Distribuição da revista gratuita Blog Impresso Natureza Brasil em torno de 100 mil exemplares mais ou menos ou mais.
- Muda de árvores nativas da Mata Atlântica a ser doado por instituições afins.
- Camiseta de garrafa PET para a realização da caminhada.
Obs: só poderá participar da caminhada aquele que comprar a camiseta.
Obs: só poderá participar do reflorestamento crianças de escolas públicas.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$500,001‐1 million

Explain your selections

O projeto ainda não foi implantado estamos tentando apoio das prefeituras e órgãos publicos para a implantação deste projeto.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

através da revista blog impresso Natureza Brasil. A revista tem distribuição gratuita em parceria com a prefeitura, somente será cobrado o anuncio para empresas que desejarem divulgar no espaço de publicidade da revista. Quem vai manter o projeto é a prefeitura. a empresa Natureza Brasil apenas idealizou este projeto a execução é da prefeitura. Quem governa a cidade é o prefeito.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Lack of visibility and investment

SECONDARY

Lack of skills/training

TERTIARY

Lack of access to information and networks

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

visibilidade e investimento
articular parceria com a prefeitura e convence-los da importancia da implantação da cidade sustentável, mas isso só se consegue quando se ganha um premio internacional ou alguma menção honrosa
ausencia de capacitação / formação
Educar a população de Campinas e região através da sensibilização coletiva (caminhada para a sustentabilidade) sobre a importancia do consumo consciente e como prevenir doenças com aulas sobre fitoterapia e alimentação viva nutraceutica. O governo brasileiro investe cada vez mais em hospitais e menos em prevenção de doenças
ausencia de acesso a informação e redes
através da distribuição da revista gratuita para a população de Campinas e da caminhada coletiva é possível corrigir a desinformação

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Grown geographic reach: Global

SECONDARY

Repurposed your model for other sectors/development needs

TERTIARY

Grown geographic reach: Within host country

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

alcance global
ação futura
adaptação do modelo para outros setores / necessidade de desenvolvimento
ação futura
alcance geográfico
ação presente em curso

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

For profit companies, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

Universidades no desenvolvimento de tecnologia de produtos sustentáveis
governamental: estamos buscando apoio
empresas ecologicamente corretas que tenham projetos de sustentabilidade: divulgação na revista da empresa Natureza Brasil, aumento da consciencia coletiva

“Enabling Healthier, Happier Meals through locally made improved biomass stoves in Burkina Faso

This project aims at providing portable eco-friendly cook-stoves to the poor section of the society, which are currently available in the market for 30 - 120 USD at the lowest possible price of 10 USD to the final customer while fostering entrepreneurial spirit amongst the vulnerable youth which shall further provide employment avenues for the underserved. It also aims link livelihoods with a technology intervention which would reduce women’s drudgery by reducing indoor air pollution and reduce the rate of health related problems caused.

About You

Organization: Greenway Grameen Infra & SOS Energie Burkina Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Neha

Last Name

Juneja

Twitter

grameeninfra

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Greenway Grameen Infra & SOS Energie Burkina

Organization Website

Organization Country

India, MM

Country where this project is creating social impact

n/a

Is your organization a

For‐profit

How long has your organization been operating?

1‐5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

“Enabling Healthier, Happier Meals through locally made improved biomass stoves in Burkina Faso

What change do you want to bring to the world?

This project aims at providing portable eco-friendly cook-stoves to the poor section of the society, which are currently available in the market for 30 - 120 USD at the lowest possible price of 10 USD to the final customer while fostering entrepreneurial spirit amongst the vulnerable youth which shall further provide employment avenues for the underserved. It also aims link livelihoods with a technology intervention which would reduce women’s drudgery by reducing indoor air pollution and reduce the rate of health related problems caused. The environmental and health impact of traditional stoves are well known – not only do they cause over 5 million premature deaths annually, they are also known to be significant contributors to climate change and destruction of local ecology.

What are the primary activities of your project?

Greenway Grameen Infra (in India) and SOS Energie Burkina shall manufacture the combustion chamber and grate and sell it to identified nascent entrepreneurs. In the preliminary test conducted, the thermal efficiency came to 27.5%, which is almost equivalent to any forced draft cook-stove and carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide emissions were much below the BIS standards thus complying with internationally recognized indoor air pollution norms. The project proponents do not wish to compromise on the quality of the cookstove, which majorly depends on the combustion chamber and grate and hence will keep the manufacturing to itself.
To maintain the thermal efficiency of the cookstove, the proponents shall provide these entrepreneurs with adequate tool usage training required to manufacture the outer body and assembling of cookstove, so that the final product is as per the specified design.
Proponents shall provide assistance to entrepreneurs for getting funded under various government programmes undertaken to encourage economic development for underprivileged population of the society and shall engage with micro-financing institutions to provide loan to them.
Nascent entrepreneurs shall undertake the manufacturing of outer body of the cookstove and assembling to make it functional and sell it to the final customer by adding their margin. He will have thorough knowledge about the designing of cookstove and hence will able to answer the queries of the people. Their interaction with the final customer can prove to be a source of information for improving the product as well as designing a new product. The proponents would manage and assist in the final sale and marketing of the product.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

The presented project is a unique co-learning collaboration between two diverse organizations from two diverse geographies.
The initiative is innovative in following manner:
• The initiative shall encourage entrepreneurship. The project proponents will only manufacture the combustion chamber and grate which need to be with precision for thermal efficiency and low particulate pollutants. Outer body manufacturing and final assembling will be undertaken by nascent entrepreneurs; thus creating a source of income for them and skill development to undertake other such activities on their own.
• A Below Poverty Line (BPL) individual is unable to show concern for the environment. Any portable energy efficient cook-stove available in the market costs minimum of 30USD, which is also not feasible for them. All the cookstoves, available in the market provide environmental and health benefits but are unreasonable for a BPL household. GGI’s model shall make the cook-stove available to such households at an affordable price of 10 USD.
Energy efficient cook-stoves usually offers economic benefits by reducing firewood consumption, while GGI cook-stove will contribute to economic development by encouraging entrepreneurship, creating job opportunities and skill development. The nascent entrepreneur will earn a minimum margin of 2USD on each cook-stove; thus leading to profit sharing with vulnerable groups of the society. Employees of any nascent entrepreneur can also enrol as nascent entrepreneur in the network in subsequent years.

What stage is your project in?

Idea phase

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

 Both project proponents work with communities trapped in energy poverty. These households do not have access to electricity, potable water, clean energy fuels like LPG and are mostly settled in rural parts of the country.
 These households are from economically backward background with daily income of 2USD and deprived of their basic needs.
 Women and children spent most of their time in collecting firewood, which otherwise could be utilized for some productive activity.
 Females and children are prone to diseases like lung cancer, cataract, intestinal diseases, asthma, acute respiratory infections, pre-natal and neo-natal disorders etc.
 Death rate is high in this section of the society as the households do not earn enough to get medical treatment.
 As many as 500,000 women and children die each year due to indoor air pollution caused by use of solid biomass as cooking fuel, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

GGI has interacted with energy poor communities in Yavatmal and Wardha districts of Maharashtra, Phalodi and Kota districts of Rajasthan, Shivpuri district in Madhya Pradesh, Mutksar district in Punjab while SOS Energie Burkina has been working for many years with the energy poor around Ougadougou.
The only source of income for them is agriculture and allied activities or the male members have to stay away from their families in nearby towns to earn their livelihood. These households are ready to adopt new products only if they can have reliable source of income or the product seems to be reasonable for them.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

The two project proponents (represented by Neha Juneja and Vincent Nikiema) had been working for the energy poor mainly through technology intervention, which was also the initial collaboration point between the two; the project proponents have experience in product design, community scale biogas and biomass projects etc. However, it was becoming apparent that while technological interventions bring about wide impact their reach and benefits can be extended beyond the utility of the products offered by integrating livelihoods with these interventions. This approach was found feasible in the context of improved cook stoves that the project proponents were already working on in ‘ready to use’ mode; to this effect the design was modified and localized to suit settings in both the target geographies with initial trials being successful and garnering community support.
The founders of the project are both technologists looking to serve the base of pyramid market through innovative interventions with an intense focus on co-creation of energy products so as to ensure that consumers are well understood and well voiced in the design and product configuration.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

The project is still in an idea and has not been executed. At present, the project proponents have been manufacturing and retailing ‘ready to use’ improved cookstoves and have been receiving repetitive orders for the cookstoves, which confirms the acceptability of the product in the market. The same cookstove will be supplied under the initiative but through nascent entrepreneurs. The success of the project once executed will be assessed on the following:
• Nascent entrepreneurs in the network/Growth rate
• Geographical regions covered by entrepreneurs
• Cookstoves sold in each area
• Number of employees under each entrepreneur and its growth rate
• Average salary earned by each employee
• Number of new ventures in nearby area
• Number of employees joining the network as nascent entrepreneur
• Women’s participation in economic activities they can now save time in collecting wood.
• Reduction in Greenhouse Gas Emissions
• Reduction in health related problems and savings thereof.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

Fewer than 100

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

A three year expansion plan is explained below. Each nascent entrepreneur would be capable of further generating employment for 4-9 persons.

1st year: 20 nascent entrepreneurs with minimum of 8 employees in Burkina Faso
2nd year: 55 nascent entrepreneurs with minimum of 5 employees in Northern and Western part of India and extending the same project in Burkina Faso.
3rd year: 95 nascent entrepreneurs with minimum of 5 employees all over India and approximately 35 nascent entrepreneurs Burkina Faso.
By the end of third year the project proponents aims to reduce deforestation due to firewood cutting by 55% in its area of operation and take its cooktove to over 70,000 households in India and Africa in next 3 years.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

1. Financial assistance for setting up combustion chamber and grate manufacturing plant: This is the biggest barrier that might hinder the success of the project. The project is still an idea and needs financial support for execution. The project proponents intend to channelize ‘The Opportunity Project’ prize money for setting up the plant for manufacturing of combustion chambers and grate. It shall also seek assistance from Governmental agencies as the project shall result into environmental, social and economical well-being.

2. Seed Capital for setting up the workshop for nascent entrepreneurs: The total investment required for setting up a workshop with tools required for manufacturing the outer body and assembling the cookstove is expected to be 400 USD per workshop. The project proponents would be investing in the same (as soft loans) or arranging for the same through other lending agencies. In both the target geographies the feasibility of such financing is well established especially for women entrepreneurs.

3. Acceptance by target audience: There are cookstoves in the market which are not accepted by the target audience because they are not handy for women using traditional cookstoves. The other reason for unacceptability is that the price at which it is available in the market. The project proponents have previously developed and retailed many designs and created a database after studying the cooking habits in various communities and conducting research at grass-root level and have the potential to design a cookstove which will not demand any change in cooking habits. The endeavour has been to develop a user friendly and durable configuration locally delivered to the consumer under USD 10.
4. Cookstove quality assurance: A warranty period of 1 year for ‘ready to use’ version of the cookstove currently available in the market and the cookstove can work efficiently for a period of 5 years. The same level of product quality will be maintained in this project also. So the combustion chamber and grate will be manufactured at central unitilities and the outer body and assembling of final cookstove will be the responsibility of nascent entrepreneur for which appropriate training will be provided.

Tell us about your partnerships

The project proponents by themselves represent a unique partnership and have been working with a variety of other organizations to promote their mission. In order to channelize efforts and reach deep within communities better the project proponents have been availing support from a number of non governmental and community based organizations such as:

1. Bhartiya Dnyanpith Bahuudeshiya Gramin Vikas Sanstha (BDBV): BDBV majorly undertakes activities in Yavatmal and Wardha districts of Maharashtra. BDBV is working to ensure and institutionalize a process of participatory rural development especially for women, the SCs and STs as a development agent through credit for self-employment services. BDBV activities are primarily on self-governance, strengthening local institutions, micro enterprise, market linkages, community mobilization, women sensitization, self-help and natural resource management.

2. Boond Foundation: The mandate of the Boond Foundation is to develop an ecosystem of entrepreneurs who can sell and service low-cost productivity enhancing development products such as solar lamps, biomass cookstoves and water filters in order to bring light and good health to rural Indian communities. Further, the Boond Foundation gives technical and entrepreneurial training to the local people, who market, sell and service the products to the poor people.

3. Pratinidhi Samiti: It is a group of participatory practitioner engaged in participatory practices and capacity building of various stakeholders on various themes such as livelihoods, Inter personal communication, behavior change process, integrated development, and rights based approach, HIV-AIDS, WASH and social marketing.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$10,001‐50,000

Explain your selections

Individuals and NGOs: Individuals and NGOs are selected for providing non-monetary support i.e. to provide training to nascent entrepreneurs and marketing of cookstoves. The entrepreneurs and employees will be unskilled and require training in the area of manufacturing, assembling and marketing of cookstoves. NGOs and individuals will provide them this training and help them gain confidence to undertake these activities.

National Government, Changemakers, and Customers: The project proponents shall seek for assistance from Ministry of New and Renewable Energy in India, Ministry of Environment in Burkina Faso and other government agencies for undertaking the project. It shall direct the Changemakers award money for setting up combustion chamber and grate manufacturing unit. With increasing demand more such units will be set-up in different parts of the country from the sales generated during initial period of the project.

MFIs, National Government: The project proponents shall provide assistance to entrepreneurs to arrange for funds through MFIs for setting up the work-shops. It shall also seek assistance from government agencies under various schemes and programs for them as establishment of workshops in these areas will create a demand for manpower and reduce the rate of unemployment.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

The proponents aim at developing sustainable business model and shall initiate by selling the combustion chamber and grate to nascent entrepreneurs who will further manufacture the outer body, assemble the cookstove for usage and sell it to the final consumer. In first few years it shall expand it nascent entrepreneur network over parts of India and West Africa.

The proponents believe in establishing long-term relationship with its stakeholders and thus they shall be in constant touch with the entrepreneurs to identify the areas of improvement. Nascent entrepreneurs with an experience of more than one and half year and fulfilling certain performance criteria will be selected to provide training to new entrepreneurs joining the network. Their interaction with the final customer and their suggestions will be considered while framing strategies for future expansion and product development.

Nascent entrepreneurs will be considered as partners and will be given preference in the process of extending the product line so that more opportunities can be created. The proponents are working towards developing and disseminating no energy water treatment systems to households without water connection and low cost sanitary napkins. We are looking forward to further strengthen the project by including water purification system with cookstoves in the product line, which would create new employment prospects for the local vulnerable population.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Lack of skills/training

SECONDARY

Lack of visibility and investment

TERTIARY

Restricted access to new markets

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

Skill-sets required for manufacturing, marketing and managing an enterprise will be provided by the proponents in partnership with NGOs. A helpline number will be provided to every nascent entrepreneur so that he/she can communicate any technical or managerial assistance.

The project proponents will facilitate fund flow from MFIs and Governmental agencies to nascent entrepreneurs. Through this project entrepreneurs will able to establish a network with NGOs and financial institutions and will be aware of the opportunities they can exploit.

Manufacturing of the developed localized cook stove does not require fully automated machinery. Some parts of the cook stove can be manufactured manually with the help of some tools without compromising the quality of the product.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Repurposed your model for other sectors/development needs

SECONDARY

Influenced other organizations and institutions through the spread of best practices

TERTIARY

Grown geographic reach: Multi-country

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

The proponents shall identify a manageable 20 nascent entrepreneurs only in some parts of India during first year of operation and aims to reach 55 such entrepreneurs in North and Western parts of the country and also in some parts of Africa by second year of operation. These entrepreneurs will be identified with the help of NGOs working in these areas. The proponents shall encourage that atleast 10 employees working under first 10 entrepreneurs join the network as nascent entrepreneur in the second year.

In the third year of operation, the project proponents shall select few of the nascent entrepreneurs to provide training to new entrepreneurs joining the network. This would allow them to understand the market better and develop themselves.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

NGOs/Nonprofits, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

The innovation is still an idea and not been executed yet. But a programme was undertaken to assess the acceptability of the product in some rural parts of India in collaboration with the NGOs and it was a success. Collaboration with NGOs is a must to penetrate rural marketplaces and gain confidence and support of locals to undertake entrepreneurial venture and join proponents proposed network. As local NGOs undertake various social programmes in the area, people are familiar with NGO volunteers. NGO will also play an important role in training them and creating demand for cookstoves.

The Big Blue Bike is striving to be the world's premier ethical and eco clothing brand with social impact.

The Big Blue Bike (BBB) intends to protect colored alpacas which are facing severe shortages since larger companies request only white alpaca fiber (easier to dye and sort). By increasing demand for colored alpaca fiber, the BBB encourages their protection and stimulates their numbers. The BBB is also offering a luxurious, eco friendly alternative to cashmere whose goats are causing deserts in Asia by their destructive grazing habits and excessive water requirements.

About You

Organization: The Big Blue Bike Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Shudhan

Last Name

Kohli

Twitter

http://twitter.com/#!/thebigbluebike

About Your Organization

Organization Name

The Big Blue Bike

Organization Website

Organization Country

United States, TX, Harris County

Country where this project is creating social impact

Peru, LI

Is your organization a

For‐profit

How long has your organization been operating?

1‐5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

The Big Blue Bike is striving to be the world's premier ethical and eco clothing brand with social impact.

What change do you want to bring to the world?

The Big Blue Bike (BBB) intends to protect colored alpacas which are facing severe shortages since larger companies request only white alpaca fiber (easier to dye and sort). By increasing demand for colored alpaca fiber, the BBB encourages their protection and stimulates their numbers. The BBB is also offering a luxurious, eco friendly alternative to cashmere whose goats are causing deserts in Asia by their destructive grazing habits and excessive water requirements.

This approach to solving the crisis in the colored alpaca population is simultaneously empowering marginalized communities of Lima. The fiber will be processed by Small-to-Mid Size Enterprises (SMEs) in the poorest areas that will then manufacture garments made from the fiber with a strong emphasis on quality and design.

What are the primary activities of your project?

Adsila, a San Francisco based global virtual incubator is providing the BBB with project management, advisory and support services, assisting the accomplishment of the following primary objectives:

I.To protect and increase colored alpacas in the Andes Mountains, by stimulating demand for the fiber

-Identify and select colored alpaca producers that treat and process the fiber, who will also receive training from local NGOs to improve breeding practices and treatment of the animals.
-Identify and select local SMEs to work directly with the BBB, that will process and treat the fiber and those that will turn it into yarn with respect for environmental standards, creating market-linkages and adding value to the supply chain.
-Encourage retail stores and consumers to purchase eco friendly products by placing an emphasis on style and quality

II.To increase job opportunity for the poor in Lima, especially women, working within SMEs.

-Identify and select poor women working within SMEs in close consultation with local NGOs that facilitate the BBB’s engagement at field level.
-Develop an on-going relationship with local NGOs to help in the engagement with SMEs and measure the project’s impact
-Manufacture directly with SMEs, creating a direct relationship with them, instead of going through intermediaries.
-Create long-term employment opportunities by working directly with the target group

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

Alpaca fiber is an eco-friendly alternative to cashmere with luxurious attributes. Baby alpaca fiber is just as soft and lightweight as cashmere, however, far more durable and insulated. The demand for cashmere has caused an overpopulation of cashmere goats in Asia (especially inner Mongolia). The goats' destructive grazing habits and requirement for excessive water & food resources has caused deserts in what used to be grasslands. Alpaca fiber is the best alternative to cashmere on the market, without the environmental footprint.

Through the clothing manufacturing line, the BBB is working directly with alpaca herders in Peru and creating demand for the fiber. By collaborating directly with the producers we create direct supply lines, creating increased financial value for the producers rather than going through intermediaries. The BBB will also work directly with women-focused SMEs within impoverished communities of Lima, who will manufacture and create the BBB's clothing line. By working with these SMEs, the BBB is directly addressing one of the biggest problems in the poor districts of Lima - creating job opportunities for vulnerable women.

The BBB’s approach to provide quality, eco friendly products that utilize local craft and resources will be marketed at trade shows to retailers, through partner distributors and directly to consumers through online media. The BBB’s emphasis on quality and design encourages consumers to buy eco-friendly products that protect the environment while creating job opportunities for disadvantaged communities.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for 1‐5 years

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

Democratic elections were recently held in Peru where former Peruvian military officer Ollanta Humala won. The new president still needs to demonstrate that he is keen on strengthening democratic institutions and tackling poverty in Peru, which affects about 50% of the population.

Lima has a poverty rate of 14.1% and carries over a third of Peru’s population. The city's poverty problem has a strong gender component. The level of women’s participation in the labor market is low and their access to health and education is still inadequate. The project therefore places a preference in providing job opportunities for poor women.

Poverty predominantly affects single women households with one or more children (below 14yrs, or adolescent) - which make up 25% of households in the urban areas of Peru. These poor women (either divorced, separated or widowed) also face the highest levels of domestic violence, or have been victims thereof (58.1%).

Alpaca herders and value:

There are over 170,000 families in Peru producing alpaca fiber, predominantly poor and living in rural areas in the South of Peru. Their socio-economic vulnerability is a reflection of centuries of exclusion. The alpaca herders can potentially make 50 times more their current earnings. The demand for alpaca fiber is projected to grow with exports to Western nations. This brings the need to improve links between herders and treating/processing capabilities to provide them with better market access.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

With a truly global upbringing, the founder, Shudhan Kohli, was born in a small fishing town in Kenya to a mother from India and father from England. His education brought him to the US where he got a degree at the University of Texas at Austin. Passionate about the world and an avid adventurer, the founder found himself in the Andes Mountains of Peru where he noticed a disproportionate amount of white alpacas compared to colored ones. Researching the animals, he realized that their fiber can serve as an eco friendly alternative to cashmere (due to the animal’s hardy nature requiring minimal water and food resources and non destructive grazing habits – a stark contrast to cashmere goats as they cause deserts in what used to be vast grasslands in Asia). Armed with this knowledge, he sought to create a fashion brand that helps to protect and increase the number of colored alpacas while creating better and long-term job opportunities for local manufacturing communities. By partnering with strong local NGOs for production and strategically sourcing colored alpaca fiber, the Big Blue Bike was born.

With the pilot stage implemented and products brought to market, the resoundingly positive feedback revealed true potential in the brand. It was then decided that the initiative would turn into a global one, sourcing local eco friendly materials produced with the goal to provide a positive social impact amongst disadvantaged communities in the world.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

Success will be measured by evaluating the numbers of people employed (particularly women) by the project from poor districts in Lima, number of products sold around the globe, and quantity of colored alpaca fiber produced (which, in turn, will determine the number of colored alpacas bred).

So far as part of its pilot stage, the BBB has achieved the following:

- To develop and expand markets, the BBB has successfully signed and set-up 6 wholesale accounts and 3 online distribution channels across the US, as part of the pilot stage.
- The BBB sold 100% of units produced during its very first season – fall/winter 2010. Orders for fall/winter 2011 have already come in.
- Feedback from the end-users has been very positive, with consumers appreciating the premium quality, feel and style of the products.
- The BBB has successfully created job opportunities for women (10 ladies who produced handmade and machine made garments) for the fall/winter collection of 2010.

To measure the environmental and social impact of the project in Lima, the following guide will be used:

https://adsilaorg-resourcesforngosandnpos.pbworks.com/w/file/27747570/Me...

The actual data and information will be gathered and verified through impact assessment studies, focus groups and one-on-one interviews. Designated local partners will produce progress reports, updates and press releases.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

Fewer than 100

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

1,001-10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

The BBB will surpass intermediaries in the production and raw material sourcing stages. In collaboration with local NGOs, the BBB is establishing relationships with alpaca herders that have the capacity and willingness to work with the project’s environmental goals. Relationships with SMEs that have training resources (scalability) in select poor districts of Lima are being developed and baseline data collected for impact measurement.

Diversifying and increasing revenue will ensure job expansion within SMEs. The BBB will expand distribution channels to Canada, Europe and emerging markets. Once ready to scale, a decision to replicate/adapt the model in other countries will be made - allowing the company to introduce new socially impacting products that utilize local craft & resources.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

The BBB successfully addressed a cashflow problem which brought limitations to the sales process. At the moment, cold calling is the primary mode of opening new wholesale accounts. Most of the cash is being devoted to sample mail outs to storefronts and national sales visits. A partnership with an established showroom in Los Angeles has been developed to counter this. The relationship will allow the BBB access major North American storefronts and open a significant amount of wholesale accounts. To meet the upcoming demand, the company’s cash flow will be strengthened through grants, donors and reinvestment of profits.

A further risk to the project was the reliance of the entire operations on the founder. Areas such as branding and marketing the brand’s message are best left to the experts, especially as the brand makes an entrance into the market. This area is currently being addressed as part of Adsila’s incubation process providing the BBB with mentorship, expertise and operational support.

Furthermore, the current model of accessing raw material and production through intermediaries causes bottlenecks across the supply chain. This delays and makes the process expensive. A one-time seed funding will revamp the new supply structure that we are putting in place ensuring a more durable and efficient operation. Our local partners are collaborating with us to develop direct relationships with SMEs and fiber providers for a more sustainable supply process that creates impact.

Tell us about your partnerships

The BBB is currently identifying additional stakeholders to partner with, including to the Peace Corps, to connect and educate local herders.

Existing partners are-

Multi-Functional: Adsila, a California based non profit incubator of early-stage social ventures has brought the BBB under its wing in order to provide business & social advisory services and strategic networking within the market. They serve as an advisory group assisting with every function of the company's business and social operations (not financial).

Social and Implementation: The BBB is currently working with a local NGO who are identifying communities in need of an economic impact for manufacturing partnerships. They have already supported the BBB in gathering statistics to determine social needs, and will assist in measuring the project's impact.

Manufacturing: A family owned manufacturing facility (intermediaries) using hand operated machines produces the BBB’s machine made collection. Their fair trade principles align with the BBB's values. They provide employment under fair trade wages and ethical working conditions while sub contracting micro enterprises in poor Lima communities.

Market Expansion: A show room located in LA's prestigious fashion district has been contracted to head sales for the fall/winter 2012 season. The showroom is very well respected in the industry and has been successful in introducing emerging knitwear brands to the market. Their vast sales network along with their partnerships will ensure the expansion of the BBB across the US, EU and Canada.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$100,000‐250,000

Explain your selections

Friends and family – Contributions from family and friends have helped the company’s cash flow allowing it to operate and conduct seasonal production

International and local NGOs – local NGOs will connect the BBB to other relevant partners, as well as supporting the BBB in measuring impact of the project areas. The Society of Registered Alpaca Producers (SPAR), will be important in helping the BBB set up direct supply lines with herders, and linking them to the market.

Customers - Cash generated from sales are reinvested into the company to grow and expand the operations as the BBB multiplies its customer base, enhances brand equity and enables expansion.

Adsila – BBB is incubated with Adsila for a min of 12 months. This partnership is providing expertise and knowhow of building and maintaining a sustainable business and social model. Their network of advisors and project managers are providing the founder with valuable insights, entrepreneurial training and mentorship. The partnership is strengthening BBB’s external and internal operations to expand its outreach.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

BBB, with Adsila’s support, will solidify operations during the pilot project in Peru. This will be achieved by streamlining the supply chain (surpassing intermediaries) and setting up a local office to oversee and manage the entire operations, including product design and development. Local NGOs will assist in the monitoring of the project’s social and environmental impact and communication of stakeholders’ needs. Emphasis will also be placed on the project’s scalability. Training programs will be established for SMEs to train and hire local talent based on the project’s production needs. Fiber sources will also be evaluated to ensure the ability to sustain large demand.

As the BBB strengthens its internal and external operations, the company will examine appropriate strategies to replicate/adapt its model in different countries (expansion of the program to Kenya is being explored). Trade show participation and distribution relationships will be developed across Europe, Canada and emerging markets. This will ensure a steady increase in market opportunity and ascertain demand of products developed in newly launched global initiatives. Initial growth will be funded by grants, donations and profits with the eventual goal of a self sustaining model - completely funded by the company’s profits.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Underemployment

SECONDARY

Restricted access to new markets

TERTIARY

Lack of skills/training

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

The project targets people in poor districts of Lima skilled in knitting (manually or with looms) but restricted in their economic activities. By targeting mainly women, who are particularly marginalized in the workforce, long term employment opportunities are being provided to impact their economic conditions.

Entering the fast-growing eco fashion and general green market, the target group is allowed the opportunity to grow with this global trend. As the market grows, supply will be expanded through the SMEs by hiring and training unskilled workers within the community, creating jobs and skill. Additionally, the project is adding value to alpaca herders by helping to produce, treat and process raw material which is natural, dye-free and therefore valued in the eco-fashion market.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Enhanced existing impact through addition of complementary services

SECONDARY

Grown geographic reach: Global

TERTIARY

Repurposed your model for other sectors/development needs

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

-The BBB is currently selecting other districts in Lima to work in. Baseline data collection has begun in order to measure impact. During this process, the BBB engages and consults with local stakeholders to ensure resources are utilized effectively and their needs met.
-Following the pilot project, the BBB will grow and stabilize. Once ready to scale, similar initiatives will be launched by consulting and engaging other local stakeholders. Currently, the prospect of launching an initiative in Kenya is being explored. Through Adsila’s 12 month incubation period, skills and requirements to sustain and scale the project will be obtained.
-Product groups will be expanded depending on market need in order to better utilize local skill and resources within newly developed initiatives.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

NGOs/Nonprofits.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

The BBB is collaborating with Adsila an incubator of early-stage social ventures. The partnership with them has provided expertise, mentorship and access to a large network of resources.

A large South American NGO is currently assisting the BBB with gathering relevant data of target communities to engage with. Their assistance has enabled the BBB to develop strategic partnerships with SMEs in select regions. The NGO will help with implementation and assessment of BBB’s social objectives.

Currently, the BBB is in negotiation with the Peace Corps to partner in the engagement efforts with alpaca herding communities. The partnership will assist in the sourcing of the fiber and educational efforts with the herders.

Fair Trade Certified Apparel: Improving the Lives of Cotton Farmers and Factory Workers

Lower trade barriers has created wealth due to increased trade, yet this wealth has not trickled down to the poorest of the poor. Fair Trade USA’s Fair Trade Certified™ standards for apparel are the win-win solution that vulnerable garment workers, anti-sweatshop advocates and companies have been seeking. Low wages, dangerous working conditions and limited chance for advancement have been central concerns of both labor advocates and conscientious companies. The Fair Trade label guarantees that stringent environmental, economic, and labor criteria are met.

About You

Organization: Fair Trade USA Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

James

Last Name

Solada

Twitter

Facebook Profile

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Fair Trade USA

Organization Website

Organization Country

United States, CA

Country where this project is creating social impact

India

Is your organization a

Non‐profit/NGO/citizen sector organization

How long has your organization been operating?

More than 5 years

Innovation

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Entry Form title

Fair Trade Certified Apparel: Improving the Lives of Cotton Farmers and Factory Workers

What change do you want to bring to the world?

Lower trade barriers has created wealth due to increased trade, yet this wealth has not trickled down to the poorest of the poor. Fair Trade USA’s Fair Trade Certified™ standards for apparel are the win-win solution that vulnerable garment workers, anti-sweatshop advocates and companies have been seeking. Low wages, dangerous working conditions and limited chance for advancement have been central concerns of both labor advocates and conscientious companies. The Fair Trade label guarantees that stringent environmental, economic, and labor criteria are met. It is a guarantee that farmers and workers receive a fair price and benefit from safe working conditions. Success is assured by connecting Fair Trade certified factories with U.S. companies that will purchase products on Fair Trade terms.

What are the primary activities of your project?

Fair Trade USA will provide training and capacity-building to 2,500 factory workers in India:
• Worker education and training. A critical component for all factories participating in this pilot program is worker education and capacity building. This training includes information unique to the new Fair Trade standards, such as the nature and uses of Fair Trade premiums, as well as training on fundamental aspects of workers’ rights, such as freedom to organize and grievance procedures.
• Factory inspection and certification. Fair Trade USA works with a network of local partners for factory training and auditing. Factories are audited against all aspects of the Fair Trade apparel standard. Performance standards track key indicators on income, empowerment, and environment. In this pilot, each participating manufacturing facility is evaluated on an annual basis to track how the facility is improving against the standards and whether workers are better off. This model can then be applied to the improvement of factory conditions for workers worldwide.
• Market outreach and linkage. Fair Trade USA also connects these model factories to U.S. customers that want to offer Fair Trade Certified products. Fair Trade USA has more than ten years of experience connecting developing world producer partners to value-added market opportunities in the United States. Fair Trade Certified products are found in over 60,000 U.S. retail outlets, including such mainstream industry leaders as Wal-Mart, Costco, and Target stores. Fair Trade USA’s garments team is working with more than 20 U.S.-based brands that have already committed to participating in this pilot program, and is engaged in active conversations with additional companies ranging from small, mission-driven brands to companies that supply major mainstream U.S. retailers.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

Fair Trade USA’s Fair Trade Certified Apparel Program is the first-ever garment sector intervention to guarantee financial benefits to factory workers and to promote direct consumer engagement in more responsible manufacturing. Fair Trade USA developed standards to extend the proven Fair Trade model up the supply chain to workers at cut-and-sew facilities.
Fair Trade USA’s pilot is using standards developed over four years of feasibility research. Factory workers are trained on their rights and on the new Fair Trade performance standards against which their facilities will be audited. Fair Trade USA is now working with a dozen factories in Latin America, Africa, and Asia, together with international buyers.
Fair Trade delivers higher wages to individual workers in addition to community development earnings called “social premium funds.” Workers decide democratically whether to distribute social premium funds as a cash bonus or invest it in collective projects that benefit the entire community:
• Literacy training (India, Liberia)
• Computer classes
• Improved sanitation facilities (Liberia)
• Health services (India, Liberia, and Peru)
• Scholarships for high school students (Liberia)
Unlike interventions such as factory auditing against codes of conduct, this project links ethical manufacturing directly to a consumer-facing label with growing recognition. This initiative will extend an innovative pilot program to new factories in India and help to create a model for worker empowerment that can be replicated worldwide.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for 1‐5 years

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

Fair Trade USA focuses on improving the lives of farmers and workers around the world, while empowering consumers in the U.S. to vote with their purchases. Through direct, equitable trade, farming and working families are able to eat better, keep their kids in school, improve health and housing, and invest in the future. Fair Trade helps keep families, local economies, the natural environment, and the larger community.
Fair Trade USA collaborates with a diverse group of supply chain stakeholders: regional and international trade organizations, businesses, exporters, importers, international development experts, and most importantly, Fair Trade producer cooperatives themselves.
Annually, Fair Trade USA recruits new farmer and worker producer groups into the Fair Trade system to benefit more farming communities and to supply U.S. companies with a stable and growing supply of sustainably sourced products. We provide training, quality improvement support, and market linkage to producers.
Here in the U.S., we are actively building a movement of Fair Trade committed advocates and ethical consumers. Fair Trade USA is growing a nationwide grassroots movement of students, consumers, educators, volunteer organizers, and local politicians through the Fair Trade Towns and Fair Trade Universities campaigns. There are currently campaigns running in more than 50 communities across the country.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

Paul Rice is the President & CEO of Fair Trade USA, the leading certifier of Fair Trade products in the United States.
Prior to launching Fair Trade USA, Paul worked for 11 years as a rural development specialist in the mountains of Nicaragua, where he founded and led the country's first Fair Trade, organic coffee export cooperative. His first-hand experience over the last 27 years in the areas of global supply chain transparency, social auditing, sustainable agriculture, and cooperative enterprise development is unique in the certification world. Paul is now a leading advocate of global market linkage as a core strategy for sustainable community development.
Since launching the Fair Trade Certified™ label in 1998, Fair Trade USA has established Fair Trade as one of the fastest growing segments of the U.S. food industry. Between 1999 and 2009, smallholder family farmers earned over $200 million in additional income selling to the U.S. Fair Trade market, allowing them to keep their kids in school, care for the land, and dramatically improve their living standards.
Paul has received numerous honors for his pioneering work as a social entrepreneur, including the Ashoka Fellowship (www.ashoka.org), the World Economic Forum Award for Social Entrepreneurship (www.schwabfound.org), Fast Company magazine’s Social Capitalist of the Year award (four-time winner), and the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship (www.skollfoundation.org).

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

Fair Trade USA enables sustainable development and community empowerment by cultivating a more equitable global trade model. In order to succeed, Fair Trade USA certifies and promotes Fair Trade products involving:
• Audits and Certification: of the global supply chain and transactions between U.S. companies, suppliers and distributors worldwide;
• Consumer Awareness: educating and informing domestic consumers, and bringing new manufacturers, distributors and retailers into the Fair Trade system; and
• Capacity Building: providing farmers and agricultural cooperatives with technical assistance, imparting critical business tools and information on labor rights, working conditions and adherence to strong environmental standards.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

101-1,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

Fair Trade USA will expand the network of countries, factories, and project partners involved with this initiative. Fair Trade USA will work at expanding the project nationally and internationally, so factory workers worldwide can receive an additional premium for their services.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

Like our food, our clothes have an impact on thousands of people, from cotton farmers in India to seamstresses in Nicaraguan factories, many of whom struggle to survive. Many believe that Fair Trade Certification, with its growing consumer recognition and widely recognized integrity, offers a solution to many of the development challenges faced by garment producers. In addition, Fair Trade garment standards can offer a more workable solution for manufacturing facilities dealing with a wide range of individual companies’ codes of conduct and terms of engagement, and for brands seeking credible third-party authentication of their responsible sourcing practices.

Tell us about your partnerships

In 2010, Fair Trade USA convened a Multi-Stakeholder Group of buyers, suppliers, auditors, trainers, NGOs, and Fair Trade producers to guide pilot implementation of certification standards through the end of 2012. Fair Trade USA hosted and facilitated two quarterly meetings and the first round of subcommittee meetings focused on income, empowerment, sourcing, and communications. Members of the Multi-Stakeholder Group include:

• North-based NGOs: Jackie DeCarlo, Catholic Relief Services (CRS) Fair Trade; Patricia Jurewicz, As You Sow / Responsible Sourcing Network; and Audrey Seagraves, World of Good Development Organization

• South-based NGOs: Homero Fuentes, Coverco; and Dr. Aqueel Khan, Association For Stimulating Know How (ASK) India

• Companies: Bena Burda, Maggie’s Organics/Clean Clothes, Inc.; Joe Falcone, Counter Sourcing ; Scott Leonard, Indigenous Designs; and Doug Cahn, The Cahn Group, LLC and Clear Voice

• Suppliers: Rajat Jaipuria, Rajlakshmi Cotton Mills Ltd. (RCML); and Chid Liberty, Liberian Women’s Sewing Project

• Cotton Producers: Ashutosh P. Deshpande, Chetna Organic Program (India)

• Fair Trade USA: Heather Franzese and Tierra Del Forte
)

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$100,000‐250,000

Explain your selections

Fair Trade USA is a mixed revenue model. Approximately 70 percent of our income comes from Fair Trade certification fees from U.S. businesses and approximately 30 percent comes from individual donations and foundation grants.

This project is done in partnership with the NGOs and businesses listed above and will depend on support from U.S. consumers.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

Fair Trade USA and its project partners intend to strengthen this project over the next three years through rigorous evaluation and improvement of the new standards for Fair Trade Certified apparel.

Fair Trade USA will also expand the network of countries, factories, and project partners involved with this initiative.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Restricted access to new markets

SECONDARY

Lack of efficiency

TERTIARY

Lack of skills/training

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

Fair Trade USA strengthens the ability of farmers, agricultural cooperatives and associations to function effectively and efficiently by integrating technical assistance and capacity building support into every project or program. Fair Trade leverages its connections along the entire supply chain to create more efficient links between producer and end markets, empowering smallholder producers to increase incomes through greater and more sustainable access to the Fair Trade market worldwide.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Grown geographic reach: Within host country

SECONDARY

Grown geographic reach: Multi-country

TERTIARY

Grown geographic reach: Global

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

Fair Trade USA is establishing Fair Trade Certified garments in India. If Fair Trade can expand Fair Trade apparel worldwide, it is pivotal that it first succeeds in India.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

NGOs/Nonprofits, For profit companies.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

Fair Trade USA launched its Apparel and Linen Products Program with 3 certified organic cotton producing factories in India, Liberia and Costa Rica, and with a dozen pioneering brands. Brands include:
• Liberty & Justice (San Francisco)
• HAE Now (El Sobrante, CA)
• Maggie’s Organics (Ypsilanti, MI)
• PrAna (Vista, CA)
• Indigenous Designs (Santa Rosa, CA)
• Marigold Fair Trade (Seattle, WA)

Fair Trade USA conducted auditor training in Mumbai, India in December 2010 in partnership with Social Accountability International (SAI) and their monitoring partners. Fair Trade has effectively linked producers to Fair Trade brands.

The Friends Global Model: Vocational training restaurants bringing marginalized youth into employment

Friends-International (FI) has for 16 years, implemented projects that support children, youth and families who live at-risk lifestyles by circumstance or force.

FI links, shares best practices with and offers training to the private sector, Civil Society and State actors to improve protection and sustainable reintegration mechanisms afforded to vulnerable children.

Through this project, I hope to bring bring employment/education through quality vocational training to those too vulnerable or marginalized to acquire it.

About You

Organization: Friends International Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Sebastien

Last Name

Marot

Twitter

http://twitter.com/#!/friends_intl

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Friends International

Organization Country

France

Country where this project is creating social impact

Cambodia, PP

Is your organization a

Non‐profit/NGO/citizen sector organization

How long has your organization been operating?

More than 5 years

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Innovation

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Entry Form title

The Friends Global Model: Vocational training restaurants bringing marginalized youth into employment

What change do you want to bring to the world?

Friends-International (FI) has for 16 years, implemented projects that support children, youth and families who live at-risk lifestyles by circumstance or force.

FI links, shares best practices with and offers training to the private sector, Civil Society and State actors to improve protection and sustainable reintegration mechanisms afforded to vulnerable children.

Through this project, I hope to bring bring employment/education through quality vocational training to those too vulnerable or marginalized to acquire it.

Based on a socially viable franchise model, the project provides effective and replicable social business tools. It supports sustainable development by sourcing organic, local produce and protects local heritage by reviving traditional recipes/cooking techniques.

What are the primary activities of your project?

- Continue operating the model training restaurants providing marketable vocational skills to vulnerable youth aged 15-24. Besides professional skills, the youth receive basic literacy (mother tongue, English), math and micro business skills training. Upon graduation, students receive job placement support and follow up during a year at minimum--helping them acquire much needed skills for self employment or the hospitality/Food & beverage job industry.

- Promote the model training restaurants within the social enterprise and NGO community to ensure expansion and support

- Continuously assess the use of and improve training, marketing and monitoring tools to ensure the model's highest quality in service provision and training afforded

- Support franchisees to build their capacities by establishing their social business team - Training and support for teachers and staff at each of the franchise restaurants by the FI international hospitality team (Food & Beverage / services trainers, quality monitors, social workers and marketers.)

- Monitor the success of the franchisees and run regular social impact evaluations so that the project remains advantageous to the trainees and their communities, and to ensure the quality of all franchisee operational standards

- Promote the franchise business and local cuisines through special events such as seasonal/weekly menu specials that feature more traditional recipes and cooking techniques, local guest chefs; spin-offs such as cookbooks;linking with credible organizations that are interested in the franchise model; linking with organizations working with local farmers/organic ingredient producers.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

My project will encourage a shift in image and activities associated with a 'franchise' (of which business successes are reliant on low paid jobs, little social promotion and standardized menus/looks) by presenting the 'Friends franchise model' as a strong social leveraging tool with localized tastes and social support for its young trainees.

The restaurants will research and serve recipes often forgotten, giving young people a renewed sense of identity and reviving local culture and traditions; the model will not reflect a standardized taste as in most franchises do, but rather a standardized quality with tastes unique to their location. In other words, this franchise model is free to replicate itself, each time, acquiring and reflecting the culture, cuisine and tastes of the country or province where it is established.

The Friends model will expand through replication. It will be quick to start-up and is based on proven business models as well as a sustainable social business support model. It will provide NGOs/other organizations interested in applying it with an entire package of social and business tools, high quality vocational training modules, links to social support systems, and monitoring/follow up training by the Friends International.

Even though there are other organizations that have started up similar projects in Phnom Penh, the Friends restaurants remain the top 2 restaurants in the city-competing with large businesses and chains. The model has already proven that it works well and our trainees have opened their own restaurants and businesses.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for less than a year

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

Friends-International (FI) began working with street children and youth in 1994. It is estimated that there are 150 million street children around the world.

Since then we have expanded our services to support other groups of marginalized children including those who are living and working on the streets, using drugs, affected by HIV, migrants, in prison or detention, victims of abuse, domestic violence or poverty, and those whose internationally recognized rights as children are denied or inaccessible for various reasons.

The present project will focus on children and youth aged 15-24 years old as the legal age for accessing vocational training is 15 years in most countries.

The franchisees that FI is targeting are local social enterprises and NGOs providing services to similar groups of vulnerable youth. Numerous requests from such organizations have come to FI over the last 3 years, leading to the idea of creating the Friends Global Restaurant Model. Most of these organizations have visited one of the model restaurants or have heard about its success and workability through media or conferences.

Although its action generally aims at generating income, social responsibility is a prerequisite and should never be jeopardized for income generation. The selection of franchisees is made based on a strict set of criteria and values that are mentioned on the collaboration agreement between FI and the franchisee and include:
- Legal frameworks;
- Social developmental philosophy and approaches;
- Best practice service provision to target groups;
- Environmental footprint
- Statutory and non-for-profit management
- Strict financial management and financial transparency
- Communication and funding policies

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

An excerpt from the introduction to “Best Of Friends-The Restaurant” Cookbook:
“My journey began on my last day traveling in Cambodia, when upon leaving a restaurant, the sight of a luxury vehicle driving past a group of children sleeping on cardboard boxes on the street stirred me deeply. I decided to stay on, and with the financial support of two friends, set up ‘Street Friends’ in Phnom Penh.
In August 1994, with a team of 3 Cambodians, some of whom still work with me, we opened the first center. 10 days on, all the children had left except for one. This is when we learned our first, most important lesson: we thought we knew what was best for the children and wanted to provide what we thought they needed-but we were wrong. They preferred the cool floor tiles to the mattresses we provided; we prepared a classroom-but they did not care about literacy-they wanted jobs. We learned to listen to the children and from then on, they have been guiding our work.
The FI vision is to uplift children with dignity, reintegrate them back into society as productive citizens and change negative attitudes towards them.
Vocational training (VT) quickly emerged as an essential need/request for/by the young people we worked with. We started the first VT restaurant in 2002, and set up a new one approx. every 3 years. We have received many requests from organizations willing to start similar projects that yield strong social/financial profits. In response, the idea for a franchise model was born, accepted by my core team and main partners—and here I am, presenting it to you”.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

16 years on since its establishment, FI is more than a non-profit that builds futures for formerly marginalized youth through education, training, reintegration and empowerment; it’s also a social enterprise promoting replicable models of social business with originality and success; investing profits in sustainable service expansion throughout its programs (social programs are 30% sustainable in 2010 from business profits). In 2010, FI provided services to over 23,000 children/youth in Cambodia, LaoPDR, Thailand and Indonesia.
At three restaurants (run by around 130 former street youth in training) customers can experience local cuisine, culture and ambience whilst contributing to helping the students gain the skills and confidence they require to work in the hospitality industry. Friends the Restaurant with its tapas-style menu is currently rated #1 restaurant in Phnom Penh on both Tripadvisor and Lonely Planet. Romdeng, serving creative food inspired by traditional recipes from Cambodia’s provinces, holds the #2 spot. Makphet, based in Vientiane, Lao PDR, serving food inspired by traditional Laotian cuisine, was recognized by the 2009-2010 Miele Guide as one of Asia’s best restaurants, and is currently in the #1 spot on tripadvisor. Each restaurant has published award winning cookbooks featuring rediscovered recipes, local culture and food customs (Makphet students traveled 3,000km, visiting four ethnic tribes in preparation of theirs) and are sold through a global network of partners.
The success of the Friends model is measured through:
- # of trainees
- # trainees placed in employment
- # trainees still in employment after 12 months
- Net profit increase of restaurant
- % of profit reallocated to sustain social services besides the restaurants
- customer satisfaction

How many people have been impacted by your project?

101-1,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

1,001-10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

As the franchise model expands geographically, it will reach a more diverse customer base that would also include local customers (in the more developed cities). The majority of our current customers are tourists/travelers; many of whom are interested in ‘giving back’ to the local community but don’t know how. As the franchise grows, it will be replicable not only in developing countries, but also in high income countries as marginalized populations and underemployment are problems of both the developed and developing world.
The model restaurants will be able to expand around itself as it grows in scope. Provision of wider range of: social support, business start-up support for trainees and other skills training (home based income generating alternatives)cookbooks, retail shops.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

Funding: As a social enterprise, raising funds for the core team and activities is a difficult task. However, it is expected that the income from the franchised restaurants will ensure the project becomes self sufficient over the years. As in the case of current FI restaurants, the income generated by the restaurants sustain all running costs from the restaurants, the training costs, teacher salaries and the cost of the social support offered to the trainees. The profit eventually also supports other FI social projects in the city or province where the restaurant is located.

Lack of support from the local F&B communities: It is difficult at first to compete with already established restaurants in terms of status or image, considering the fact that our most successful training restaurants are linked to social image. The project maintains quality of service and customer satisfaction as the most important elements of success, while the ‘social image’ comes second. Our restaurants have already proven that quality service, presentation and the social cause behind it, is what shapes our social image and draws a strong customer base.

Legal issues: Depending on the country they operate in, the franchisees have to register under different legal status to be able to provide vocational training and to operate as a business at the same time. The tax payments are often very different depending on the status adopted. The franchise model requires access to legal services regularly and to maintain close communication with the concerned authorities.

Tell us about your partnerships

The Skoll foundation has pledged part funding for developing this project over a 3 year period (2011-2013) while also supporting us to raise the project’s profile in media and to connect with key stakeholders.

The Schwab Foundation supports us to present and advocate our model of social business where social profit comes first.

The partnerships with local UNICEF offices in every country where we operate allow us to be on top of local issues and law-making related to vulnerable children and youth

Our participation with local networks of social service providers (NGOs, government services) allows us to ensure that the trainees are able to access a holistic range of social support (lodging, emotional support, medical care).

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

More than $1 million

Explain your selections

The FI projects are supported through:

- Grants from UN and other multilateral organizations, International NGOs, Foundations and Trusts(more than 50% of resources): Give2Asia, UNICEF, European Union, World Health Organisation, Save the Children Australia, Dan Church Aid, World Childhood Foundation, Aide et Action, The Global Fund, Mainline Foundation, Deutsche Bank, Skoll Foundation, Goutte d’Eau-a Child Support Network, CLSA Chairman’s Trust, Evert En Gisela Boudewijn Stichting and Wise Foundation.

- Donations from Governments (approx 15%): governments of developed nations offer grant aid directly through their missions/embassies in the recipient country or by channeling funds through international or bilateral organizations.
French Embassy, US and Australian Embassies

- Revenue from social businesses (approx 30% of resources): businesses providing hands on vocational training to youth and shops selling products made by caregivers of vulnerable or at-risk children.

- A small % of resources come from donations of individuals. This represents non profit organizations and individuals who are not covered by specific grant agreements—This is a source of funding that the organization is currently developing.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

This year (2011), the next step is to develop the overall standards for the franchise model, to apply them to all the restaurants currently operating (Makhpet, Friends the restaurant and Romdeng mentioned above) and to use them as the basis to develop the model across the region; (Objective is 8 restaurants, together with the existing restaurants, by 2014).

FI will develop a multidisciplinary and multicultural team composed of chefs, a designer, marketing officers, a legal adviser and social workers. It will include personnel originating from the countries where I am going to develop the model restaurant and aware of the culture and of personnel used to working in an international environment. This team will be extremely mobile with a base in Phnom Penh, Cambodia where the FI headquarters office are located.

In 2011, the first franchisee (in Kampong Som, Cambodia) will establish its restaurant. Over 2012 and 2013, 5 more restaurants will be established.

The communication of the project will start at the end of 2011 to focus on existing restaurants and to promote a social franchise developed in South Asia but which will expand to higher income countries in Europe and America.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Lack of skills/training

SECONDARY

Underemployment

TERTIARY

Lack of efficiency

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

Lack of skills/training: by increasing the number of training providers that specifically target vulnerable youth and:

- Literacy / numeracy: most trainees are illiterate or school dropouts. Administered through tailored teaching methods.

- Behavioral change: work with a team of peers/relationships with teachers/direct interaction with customers

- Entrepreneurship training: trainees are involved in the management cycle of a restaurant (goods purchase/stock management/menu design/monitoring of P&L)to gain hospitality business start up knowledge

The project tackles underemployment as its ultimate goal to support youth who have been involved in low paid and often dangerous/illegal labor into a professional occupation with reasonable financial and social benefits.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Influenced other organizations and institutions through the spread of best practices

SECONDARY

Grown geographic reach: Multi-country

TERTIARY

Grown geographic reach: Within host country

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

Current growth plans includes developing the profile of the 3 existing training restaurants:
- Media attention : visits from famous chefs, display in travel magazines and tour guides (Friends Restaurants already featured in local/international magazines/visited by international chef, Gordon Ramsey, feature special on BBC's Alvin's from Guide to Good Business)
- Development of by products: cook books, aprons, thsirts….

Next year:
- 4 restaurants will be established: 1 in Thailand, 1 in Indonesia, 2 in Cambodia (Siem Reap and Kampong Som)
- Promotion of the franchise concept will be initiated (so far only advertising of individual restaurants took place)

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

Government, NGOs/Nonprofits, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

Government: support us to ensure our training restaurants are in line with national vocational training requirements/and that they recognize the diplomas of the students/provide administrative support for students with ID documents (family books, birth registration numbers)

NGOs: help us ensure that we are able to provide holistic social support to the trainees (who might have been living on the streets, or coming out from prison, before starting training): medical care, lodging, contact with families

Universities: through presentations to students, help us show that the industry can have a social impact and can be used as a social actor (e.g. national university in Laos and Cambodia, the countries where there are restaurants currently)

Cycle Chalao!

We wish to establish and run Bicycle Sharing Systems in Developing Countries. By Collaborations with Public Authorities and Corporates we will be starting Public Bicycle Sharing Systems in Urban Areas.

About You

Organization: I-initiate Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Raj

Last Name

Janagam

About Your Organization

Organization Name

I-initiate

Organization Website

Organization Country

India, MM

Country where this project is creating social impact

India, MM

Is your organization a

For‐profit

How long has your organization been operating?

1‐5 years

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Innovation

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Entry Form title

Cycle Chalao!

What change do you want to bring to the world?

We wish to establish and run Bicycle Sharing Systems in Developing Countries. By Collaborations with Public Authorities and Corporates we will be starting Public Bicycle Sharing Systems in Urban Areas.

What are the primary activities of your project?

Running Bicycle Sharing Program which includes providing bicycles on hire for short distance commuting.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

A simple yet unique and powerful solution to the current traffic situation. A transport option much needed at dense cities and yet not have been tried especially in cities like Mumbai.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for 1‐5 years

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

Middle Class Young Community where commuting forms a significant activity in their livelihood.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

The development sector professional with thirst to work on the most pressing issues of our time. The idea came our of personal experiences and research of lack of sustainable transport option in growing cities and the associated problems with the existing transport options.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

We have made more than 500 routine commuters take Bicycles in their routine commuting since we launched saving more than 1.25 tonnes of CO2 and Cost of transportation for the subscribers.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

101-1,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

Collaborations with public authorities and corporates, a sound financially viable business model for growth to reach the target of running bike sharing system across all the major metropolitan areas in India

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

Unfavourable climatic conditions might hinder the yearly activities where we plan to have additional measures for coping up with the requirements.

Tell us about your partnerships

Couple of public authorities formally endorsing and supporting the initiative in terms of logistics. Some Corporate and Civil Society organisations supporting us as strategic partners.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$100,000‐250,000

Explain your selections

via Grants, Soft loans and payment to our services.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

Develop strategic partnerships with potential investment sources and businesses.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Lack of access to information and networks

SECONDARY

Lack of efficiency

TERTIARY

Lack of efficiency

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

Savings in cost and access to employment via the business model

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Grown geographic reach: Within host country

SECONDARY

Grown geographic reach: Multi-country

TERTIARY

Enhanced existing impact through addition of complementary services

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

To scale the model across the major cities in India

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

Government, Technology providers, NGOs/Nonprofits, For profit companies, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

Various Financial and Non Financial Resources have been gathered from different institutions.

Green Technology To Create Economic Opportunities For Poor Urban Youth

Earthen Glow empowers poor urban youth with a business model that leverages distribution of clean energy to street vendors. Solar Charging Stations power self-contained, mobile LED lighting devices that are rented for a fee to street vendors.

Street Vendors are a part of almost all major cities in India. On an average every major city has between 10,000-25,000 street vendors. Almost all of these vendors use kerosene lamps for night time street hawking.

The change we drive into the world with this initiative is clean lighting and employment for the urban poor.

About You

Organization: Earthen Glow Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Ramana

Last Name

Gogula

Twitter

Facebook Profile

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Earthen Glow

Organization Website

Organization Country

India, AP

Country where this project is creating social impact

India, AP

Is your organization a

For‐profit

How long has your organization been operating?

Less than a year

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

Green Technology To Create Economic Opportunities For Poor Urban Youth

What change do you want to bring to the world?

Earthen Glow empowers poor urban youth with a business model that leverages distribution of clean energy to street vendors. Solar Charging Stations power self-contained, mobile LED lighting devices that are rented for a fee to street vendors.

Street Vendors are a part of almost all major cities in India. On an average every major city has between 10,000-25,000 street vendors. Almost all of these vendors use kerosene lamps for night time street hawking.

The change we drive into the world with this initiative is clean lighting and employment for the urban poor.

What are the primary activities of your project?

Our first goal was to identify a cross-section of the urban poor who would benefit from being part of our initiative. We are in the process of developing a comprehensive training program that would bring in around 200 individuals/city into our program.

Being a technology company, our product design has been driven based on end user feedback. We have tied up with various street vendor associations to articulate our value proposition for their support.

In this process we have identified clear vendor segments that need clean lighting during their late evening & night sales. We are also looking at a franchise model that would be attractive for small business entrepreneurs to sponsor these solar charging stations.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

There are three distinct areas we address:

(a) TECHNOLOGY: Our proprietary architecture ensures that we maximize the energy harvested from the SUN and optimize its storage into batteries. Our microprocessor based algorithms ensure fast charging of the lighting devices that we also design

(b) BUSINESS: Our business model ensures employment to poor urban youth and also drives small business entrepreneurship through our franchise model.

(c) ENVIRONMENT: We can also claim Carbon Credits for the amount of atmospheric CO2 emission that we save.

Even though there have been prior instances of similar implementation, they could not scale because of the way the technology was implemented, the lack of a larger community being involved and the ability to support & train the employees and entrepreneurs.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for less than a year

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

Interacting with street vendor is almost inevitable in modern India. From vegetables, to fast foods, to flowers, to fruits and a host of other services, we deal with them on a daily basis.

There are more than 540 street vendor organizations, trade unions and community-based associations across 22 States of India. There are more than 12 million urban street vendors of India.

We are now at a point in time where these various vendor organizations can be reached with greater ease. If this clean lighting initiative can be successfully implemented in once city, it can be easily duplicated across similar geographies across the world.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

Ramana Gogula, CEO of Earthen Glow has an MS in Alternative Energy from IIT, Kharagpur & an MS in Computer Science from LSU, USA.

Prior to starting Earthen Glow, he was Managing Director of Sybase - South East Asia and focused on building sales and marketing teams for the SE Asian market.

He later founded his own eLearning Company called Liqwid Krystal. As CEO of Liqwid Krystal, he focused on designing and building eLearning platforms for the international markets.

He is also a very successful musician & composer who produced many world music bands in the Bay Area, California. His own album "In Search Of A Soul" went on to be the #1 music video on MTV & Channel V in India. He has since composed film music for 25 films in South Indian Languages.

After a successful sabbatical stint in the entertainment industry, he has come full circle with Earthen Glow.

The company is built on a Vision to deliver clean light & water to over a billion people who have no access to the grid.

The Mission of the Company is to build affordable & sustainable clean energy technologies that leverage Solar Energy, Light Emitting Diodes(LED) and low energy consuming devices to improve the quality of rural households.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

We are in the design phase of out project. We have completed building prototypes of out lighting devices and our Solar Charge Station.

We measure our success on the sustainability, community adaptation levels and the revenue model of our products and technology

How many people have been impacted by your project?

Fewer than 100

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

We are a Clean Energy Company that currently focuses on facilitating clean light and water rural landscapes. We see our technology having immense applicability in the Urban terrain. The new sector that we are currently researching and building prototype is plug & play grid-based 40W/60W incandescent bulb replacement market.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

The greatest challenge for any new technology intervention is its community adaptation.

Hand-holding customers, providing technical support and building vendor support groups are key.

Tell us about your partnerships

Our Technology Partner Citizen LED, Microchip USA, On Semiconductors
USA, Texas Instruments USA, Linear Technologies USA.

Our University Partner JNTU, Kakinada

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$50,001‐100,000

Explain your selections

Earthern Glow has been jump-started with personal funding of $20,000.

We have also boot strapped our Company with a project we did for JNTU University. Using these resources we have identified areas of growth and revenue generation. Working with regional government we have identified 50 villages where we can implement our technology. They have shortlisted 2 villages as pilot projects that we will be implementing over the next 3-6 months.

We have also taken our core technology components and diversified into other areas of growth such as solar water pumps, LED lighting for various verticals that are relevant to our strategy.

The street-vendor project has been sent as a proposal to a number of Corporations for sponsorship.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

Our success lies in implementing the Street Vendor project without a hitch in one city. On an average every city has around 10,000 street vendors. If we build a 100 Solar Charging Stations/City, we can generate revenues close to $2,000,000/city

Once we are confident of a successful implementation in once city, replicating it to all major cities in the country and expanding this around the world with similar requirements is a franchisee model.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Restricted access to new markets

SECONDARY

Lack of skills/training

TERTIARY

Underemployment

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

In our case we are trying to move street vendors away from kerosene for lighting to self powered solar-LED lighting solutions. To push this advantage hard into the market, we are building sustainable, robust plug & play products. We train the urban youth on the technology and even structure the territories and sales models.

We break the city into regions and every region has a group of urban youth that we recruit to man and run our Solar Charge Stations. Each Solar stations powers up to 100 Lights that can be fast-charged during the day. In the evening the recruits go around distributing the lamps to the vendors in their region. Every vendor pays for the use of this clean light at a pre-defined rate. At $0.50 cents/lamp each charging station generates close to $18,250/annum.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Grown geographic reach: Global

SECONDARY

Enhanced existing impact through addition of complementary services

TERTIARY

Repurposed your model for other sectors/development needs

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

Earthen Glow is a clean energy solutions company the focuses on off-grid rural landscapes. We are currently targeting India, Africa and South-East Asia as our primary markets. We build our own highly efficient solar energy harvesting and energy storage devices. We design our own LED drivers for our lighting solutions. We leverage these technology innovations into building applications to facilitate clean lighting and water in rural areas.

Our Solar Charging Stations are being tested in remote villages to facilitate community lighting. Miniature versions of these charging stations power individual homes with ceiling lights and hand-held lanterns.

The Solar Charging Station model that we applied to the street-vendors is easily adaptable multiple applications in rural landscapes.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

Government, Technology providers, NGOs/Nonprofits, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

We are actively involved with the government into identifying remote villages that have lighting & water requirements. After having researched over 100 villages in South India, we have actually gone back to the drawing board to redesign our products to be more sustainable, robust and have the ability to able to function with as little human intervention as possible.

Our experience with the University (JNTU)where we applied our core architecture to design corridor lighting has been extremely well received and now we are in the process of designing a completely Green Campus for them.

We see NGOs & Non Profits as powerful vehicles to take our products and technologies into regions that we may never be able to reach.

ROPE - A trusted supplier brand of sustainable, eco friendly products using scalable skills and a rural centric production model

Bring (back) craft, nature and village production to main stream in the form of utilitarian handmade products of simple, contemporary designs made from renewable natural fibers. World over customers – institutional buyers, businesses, end customers – are increasingly interested in environment friendly products made by non-polluting processes. ROPE aims to fill the absence in the fair trade sector of large scale, trusted, professional suppliers of eco-friendly and custom made home textiles, home decor, packaging and life style products for retail chains and global corporate buyers.

About You

Organization: ROPE Enterprises Pvt. Ltd. Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Sreejith

Last Name

NN

Twitter

About Your Organization

Organization Name

ROPE Enterprises Pvt. Ltd.

Organization Country

India, TN

Country where this project is creating social impact

India, TN

Is your organization a

For‐profit

How long has your organization been operating?

1‐5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

ROPE - A trusted supplier brand of sustainable, eco friendly products using scalable skills and a rural centric production model

What change do you want to bring to the world?

Bring (back) craft, nature and village production to main stream in the form of utilitarian handmade products of simple, contemporary designs made from renewable natural fibers. World over customers – institutional buyers, businesses, end customers – are increasingly interested in environment friendly products made by non-polluting processes. ROPE aims to fill the absence in the fair trade sector of large scale, trusted, professional suppliers of eco-friendly and custom made home textiles, home decor, packaging and life style products for retail chains and global corporate buyers. For this market ROPE designs and/or custom makes scalable, cost competitive handmade products well targeted to fit the above categories from sustainable materials ensuring quality and process standards

What are the primary activities of your project?

Low cost and labour intensive manufacturing of environment friendly, handmade products from villages is a huge opportunity for developing nations because of large unskilled and semi skilled rural populations dispersed across the villages.

ROPE’s mission is to create a commercially viable and replicable model of large scale rural manufacturing to leverage the full potential of the skills and renewable environment friendly resources of our villages in the global markets and create widespread rural employment opportunities
ROPE establishes hub and spoke based clusters of rural manufacturing units, which require lower capex and is easily scalable and replicable. Each cluster will have a number of village level units employing 50 – 100 local artisans managed by a central hub. This model allows ROPE artisans to work from near to their home. The village level units work on specific products or dedicated customer orders aggregated by hubs.

ROPE stays away from niche, luxury handicrafts products requiring high levels of skill and creativity and are sold only for their aesthetic value thereby catering to a small market. ROPE tries to combine utility with design value additions focusing on affordability aiming large volumes and scalability in production. Please see the two video links below

[video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UF0XgivpX0A]
[video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-H1A1QadJs]

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

ROPE’s innovation is its focus on and its model and systems whereby rural artisans manufacture items according to global customers' specifications. Most others sell existing artisan products. No other organization in craft or fair-trade areas actively seeks buyers' requirements and custom-makes products in large scale. Instead of linking existing products to existing retail channels, ROPE reaches globally, seeking suitable production opportunities that can be brought to its rural units.

Specifically, ROPE presents global customers in its target sectors a portfolio of skills, materials, and sample products which help them define their products. Besides products per existing samples, ROPE has produced many new items and applications (e.g eco friendly raw materials for natural paper, new eco friendly materials for making decorative veneers by plywood industry, low cost bio degradable bags for a shoe brand and also for distribution of ‘prasad’ by a famous temple, floral home decorative products and wall hangings) which demonstrate the power of customer-driven products. ROPE establishes production centers specifically to meet large long term orders.

Innovative operations are critical to ROPE's success. As it uses small production units in clusters each managed by a central hub to produce diverse products with short lead times, ROPE is developing innovative IT tools which work with wireless PDAs and cell phones. This will allow efficient and effective communication at all stages of the supply chain helping ROPE to be more successful and grow to a greater scale.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for 1‐5 years

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

ROPE addresses the employment problems of rural unorganized sectors. For example, traditional handloom weavers in India face one of the largest rates of migration to urban / industrial hubs. Losing out to global competition from mechanized power looms, weaver households work on average less than 200 days per year (Kanitkar, A.). Existing weavers are under constant pressure from middlemen to reduce prices. These factors result in poor working conditions and a low quality of life among weavers with no other livelihood options. Their plight can be found at tinyurl.com/yucjjq. Unfortunately, this problem is neither small nor confined to handloom weavers. In India alone, 340 million workers are employed in the unorganized sector, 60 million are in handmade production sectors (www.nceus.gov.in). ROPE model is needed to combat such employment problems of rural unorganized sectors.

Ninety percentage of the 1000 plus rural workers engaged by ROPE are women. Of this 85% are between the age of 18 to 40 and 71% are married. 75% of workers have studied below 10th standard, which means unskilled manufacturing or agri labour are the only possible employment opportunities for them. Before ROPE many of them were getting seasonal employment in agriculture fields, which typically provides 100 to 150 days of work in a year with an annual income of $250 to $400. Some of them were employed by local textile mills or labour intensive factories like match factories. These factories require the women to either migrate or travel an average up and down distance of 60 km a day. 30% of women workers engaged by ROPE were unemployed before ROPE as they could not travel or migrate. ROPE units are within 5 km distance of travel for 100% of the workers and for 80% the unit they work is within 2 km travel, which they cover by walk or cycle. ROPE also provide many of them having small kids the option of work from home.

ROPE's impact at the local level wherever it works are significant. ROPE provides continuous work to many artisans who in turn spend their income on their families and in their local rural communities. Even more significantly, ROPE's revolutionary impact shows other organizations that rural areas and workers can produce quality cost competitive products. Our hope is that ROPE will motivate other organizations to establish facilities for gainfully employing local populations in rural areas and therefore promote rural development.

Please see the below links to know more about informal sector unorganised workers and communities engaged by ROPE in production

tinyurl.com/3yul4g
tinyurl.com/2kb6kg

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

From 2002, Sreejith worked in India with rural entrepreneurs and self-help groups promoting both micro finance groups and micro-enterprises and helping them create links with mainstream companies. He played leadership roles within organizations such DHAN Foundation and Villgro Innovations Foundation,which allowed him to travel within India, and familiarize with many development and business models and leaders. Sreejith's post-graduate work focused on business management applications for development initiatives such as natural resources management, micro-finance and micro-enterprise promotion.

Sreejith developed the ROPE production idea while working with a grassroots NGO, DHAN Foundation. As MD to a micro finance federation of rural self-help groups promoted by DHAN foundation with over 4000 rural women members, he set up many micro enterprises owned by women SHGs with industry tie up including a coil spring production unit outsourcing to these poor women work from a local manufacturer.

Subsequently Sreejith handled business incubation of dairy sector innovations in Villgro Innovations Foundation, Chennai with the responsibility of identifying and nurturing market friendly innovations, manage seed funding and help set up rural marketing channels for them. Later, he handled operations of a rural BPO start up working on a franchise model establishing rural BPO delivery centers. When he came across a project at IIT Madras which trained rural artisans in product design with the help of village Internet kiosks, Sreejith decided to make it a rural production organization.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

The hub and spoke distributed manufacturing model enables replication of low cost and networked production units closer to the raw material sources or skills. The following are some of the success stories so far

a) When ROPE approached a large Indian export house based on the suggestion of their buyer – a global retail giant - with products showcasing our skills and materials, they gave us a nylon net bag imported in lakhs and asked us if we can replicate this in a natural material. ROPE showed them a number of designs of which a design using banana fiber – an agro waste - was accepted and ROPE was asked to set up units manufacturing 10,000 bags per week. ROPE set up a cluster of units in Madurai district of Tamil nadu, which employs 500 rural skilled workers. The cluster consisted of village level units employing local population working out of local infrastructure like unused marriage halls and a hub with factory license running from a rented small factory in a place central to the cluster. Whenever the customer wanted us to increase production ROPE added new village level units at minimal capex and lead times
b) When another export house in the same sector approached ROPE for mass manufacturing of a decorative product from jute, ROPE set up a similar cluster near to the buyer employing close to 150 rural women the same way

Gradually each of these customers have become ongoing key accounts of ROPE and guided by their requirements ROPE has been showcasing them new designs frequently, many of which resulted in large volume long term orders. Many customers with unique applications of natural materials found a good supplier in ROPE like three companies from the US, one making paper from banana fiber flakes; one requiring handloom woven wide banana fiber window blinds and a third one making wall panels from handloom woven river grass mats.

The key success parameters of ROPE are

a) CAGR of revenue – Currently 195% over the last three years and ROPE targets maintaining it above 90% for the next 5 years
b) Number of workers engaged / benefited – currentlyabout 1000 rural semi skilled and skilled workers. Targets to generate employment for over 5000 rural workers in the next three years
c) EBITDA – ROPE hopes to be EBITDA positive from the current year and targets posting annual EBITDA of 12% to be sustainable

How many people have been impacted by your project?

1,001- 10,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

1,001-10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

Over the next three years ROPE’s primary plan is to a) add more key accounts in its target segments like home decorative and dry flower products; low cost eco friendly packaging; home furnishings like mats, window blinds and carpets; and lifestyle products like eco friendly handmade bags b) mine existing and new key accounts to win more orders and c) add some new skills to fit existing product segments like candle making, which fit the home decor segment. Over the next three years ROPE also sees establishing itself in few more states in India apart from Tamil Nadu. With geographic expansion and increase in workforce ROPE will be implementing some of the IT based systems, which it is currently piloting and that will help perfect the model and make it more scalable.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

a)Sustainable and affordable designs and new product development are very central to ROPE’s target of mainstream markets. Costly designs out of sync with customer tastes are one of the big barriers in acceptance of ROPE products by buyers. ROPE addresses this by working very closely with our buyers and also continuously bench mark features of our designs and prices with market studies. These help us to better target our efforts and give specific briefs to the consultant and in house designers
b)Short product life cycles spanning across two to three years – ROPE’s key account buyers have to replace the successful products every two to three years and what that means for ROPE is to develop replacement products at our end and provide more options to our buyers. Once one of the new designs are accepted, the entire back production team should be re-trained. But design variations keeping the same core skill help ROPE to minimise the retraining required and avoid drastic losses in productivity and quality during the early months of a new products
c)Competition from sweat shop kind of manufacturers – ROPE faces stiff competition from suppliers in relatively lower cost countries, who many times run sweat-shop kind of factories. They are also aided by more flexible regulatory policies by respective Governments and lower exchange rates. This competition must be won by improved efficiency lowering costs by the use of innovative technology enabled systems, quality of designs and professional services
d)Skill training and improving productivity and quality of work by the artisans / skilled workers – ROPE’s commercial success hinges on the consistency of quality and optimal productivity by workers. ROPE’s large wholesale buyers negotiate best fixed prices and reaching the best possible quality and productivity alone will ensure commercial sustainability. ROPE addresses this by rigorous on the job training, efficient monitoring and information systems and incentives based on quality and productivity
e)Customer awareness and handling resistance to change from much cheaper plastics or other synthetic material products to eco friendly, socially responsible hand made products: ROPE realises that this is also a functions of designs, utility of products and price. Through innovations in this ROPE hopes to continuously address this.

Tell us about your partnerships

ROPE got incubated by the Rural Technology and Business Incubator (RTBI) of IIT Madras. RTBI provided ROPE with a seed funding, office space, access to its networks and is also helping us with IT based technology development for efficient coordination of distributed production centers. ROPE has its current office space in the IIT Madras Research Park. Villgro Innovations Foundations, Chennai also extended their incubation support to ROPE considering it as an innovative and scalable approach for rural employment generation. Villgro through their Lemelson Recognition and Mentoring Programme (in partnership with IIT Madras) provided early stage debt funding to ROPE. Villgro continue to partner with ROPE supporting our training and capacity building needs, bringing high quality fellows and interns to ROPE and giving us access to their networks

ROPE received early stage equity investments from Mr. Patrick Fischer who is one of the co-founders and directors, National Research Development Corporation (NRDC) founded by Govt. Of India and VenturEast Tenet Fund, a VC fund operating from Chennai.

ROPE’s most valuable partners are our key account customers with whom we keep discussing new products and projects and who consider ROPE as their trusted supplier. Similarly ROPE has its own trusted suppliers for raw materials, labour and other input materials used in production. ROPE has a set of professional partners on the legal, accounting, auditing, documentation and web and IT support fronts. ROPE also has ongoing relationships with many institutions like National Institute of Design (NID), India; National Institutes of Fashion Technology (NIFTs) and Indian Institute of Crafts and Design (IICD) for recruiting student interns and design development.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$250,001‐500,000

Explain your selections

Friends and family – They have been a great moral support from the beginning. At times when required they also helped ROPE financially.

Individuals – Mr. Patrick Fischer is one of the co-founders of ROPE. He is ROPE’s first investor and also sits in the board. He has been involved in all our major endeavours from the beginning and continues to support in our strategy, business development, technology adoption and connecting with investors. Prof. Ashok Jhunjhunwala of IIT Madras is one of the mentors of the company and promoter. There are many other individuals who lent their support and guidance to ROPE and also helped us with their networks like Dr. Aarti Kawla, who is a design expert and social anthropologist

Foundations – ROPE received the incubation support from Villgro Innovations Foundation, Chennai. This included debt funding, access to high quality human resources as fellows and interns, advisory support, networking support, recognition in various forums, etc.

National Government – ROPE has received indirect support of Indian Government through NRDC and RTBI of IIT Madras.

Customers – ROPE earns revenue from customers and many of them are good partners to us with their frequent design support, guidance in compliance and favourable payment terms

Others – ROPE received support from a Chennai based venture fund

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

1)Raising more capital to fully leverage many market opportunities by expanding the diversifying the rural production clusters, adding more skill components and training, engaging more business development resources both for the domestic and international markets and participating in international trade fairs
2)Strengthen marketing and business development efforts using additional capital through frequent campaigns, use of social and print media, participation in international trade fairs, engaging international business development agents and consultants. These efforts will target increasing the number of key accounts and increase the direct orders from international retail chains
3)Continuous development of new, unique designs and continuous innovations in terms of use of newer materials and skills is a must to win more customers and orders and increase margins.
Efforts in this should also be strengthened.
4)ROPE will strengthen its case in front of customers and improve the effectiveness of its internal processes by winning internationally accepted certifications and quality awards like fair trade and ISO.
5)ROPE will strengthen its welfare efforts among the artisans through schemes like insurance, educational scholarships for the artisan children, health camps and different recreational programmes

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Underemployment

SECONDARY

Lack of skills/training

TERTIARY

Lack of access to information and networks

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

It is critical to create low cost village manufacturing opportunities in large scale for inclusive growth of masses in developing countries. These can help millions to come out of poverty and access health care and education paving way for an inclusive move towards higher skilled jobs and accelerated growth. In this context ROPE' model of making low skilled products with greater market potential will gainfully employ many women and men in villages.

ROPE’s focus on scalability, mainstream appeal and customized products goes a long way in creating sustained demand. The demand ensures that underemployment among artisans are avoided. Across its production centers ROPE invests in training and skill building, in working capital and improving the infrastructure of its production units.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Grown geographic reach: Within host country

SECONDARY

Other (please specify below)

TERTIARY

Grown geographic reach: Multi-country

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

As ROPE's immediate focus is to increase orders in its current product segments ROPE will expand to more states in India with increased demand. This expansion will be guided by the availability of scalable skills or renewable natural raw materials or labour potential. As it expands geographically ROPE will explore new product segments and new markets, which can be catered by the existing skills of its human power, labour potential and/or portfolio of eco friendly raw materials. This diversification will be the next (second) pathway of relevance for ROPE. Once ROPE reaches certain scale and size and also establishes itself in a number of product segments, ROPE will explore setting up production clusters in other countries leveraging new skills and/or materials unique to them.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

NGOs/Nonprofits, For profit companies, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

ROPE's customers and most of its suppliers are for profit companies. One of the investors of ROPE is also a for profit company. Apart from Villgro and RTBI who are nonprofits and ROPE's important partners as explained elsewhere, ROPE partnered with few other non profits for setting up rural production units for us and also to offer training to their members. As explained elsewhere ROPE has a number of associations with academic institutions, IIT Madras being the most important. Others are like NID, NIFT and IICD. A number of well known academic institutions are ROPE's customers sourcing eco friendly gift items like bags and folders from us.

Mt. Elgon Self-Help Community Project

Location

Mbale
Uganda

Mt. Elgon Self-Help Community Project Produces solar panels to harness the power of the sun and transform it into affordable energy sources for rural needs. The organization produces solar panels from one watt to 65 watts, modified to suit local needs that are then sold as an alternative source of energy to local communities at a relatively affordable price. Solar systems are used for lighting, and income generation. More over, youth who are directly involved in the production process receive an income.

Gulfsouth Youth Biodiesel Project (GYBP)

Operation REACH’s Gulfsouth Youth Biodiesel Project is an innovative youth-led social enterprise designed to collect and recycle New Orleans’ used cooking oil into environmentally-friendly biodiesel fuel as a means of educating and developing leadership, environmental stewardship, and social entrepreneurship of young people for the “Green Collar” workforce.

About You

Organization: Operation REACH, Inc. Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Sarah

Last Name

Sanders

Twitter

Facebook Profile

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Operation REACH, Inc.

Organization Website

Organization Country

United States, LA, Orleans Parish

Country where this project is creating social impact

United States, LA, Orleans Parish

Is your organization a

Non‐profit/NGO/citizen sector organization

How long has your organization been operating?

More than 5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

Gulfsouth Youth Biodiesel Project (GYBP)

What change do you want to bring to the world?

Operation REACH’s Gulfsouth Youth Biodiesel Project is an innovative youth-led social enterprise designed to collect and recycle New Orleans’ used cooking oil into environmentally-friendly biodiesel fuel as a means of educating and developing leadership, environmental stewardship, and social entrepreneurship of young people for the “Green Collar” workforce.

What are the primary activities of your project?

The Gulfsouth Youth Biodiesel Project program cycle operates on 18-week sessions Monday through Friday for 35 participants. Each class engages youth in learning in multiple formats, including workshops, laboratory, fieldwork and practicum, and community-based applications. The GYBP involves lecture, lab work, and group problem solving, and hands-on field work, which will include biodiesel production, feedstock production and collection, NCCER training and certification, marketing, surveying, data entry, and problem solving. Fridays will be reserved for team-building, evaluation, and leadership development. Each participant will be paired with a mentor to provide one-one-one advising and career development support.

GYBP participants spend the majority of their time involved in community outreach, business development and management, and biodiesel and feedstock production. This is enhanced by additional work exploration opportunities focused on green jobs, social entrepreneurship, and renewable energy with GYBP partners. Participants are exposed to career opportunities with local organizations that include green building, weatherization and sustainable deconstruction through guest speakers, site visits and service learning projects with partner agencies like Rebuilding Together and the Alliance for Affordable Energy.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

The Gulfsouth Youth Biodiesel Project is innovative because it helps create strong communities in several distinctive ways:
-It creates a market for alternative fuels like biodiesel as a viable and available alternative in a city that is in the shadow of the largest oil spill that has ever touched the shores of the United States.
-It makes New Orleans’ reputation for fried foods into an asset. The project has the potential to recycle up to 2 million gallons of cooking oil that is used in New Orleans each year to fry local culinary delights from beignets to shrimp and oysters. Much of the city’s cooking oil ends up in storm drains, backyards or other waste streams.
-It engages out-of-school youth between the ages of 16 and 25 who have been termed by many as “hard to reach.” These young people not only learn about, but lead the production and promotion of renewable energy.
-It is a mission-based social enterprise, designed to generate earned income to support the fulfillment of the mission of Operation REACH, Inc.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for 1‐5 years

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

The GYBP is designed to address the lack of exposure of out-of-school, at-risk New Orleans youth to educational and career paths in the growing green economy. By nearly all indicators, the need in Orleans Parish is greater than elsewhere in the state and nation. Youth, ages 16-24, are more likely to live in poverty and less likely to attend college or be employed. The GYBP is targeted at these youth, many of whom are not working and not on pathways to employment. The Annie E. Casey Foundation Kids Count Data Center has compiled the most recent comparative state level data for youth and their families.
-26% of people, ages 18-24 lived in poverty in Louisiana, compared with 21% across the U.S. in 2007.
-10% of Louisiana teens were high school dropouts, compared with 7% nationally.
-68% of teen ages 16-19 were unemployed in Louisiana, compared with 65% nationally.
-12% of Louisiana’s teens were not attending school and not working, compared to 8% nationally.
-Likewise, 20% of Louisiana residents ages 18-24 were not attending school, not working and had no degree beyond high school in 2006. That figure was 15% nationally.
-38% of young adults in Louisiana enrolled in or had completed college, compared to 45% in the U.S.

New Orleans also has some of the highest rates of poverty and lowest rates of educational achievement in the nation. The recent economic downturn has seen unemployment rise over the last year in New Orleans.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

New Orleans native and public school graduate Dr. Kyshun Webster is a nationally recognized educator and certified teacher who has worked in the nonprofit sector as a community educator since he was 12 years old. Raised in the St. Bernard Housing Development, he returned there to start his first formal after-school tutorial program in 1998. Over the last decade, ORI has worked with a variety of stakeholders, including area universities, foundations, public schools, state government, and public housing officials, developing a reputation for providing high quality educational enhancement programs for underserved youth.

New Orleans is a city famous for its fried foods. Each year, the Greater New Orleans area produces more than 3 million gallons of used cooking oil—most of which is disposed of rather than recycled. Now, Operation REACH’s Gulfsouth Youth Biodiesel Project (GYBP) aims to transform the region’s reputation for fried foods into an asset by turning used cooking oil into environmentally-friendly biodiesel fuel. By equipping New Orleans-area young people ages 16-25 with leadership, business, and technical skills, the GYBP is connecting hard-to-reach, out-of-work, and out-of-school youth with career paths into the new green economy.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

Each GYBP cycle provides: (1) Meaningful community service projects and service-learning opportunities; (2) Educational interventions that lead to a credential and increase placement opportunities in post-secondary education and long-term employability for participants; (3) Connections between program participants and the community that allow youth to build community-based trust and relationships; (4) High staff to participant ratio and close adult supervision throughout all activities; (5) Career development; and (6) Post-program support and follow-up.

Operation REACH measures the results of the GYBP for youth through the acquisition and application of knowledge, attitudes, skills and awareness (KASA) tied to educational, employment and community leadership outcomes among youth participants, using the KASA evaluation model. This is done through qualitative and quantitative evaluations focusing on environmental awareness, biodiesel production skills, leadership and job readiness skills. Nationally recognized instruments, including the NCCER examination and I-Sight Career Assessment inventory, will be used to measure knowledge and skill acquisition. ORI also conducts a longer term longitudinal study that looks at employment, salary, educational attainment, and environmental and community leadership and activism of program graduates at various points following completion of the program. Additionally, ORI measures the impact of the GYBP on the larger society in several key areas, including: amount of capital attracted, number of stakeholder groups engaged, recognition received, and impact of biodiesel produced.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

101-1,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

1,001-10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

-Year 1: Demonstration
ORI will continue to develop and position the GYBP as a demonstration of community-scale biodiesel production and effective green job training for out-of-school youth. We will ramp up our cooking oil collection, biodiesel production, and distribution to approximately 10,000 gallons per month with a handful of stable partners and clients.

-Year 2: Scaling
ORI will have secured the necessary investment, expertise and permits to equip and operate a larger biodiesel production facility with a production capacity of up to one million gallons per year.

-Year 3: Sustainability
The GYBP will operate entirely in the black. It will have the appropriate systems, policies, procedures, partnerships, clients and staff in place to ensure sustainability and scalability.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

Several factors could prevent the GYBP from being successful. External factors that could impact the success of the project could include dramatic decreases in diesel prices or unexpected increases in cost of materials. The success of biodiesel depends on it being competitively priced with traditional diesel fuel. Federal tax credits have incentivized production and usage of biodiesel. If these tax credits are allowed to expire and not renewed over the long-term, they could adversely affect the project. An additional factor that could impact the bottom-line sustainability of the project would be an inability to secure enough cooking oil for production. The scaling of the project is based on estimates of available used cooking oil in the city and research on the current competition for collection. Dramatic differences in these areas could prevent the project from being as successful. Additionally, the project depends on staff that can combine the technical management of a process with training a challenging population of vulnerable youth. This combination of abilities can be rare, but is required for the success of the program.

Tell us about your partnerships

Operation REACH has identified several valuable partners to support the success and expansion of this project, including employers, colleges and universities, workforce investment boards, restaurants and fuel distributors.

-Employers: ORI has established partnerships with several employers to ensure placement of GYBP program graduates in sustainable green jobs. Employers in construction, community outreach, waste management, and biofuels have already provided input into program curriculum and made commitments to hire graduates.

-Education Partners: ORI has established a strong partnership with Delgado Community College Technical Division (DCC) to support the GYBP. DCC provides training and laboratory space. Participants have the opportunity to receive college credit for participation in the program. In addition, DCC provides faculty with expertise in a variety of relevant areas and participants. In addition, Tulane University and the Louisiana State University W.A. Callegari Environmental Center, which provides skilled volunteers and program mentors as well as research facilities for chemical testing of fuels including ASTM 6571 and other tests for purity of biodiesel byproducts like glycerin and methanol.

-Restaurants and Oil Providers: ORI already has established partnerships and secured commitments from more than 20 restaurants in New Orleans to provide used cooking oil to the GYBP. These restaurants range from institutions like Sodexo Dining Services at Tulane University to fast food chains like McDonald’s to small local restaurants like Maya’s Restaurant.

-Fuel Distributors: ORI has also established relationships with fuel distributors to bring all biodiesel produced by the GYBP to market. These partners include Golden Leaf Energy and Zeon’s Global.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$250,001‐500,000

Explain your selections

ORI continues to invest in and build its fundraising capacity, which has increased by 500% over the last five years. In 2008, ORI established its Office of Social Enterprise and Fund Development, which has secured more than $4 million in financial support for the organization since January 2009. Over the last two years, ORI has launched an individual giving program, increased national and corporate fundraising, and invested in revenue-generating social enterprise activities to diversify its funding streams and create increased amounts of unrestricted revenue. ORI opened its 12,000-square-foot national headquarters in early 2009, an asset worth more than $1 million, which the organization now owns. In addition to increased investment in organizational assets, ORI also generates revenue to support its continued growth through social enterprise activities in New Orleans, including real estate investments, the operation of the tuition-based Knowledge Garden Child Development Center, and biodiesel sales from the Gulfsouth Youth Biodiesel Project, which has the potential to generate $1 million per year.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

Operation REACH has established three key factors that will determine the strength and overall viability of the Gulfsouth Youth Biodiesel Project.

1.Long-term low interest financial investment. Securing the necessary financial resources through a combination of grants, loans and additional private and philanthropic investment is critical to the success and strength of this initiative. To date, Operation REACH has already secured more than $500,000 in grants to support the initiative. It is estimated that scaling the project to a sustainable production scale will cost approximately $1 million.

2.Donations of used cooking oil. A steady supply of cheap or free used cooking oil as feedstock for biodiesel production is critical to the cost effectiveness of the project. Securing continued contributions of used cooking oil through a combination of dedicated partners, high-quality oil collection service, and tax incentives for cooking oil donations is critical to maintaining control over the primary ingredient or feedstock in biodiesel fuel.

3.Continuous improvement in efficiency and process design for biodiesel production. Continued process and technical improvements in biodiesel production will allow us to maximize the amount and efficiency of production of a high-quality biodiesel product while minimizing inputs. Continued improvements in the efficiency of our biodiesel production process will lead to continued quality improvements in our biodiesel and strengthen the success of the Gulfsouth Youth Biodiesel Project.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Lack of skills/training

SECONDARY

Underemployment

TERTIARY

Restricted access to new markets

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

The GYBP provides high-quality job training for at-risk youth, assisting them in envisioning and pursuing green careers. It takes a non-traditional approach to youth engagement and education while meeting young people’s immediate needs to receive industry-based or educational credentials and pursue sustainable careers. Through this initiative, youth participants develop: (1) increased sense of self-efficacy; (2) increased proclivity toward social entrepreneurship; (3) increased understanding of environmental and sustainability issues; (4) leadership skills; (5) basic job skills, including interviewing, public speaking, teamwork, working with diverse constituents, writing and reporting, increased literacy and numeracy, problem solving, and sustainable employment.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Enhanced existing impact through addition of complementary services

SECONDARY

Grown geographic reach: Within host country

TERTIARY

Repurposed your model for other sectors/development needs

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

Through the Gulfsouth Youth Biodiesel Project, Operation REACH seeks to provide the leadership to help cause a change in the programs, policies and practices institutions have toward young people, particularly urban youth of color. The GYBP has the opportunity to redefine a young generation of high school dropouts or “disconnected, at-risk” youth as contributing members of society by serving as part of a movement to address environmental and social challenges. All activities are currently in the developmental stage. Operation REACH has additional offices in Atlanta, GA and Birmingham, AL and scaling is being proposed in these areas within the next 3 years.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

Government, NGOs/Nonprofits, For profit companies, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

ORI has developed numerous partnerships across New Orleans to build community capacity to improve the lives of young people. Partners include youth-serving organizations and intermediaries; neighborhood organizations; schools; and funders including the Corporation for National and Community Service, the Foundation for the Mid South and W.K. Kellogg Foundation. Specifically, the partnership formed with Delgado Community College has provided a warehouse for the GYBP; partnerships with local restaurants provide essential used cooking oil; partnerships with the City of New Orleans assist with recruiting efforts; and partnerships with local green employers provide specified training techniques and employment opportunities after the program cycle is complete.

power generation from road speed breaker

Energy conservation is the cheapest new source of energy. This project attempts to show how energy can be tapped and used at a commonly used system, the road-speed breakers. The number of vehicles passing over the speed breaker in roads is increasing day by day. There is possibility of tapping the energy and generating power by making the speed breaker as a power generation unit. The generated power can be used for the lamps near the speed breakers and this will be a great boon for the rural villages too.

About You

Organization: sona college of technology,salem Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

priya

Last Name

dharshini

Twitter

About Your Organization

Organization Name

sona college of technology,salem

Organization Website

Organization Country

India, TN

Country where this project is creating social impact

India, TN

Is your organization a

Non‐profit/NGO/citizen sector organization

How long has your organization been operating?

More than 5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

power generation from road speed breaker

What change do you want to bring to the world?

Energy conservation is the cheapest new source of energy. This project attempts to show how energy can be tapped and used at a commonly used system, the road-speed breakers. The number of vehicles passing over the speed breaker in roads is increasing day by day. There is possibility of tapping the energy and generating power by making the speed breaker as a power generation unit. The generated power can be used for the lamps near the speed breakers and this will be a great boon for the rural villages too. This is a eco friendly project as it does not consume any fuel or release any by product.

What are the primary activities of your project?

This project is a innovation which makes people to obtain electricity from the energy which is being wasted in the roads. this project will enable the peole of the villages to create renewable enegy which is eco friendly too. nowadays tamil nadu is facing a serious power in sufficiency problems and there is a power shut down for nearly 5 hours in rural areas . to avoid this power shut down this project will be a great boon.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

A recent survey on the energy consumption in India had published a pathetic report that 85,000 villages in India do not still have electricity. Supply of power in most part of the country is poor. Hence more research and development and commercialization of technologies are needed in this field.
India, unlike the top developed countries has very poor roads. Talking about a particular road itself includes a number of speed breakers. By just placing a unit like the “Power Generation Unit from Speed Breakers”, so much of energy can be tapped. This energy can be used for the lights on the either sides of the roads and thus much power that is consumed by these lights can be utilized to send power to these villages.
In this kind of scenario, the best effort and the first step the world can take towards this aspect is to analyze all the ways in which energy is being wasted
The utilization of energy is an indication of the growth of a nation. One might conclude that to be materially rich and prosperous, a human being needs to consume more and more energy.
And this paper is best source of energy that we get in day to day life.

What stage is your project in?

Idea phase

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

almost every road in India has a speed breaker. when a small amount is spent in addition along with the constructional charges for the installation of the power generation unit then un-interrupted power supply can be got. this project can be a boon for the rural villages of India.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

myself along with my team aswathaman.v, arunkumar.r, prassana .s.c., prakash.s.started with this idead and we are all still working on this idea to . our dream is to implement our project in every speed breaker and in every village.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

we have successfully completed the modelling of our project and now we are waiting for the government approval and funding of our project to make it a real time project and bring our dreams true.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

1,001- 10,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

government should approve our project and make a real time one for the eco friendly energy flourishing environment without power problems.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

people in certain locality might not prefer the changes which are brought about in the road traffic and the changes in their power supplying system. WE can tackle this by making people under stand the benefits which are waiting for them during the completion of the project.

Tell us about your partnerships

as i said earlier we 5 people are working together and trying to implement our power generation set up in every possible way to create more electricity for the people of tamil nadu and india and the world in deed.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$10,001‐50,000

Explain your selections

• The world has already had its share of its energy resources. Fossil fuels pollute the environment. Nuclear energy requires careful handling of both raw as well as waste material.
• The focus now is shifting more and more towards the renewable sources of energy, which are essentially, nonpolluting.
• Energy conservation is the cheapest new source of energy. It is an attractive technology for optimal use of available sources.
• In this kind of scenario, the best effort and the first step the world can take towards this aspect is to analyze all the ways in which energy is being wasted, and to find effective ways to utilize or tap these energy.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

power generation unit in every speed breaker unit is our ultimate aim. and we are struggling to implement it now and in the years to come.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Lack of visibility and investment

SECONDARY

Lack of access to information and networks

TERTIARY

Underemployment

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

we are waiting for the government to realize the value of the project and there by we can get sources of funding, man power and access to the information of the infrastructural details of the roads.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Other (please specify below)

SECONDARY

Other (please specify below)

TERTIARY

Other (please specify below)

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

its a new team organisation which is yet to grow. but we have influenced thousands of people through paper presentations, project presentations and conferences.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

we are being helped by the sona college of technology with space to carry out our project, man power to carry out testings and labs to verify the results.

Changeshop

This project also has a Changeshop where you can read more about its latest progress.
Go to Changeshop: Integreted renewable power in shifting cultivation villages .

Integreted renewable power in shifting cultivation villages

The concept is a holistic approach and combines possible combination of all renewable energy for effectively meeting mountain village with environmentally sustainable energy requirements and co-relating livelihood like agriculture into one holistic ecology with its interaction with the outside world. The concept encourages balancing forestry in shifting cultivation by introducing agrarian practices at a pace, conserving ecology with development, rural reforestation and stable agriculture by means of plantation or terracing by key stoning technology into the system.

About You

Organization: nnt Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Kathi

Last Name

chishi

Twitter

Facebook Profile

About Your Organization

Organization Name

nnt

Organization Website

Organization Country

India, NL

Country where this project is creating social impact

India, NL

Is your organization a

Non‐profit/NGO/citizen sector organization

How long has your organization been operating?

Less than a year

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

Integreted renewable power in shifting cultivation villages

What change do you want to bring to the world?

The concept is a holistic approach and combines possible combination of all renewable energy for effectively meeting mountain village with environmentally sustainable energy requirements and co-relating livelihood like agriculture into one holistic ecology with its interaction with the outside world. The concept encourages balancing forestry in shifting cultivation by introducing agrarian practices at a pace, conserving ecology with development, rural reforestation and stable agriculture by means of plantation or terracing by key stoning technology into the system. From where on anything which is endemic to the climate crops would be sown and further linked with market facilities national or international.

What are the primary activities of your project?

The primary activities of the project would be to identify villages, study various parameters like height of the village from sea level, population, facilities like whether electrified or not, forest area cover, cultivated area in that case shifting cultivation, wind speed, sunlight etc. A holistic data would be prepared. On the basis of the conceptualized data, a holistic design to approach the ecology will be studied considering the ecological needs of the people and the environment.

Identify the natural resources under each village’s disposal that includes natural resources like forest, agricultural land, water, ecological diversity and the capacity at which human development has taken place.
The next course would be to identify areas of food deficit, salt deficit, trade and livelihood of a village community in the area, drinking water etc.etc
An approach example to the project environment will involve certain cases like progressing shifting cultivation of crops towards tapping of potential water for irrigation for terracing or encouraging plantation, and, addressing the power of electricity by introducing renewable energy like wind and solar and potential implements that can be utilized using electricity for agriculture and other rural activities. The idea is to progress with a solution in place like a one stop solution shop for their needs.

After understanding the problem then the project will cater to the NEEDS of the system.

A key stone approach to these problems might just be electricity, and the most conventional method might be the availability of it which in turn might help create an integral development of system into the approaches of hill cultivation and development of the destitute region. With reasoning that mountain regions have strong resources with wind speed, extra sunlight etc. which means utility of available resources for electrification.

Also in this case we are considering the run off water not being tapped being utilized and with electrification water can be pumped upwards to channels for terracing and storage.

Here, we are not considering mass build up of dams etc but sustainable enough for the village eco system.

From this point of view the utility of resources would enhance the prospect of other co-relation like agriculture or plantation symbiotic to the climatic conditions of the region while facilitation for the agriculture produce by market linkages will be an integral part of the project. For this cultivable land would be identified rather than drastic cutting of mountains for terracing and the project is to consider the viable needs and production with better facilities of seeds and machinery etc.

What could outcome from this would be an integrated approach towards environment conservation, agriculture economy supported by market linkages and development of lively hood. Also inside the system villagers would be trained in repair and production of the new technology introduced. It is clearly intended to impact an ecological setup of a village system by sustaining it with new technology and productivity of the region.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

Its a simple story about a cold windy mountain village at an altitude of 2000 meter, where women folks would gather water at the foot of the streams by any means in dark or stormy or cold weather. Man would burn forest to clear the land for growing crops before the rains and leave the mountain bald for the next five years unreasoning what happens to it making no sense of symbiotic needs of the ecological system. Forgetting that the world has developed into a era of technology.
As it says the approaches are directly confrontational to an environmental approach, but considering the least of any such development the parameters for working in this challenges would greatly enhance an approach towards environmentalism, as per perspective it could dimensionally look at studying rural ecology with a wider perspective of needs rather than random developments.
But the core of it would be utilization of renewable energy like wind and solar and building the ecological system around it, where I think might create the changes in the ecological behavior of the system
Most importantly it address a cycle of livelihood activates,of a village especially mountain economy, because their is a rare case of production on mountain terrains, also the other factor being that agriculture has always been looked as a physical attribution of the plains, even government agencies have strong ignorance for it, therefore their is a huge lack which itself is a subject matter with wide scopes.
The contribution towards the subject is just sensible practicals to text book lessons.

What stage is your project in?

Idea phase

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

Nagaland is a land which is about 16,579 sq km and has a "Green Cover" of about 80% also its urban population according to 2001 census is 17.2 % and 70 % of the population is into Agriculture, and the community here practice the most faulty mountain Agriculture system called “Jhum” or shifting cultivation.
1. Every village is build on the criteria of a social order which consists of a Chieftan and his elders, and the villagers under this capacity the government of India recognizes this villages according to it and all resources with the villages area is governed and maintained by the people of the villages since time immoral .
2. A village is created and recognized by the Government of India on the basis of the amount of land holding which consists of a minimum of 4.5 sq km.
3. Within the village area all developmental activities are carried out by the villages, and all natural resources such as water, forest, biodiversity, are solely the responsibilities of the respective village which looks after these resources.
4. Apart from this there are also private land owners who over the years have made purchases of this village lands and have carried out their own developmental activities.
5. In after much failed years of governance the state government of Nagaland implemented the policy of communitization which means local village governance but as of now it has not been defined, but as is in Government implementation it is “also under process of its definition”. But this itself has made many realize that finally governance has been defined.
The other political aspect is the insurgency in the region,which has often made the area volatile to the regions, balance of development.
I have been engaged with the community for the past 3 years first a fellow with Commutiny 2009-10 on the above project.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

Sharp concern for his sociopolitical context has made Kathi a journalist and environmentalist and development has pushed him towards farming. Coming from Akuluto in Nagaland, 29 year old Kathi Chishi is currently pursuing post graduation in sustainable development through correspondence. While pursuing his graduation at Delhi University he was active in student politics. Kathi was associated with the Consortium of Indian Farmers as a journalist. Over time, he has developed a deeper understanding about the need for environment conservation and development of forests and works around these issues specifically in Nagaland through 'Toka Multipurpose' an organization he has had long term association with.
Project: Setting up an Agricultural Resource Center for young and underprivileged farmers of Dimapur district in Nagaland to provide capacity building and agroforestry solutions.
As written in commutiny blog.www.commutiny.in
Kathi Chishi is the founder of North East foundation for youth a youth organization working in the field of Computer education for 200 students in Dimapur District from underprivileged background.
Currently the executive council member to the Consortium of Indian farmers www.indianfarmers.org
Secretary and founding member of FAAN Farmers Association of Nagaland.
Managing Director Northeast Naga Traders Pvt ltd
The inspiration started with a subject study,than a concern and than an action towards implementation.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

Over the past 3 years of engagement and networking with various organization in the state, I have set a clear growth towards my approach in meeting my objectives. Currently, in capacity as the Secretary of FAAN (Farmers Federation Association of Nagaland) a farmers association which advocates the problems and issues of farmers of the state, having representative from all the districts. FAAN appoints representative to the council under which all farmers associations organize itself in Nagaland.

Active engagement to solve the agriculture market in Nagaland made me form a company known as NNT PVt ltd which is engaged in a Private Partnership with the Nagaland state Marketing Board Government of Nagaland. Under this project about 20 APMC (Agricuture Production Marketing committees)covering the entire state of Nagaland work actively as partners for buying and selling of agriculture produces of the state with us.

The roots of where and how I reached to this stage are maybe attributed to my one year fellowship as a Commutineer as a fellow, which gave me extensive exposure and the opportunity to study across the country.

Success is a measure of time and needs and as we go on fulfilling our objective a new need arises. The pace and execution can be measured with the satisfaction of job done on the needs, but when needs come to an end a dimensional aspect always arises. All we can say is that the end objective is to maintain sustainability and then only can success be measured.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

1,001- 10,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

The project is about sustaining as a model for a survivor in an island. Anyone with a little sense of enterprising attitude or for that reason even a child growing around its circumference will have enough of curiosity to enjoy the pleasure of drawing the scenic beauty of its landscape. It approaches the beauty with curiosity a lot more and he or she learns. The concept is to encourage simple science into practical life and teach them how to sustain it, over the years to innovate it and upgrade the system. The idea is to bloom the project with review not by propagating media hypes but by attracting towards the concept to fulfill needs. It paces for a modulation rather than random development. The customer therefore lies in the eyes of the beholder. As for me I think it is a social impact.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

The challenges are immense since from its conceptual stage to its end, it is about creating a design to project that nature is not being affected while the work is purely developmental. Here the steadiness of work towards development must be really cautioned because there are plenty of questions on environment and its sustainability. The thin line and what would be a great challenge is when to push for work, and, when to draw the line for the success of the project. It is here that a dimensional aspect of study might come to play and the obstruction could be good or bad.

To tackle the problem of the issue, a steady approach towards the issue needs to be assessed at all stage of the model. It is not about fascinating engineering feats but about integrating the concept into a perceived organic system of play which for me might be the greatest challenge to the project.

The most difficult aspect of the project involves the geographical physical conditions which are affected by the mountain terrains. It is intended to create a model in which the developmental inputs would enhance agriculture which in turn can be sustained commercially. Implementation would be tough but practical once operational.

Tell us about your partnerships

Considering the wide scope of challenges it is understood that the elements at work would include strong belief and convincing to our stakeholders. The partnership is wide but it is about effective mobilizing of resources into a one stop solution. Stakeholders at every aspect play a major role in the work that we intend to carry out.
Our partnership involves village, village leaders, suppliers, technology transfer and the market .

As of now it involves Farmers Organization like Farmers Federation of Nagaland for identification of needs, The APMC Agriculture marketing committee of Nagaland for marketing and effective supply chain management, green solution companies like Greenfield Powers to supply with solar and wind technologies and NNT Pvt. Ltd for marketing of Agriculture produces.

Since the idea is understanding needs or wants, the partnership has a wide scope to enhance an effective solution provider for replicating models of a similar kind. In other villages a lot of economic volume can be spoken of like trading crops for farmers, partnering with various agriculture companies availing government support by levying fee chargers for construction work and partnering with government agencies with similar ideals.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$10,001‐50,000

Explain your selections

A good breakfast at home and a smiling neighbour or a loving gesture sometimes becomes a support to take up the challenges for the day.

The project itself involves all stake holders at every stage, it is a project which manifest a concept not only at the local level but a modulation intending to be spread like wild fire, (depending on its development), a quick line of business opportunity develops on the work, a concept which can be replicated taking into the concept of our philosophies like environment, sustainability etc etc.

We think this can start from the village, move on to the next, cover a district, apply it as a state policy, consider it as a national modulation and so on and so fort. Businesses can look at it as a conceptual way to sustainably generate and harness mountain economy.
As of now our project has been conceptualized, but the progress of all this can be easily drawn on the line considering how we engineer and manifest, for that, we think, the model not only generates economic opportunity to the villages, it helps a few of them become traders, a few employment manning and maintaining the solar and wind power mill, a few to look after the regulation of water suppliers, farmers being able to sow, village traders an ample spot to sale, traders being able to procure and govt understanding the importance for it "can approach us" for further implementation etc etc. It truly involves the entire stream till its flow into the ocean.

Other stakeholders contribution can be assessed considering reviews etc .

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

The concept is to sell a good idea. By what I mean is since the flow is an inception into a system, the system is rather made to rejuvenate or degrade. In this case we are considering that its rejuvenation, for me im considering this as an innovation and an economic opportunity, not considering getting the result on its immediate inception but formulating the system with a placed system. It means having a shop with the solution and catering the needs of a system.

Once placed as an effective model it is considered to attract, where else we wait with our resource with a one stop shop for the cycle for transfer of technology, implements and tools, farming, seeding, growing and selling.
Everything created is meant to benefit directly to the eco system and the implementing party. We think that the system can be bought with ease, and motivation to sell is automatic.

I intend to strengthen the project by considering that we are reasonable partners at all stage,I think the best is to have more players concern into our belief by ways of participating into the system. But considerably it is meant to attract a whole universe of participation by curiosity. But most importantly the idea is to be sustainable on its own generation of revenue.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Lack of skills/training

SECONDARY

Lack of access to information and networks

TERTIARY

Lack of visibility and investment

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

As earlier described, the people that we intend to work are isolated mountain villagers, and lack of communication is understood while investment cannot approach them with a sense of attraction,. But the positive aspects are that villagers are quick learners and most of the time the most innovative people are villagers. Considering seasonal employment, distraction as in cities are not much and bringing new technologies will grab more attention than diversion, the idea is to invite villagers to make them learn new thing, this also can be used as a chain of resource people in other implementing areas too. Also the technology that we are considering are not the most scientific as that of rocket sciences therefore it could attract a few radio makers in the villages to try their hands.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Grown geographic reach: Within host country

SECONDARY

Repurposed your model for other sectors/development needs

TERTIARY

Leveraged technology

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

As conceptualized a model village for the project would be an attractive means and to where we progress from there on would be effective marketing, lobbying and initiating policy drawers. The concept would be to identify a village, electrify it depending on resources available, empower and educate them with the utility of renewable energy and what can be achieved by using certain tools and implements etc. Prepare villages with a scheduled activity for a season, implement water shade areas or terracing and help respond to shifting cultivation by building a cycle for crops. In case of region where no cropping is possible than introduce endemic plantation, then linking agricultural produces with the market for purchase and procurement of products.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

Government, Technology providers, NGOs/Nonprofits, For profit companies, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

I had an idea ,so I put it in text. Finding and hunting led me to various means, the means gave me some hopes and because of the vision helped me some in compassion, some in kind, some for belief and some became involved towards the vision. Either way every one of the above have been my collaborators.

As portrayed in the entire evolution, it involves each and every stake holders in the flow. A simple plan to rejuvenate a system is not complete without a support from government to consider it a good policy to follow, technology to innovate to its buyers, NGO to involve in assisting and identifying, companies to buy the ideas and researchers for further evaluation to upgrade and upscale our needs. And so far I have been involved with each and everyone.

Runa - Guayusa Value Chain Creation

We believe people everywhere can benefit from the bounty of the Amazon without destroying it, and that indigenous knowledge has a critical role to play in our growth as a global community. We work with indigenous people to share the secrets of the Amazon by creating new markets for products that help the Amazon, its people, and their culture thrive. Currently, Runa is focused on creating markets for beverages created with Guayusa ("gwhy-you-sa"), a native Amazonian tree leaf that contains more caffeine and double the antioxidants of any tea.

About You

Organization: Runa Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Tyler

Last Name

Gage

Twitter

@runanation

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Runa

Organization Website

Organization Country

Ecuador, N

Country where this project is creating social impact

Ecuador, N

Is your organization a

For‐profit

How long has your organization been operating?

1‐5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

Runa - Guayusa Value Chain Creation

What change do you want to bring to the world?

We believe people everywhere can benefit from the bounty of the Amazon without destroying it, and that indigenous knowledge has a critical role to play in our growth as a global community. We work with indigenous people to share the secrets of the Amazon by creating new markets for products that help the Amazon, its people, and their culture thrive. Currently, Runa is focused on creating markets for beverages created with Guayusa ("gwhy-you-sa"), a native Amazonian tree leaf that contains more caffeine and double the antioxidants of any tea.

What are the primary activities of your project?

Initiating and ensuring the sustainable growth of Amazonian businesses, Runa serves as a catalyst for systemic change in one of our of the world’s most vital ecosystems. Runa primarily provides direct market access and sustainable agricultural training to indigenous farming families in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Our non-profit arm, Fundación Runa, also provides tools and resources to indigenous communities and farmers' associations working towards their vision of sustainable development in the Amazon. We focus on three core areas: social empowerment, community development, and environmental management.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

Compared to other market-driven development initiatives, Runa stands out with the strength of its vertically integrated supply chain, integrated land management training programs, and its strategy for leveraging Fair Trade social premium funds. Fundacion Chankuap and Kallari are examples of two decade-old organizations that have been able to raise annual income for several hundred farmers, but unlike Runa, both have not built lucrative international markets, nor gained significant buy-in from producers due to poor agroforestry management, lack of capacity building initiatives, and unreliable crops. In comparison to Komaza, a similar market-based reforestation NGO in Africa, Runa is reforesting with a native, culturally important, and perennial crop that grows exclusive in biodiverse agroforestry plots, as opposed to mono-crop plantations. Guayusa begins generating income after 3 years (in comparison to 15+ years for hardwood trees in the Amazon), produces harvests every 3 months, and exemplifies the efficacy of the "Specialized Cultivation" strategy for non-timber forest products, proven to be the most effective in cross-country comparisons (Kusters 2006).

What stage is your project in?

Operating for 1‐5 years

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

The Amazonian Kichwa are an indigenous group that live in Eastern Ecuador with a population of approximately 80,000 people divided into hundreds of smaller villages and associations. As the largest of the 8 indigenous groups in the Ecuadorian Amazon, the Kichwa have persevered through a difficult history of colonization and have largely maintained their integrity as a people.

Algunos indicadores respecto a la calidad de vida en la zona mencionada, nos muestran aspectos más particulares de la realidad:

- 8,1% de los jefes de familia tienen educación superior.
- 5% tiene acceso a crédito
- 100% no maneja sus plantas de guayusa de forma técnica
- 92% no siembra especies forestales en peligro de extinción
- 20% han recibido asistencia técnica

In 2016, Runa will be capable of purchasing at least $500,000 of fresh guayusa leaves from farmers, and provide direct market access and technical assistance to rural farming families in the Napo, Pastaza, Morona Santiago, Orellana, and Zamora-Chinchipe provinces of Amazonian Ecuador. This will result in over 5,000 farmers participating as active members in Guayusa Farmer Associations, having greater access to markets, land management training and credit than ever before. We estimate that over 85,000 farming families in the Ecuadorian Amazon would be eligible beneficiaries of Runa’s model, all of who currently earn less than $1,200 per year.

La palabra “Runa” en el lenguaje Kichwa significa “persona” o “ser humano que vive plenamente”. Hemos escogido este nombre para representar el compromiso de nuestra organización, al hacer realidad un nuevo sueño de vivir responsable e inteligentemente, de forma colaborativa como una comunidad humana en la tierra. Mientras que “Runa” es un término de inmenso orgullo, que conlleva identidad y vitalidad espiritual para los pueblos Kichwas, en la sociedad ecuatoriana moderna la palabra “runa” se considera un término despectivo, irrespetuoso y racista que significa “sin valor”. La meta de nuestra organización es revalorizar la identidad cultural indígena, sus tradiciones y su conocimiento ancestral de plantas a una escala internacional, al llevar la palabra Runa como una marca para todos nuestros productos y como un símbolo de nuestro compromiso para vivir plenamente como humanos. Este enfoque único, ofrece una gran oportunidad para que las Provincias de Napo y Pastaza, demuestren el valor de sus culturas ancestrales y productos nativos a un nivel internacional, atrayendo así, más turismo y atención a sus otros sectores.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

Tyler, while working with indigenous communities in Ecuador, Peru, and Brazil, witnessed firsthand the tradeoff indigenous communities face: while they want to preserve their cultural heritage, they also experience an immediate need to feed their families and earn cash in an increasingly globalized world. In 2007, Tyler hosted a family of Ecuadorian shamans at his home in California, and they shared an ancestral tea the shaman had carried with him from the Amazon: guayusa. They began imagining how a Fair Trade business could share this rich-tasting tea with a global audience, and pioneer a proactive and culturally valuable way for the Kichwa people to participate in the global economy. Dan, meanwhile, had travelled to Ecuador in his semester off and observed many development projects that had the best intentions but little financial stability or buy-in from communities, and had built a diverse background in non-profit management, sustainable development and conservation. With these experiences providing a grounding and operative view to the goal, Dan and Tyler teamed up in an entrepreneurship class at Brown University to write a business plan for their dream.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

In less than two years of full operations, Runa has planted over 160,000 trees in more than 180 hectares of agroforesty plots, and paid over $6,000 of supplementary income for guayusa leaves harvested from existing trees to over 400 farming families. Runa helped these farmers receive USDA Organic certification in June 2010 and Fair Trade certification in May 2011, and has initially raised their incomes by over 25% each. Runa´s 25 person team in Ecuador is composed of production managers, forestry engineers, and indigenous field technicians from the local communities. Runa´s highly experienced Board of Advisors includes Yolanda Kakabadse, President of the WWF, and Douglas McMeekin, Ashoka Fellow and President of Yachana. Runa has also formed official partnerships with the indigenous federations in the Ecuadorian Amazon and national and international universities. With over $400,000 in grants raised from USAID, Ecuador´s Exports Promotion Agency (CORPEI), DED, GTZ, the Andean Development Bank and local governments, Runa has proven itself by achieving early milestones and building high level partnerships. Runa inaugurated the world’s first guayusa factory in the Napo Province in early 2010, and is touted as the new ¨Nokia of Napo¨ by Ecuador´s Minister of Production.

Metrics & Measurement

Runa has completed a detailed intake survey of over 4,000 farming families in the Ecuadorian Amazon, which have been so successful that the national government's land planning agency recently offered to buy Runa’s farmer database. The survey showed that indigenous farmers earn between $40 and $75 of monthly income, derived primarily from illegal deforestation, migrant labor, and cattle farming. Our survey system is derived from a combination of IRIS, World Bank, Acumen Fund, and Asset Map models, and will serve as the basis through which we assess how successfully income generation and capacity building translate to improved land management, health, education, and economic participation by local farmers. A farmer can earn over $700 per year of direct income per acre from organic guayusa production, and Runa’s system monitors a variety of socio-economic factors: income generation, access to credit, health care, etc.)

How many people have been impacted by your project?

101-1,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

Within three years, Runa aims to have reforested over 2,000 acres of rainforest, and plant over 1.5 million trees. Runa will be capable of purchasing at least $200,000 of fresh guayusa leaves from farmers, and provide direct market access and technical assistance to rural farming families in the Napo, Pastaza, Morona Santiago, and Orellana provinces of Amazonian Ecuador. This will result in over 2,500 farming families participating as active members in Guayusa Farmer Associations, having greater access to markets, land management training and credit than ever before.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

1.a. Determinación del riesgo

• Desabastecimiento de Materia Prima

Como empresa social, manejamos criterios de cadena de valor, que permiten un impacto social económico real en los pequeños agricultores, por lo que hemos apoyado íntegramente el proceso de organización y consolidación de asociaciones de productores, en este caso la “Asociación Artesanal Napo Runa” y la “Asociación Artesanal Pastaza Runa”.

Consecuentemente, dichas asociaciones son ahora organismos con personería jurídica propia, capaces de tomar decisiones independientes de Runatarpuna.

En ese sentido, la empresa no posee terrenos con cultivo propio y depende directamente del abastecimiento de las Asociaciones, por lo que existe el riesgo de inadecuadas decisiones comerciales que tomen las futuras administraciones, que afecten la normal adquisición de materia prima.

• Falta de Financiamiento

Se requiere de una fuerte inversión que soporte los diferentes gastos en los cuales incurre el proyecto, especialmente los referidos al desarrollo e investigación de sistemas de producción y control de calidad, con los que garantizaremos un producto final con alto valor agregado, que cumpla con los requisitos de los clientes más exigentes.

Otro financiamiento importante, es aquel designado a los gastos de promoción y ventas, en el mercado nacional e internacional, que tienen objetivo consolidar el consumo de té de guayusa global.

• Tendencias de Consumo

El mercado de té en los Estados Unidos es sumamente fuerte, siendo el único segmento en la industria de bebidas que ha seguido creciendo a través de la crisis económica en los Estados Unidos, según la revista “Fast Company”. Sin embargo, pese a que la empresa, ha comprobado la preferencia de los consumidores por la guayusa, siempre existe la posibilidad de que cambien de idea y que el producto pierda su expectativa o interés.

El té podría perder su reconocimiento como una bebida saludable o las altas tasas de crecimiento del consumo podrían bajar.

• Riesgo para las Comunidades

El riesgo de un mal manejo administrativo al interior de las Asociaciones, es decir, los proveedores de materia prima, podría ocasionar una ruptura de relaciones comerciales con la empresa.

De romper relaciones con la empresa, es muy difícil para las comunidades, cumplir con todos los procesos productivos y comerciales que demanda la distribución y venta de derivados de la guayusa en el mercado local e internacional, por lo que los cultivos de guayusa podrían verse desperdiciados.

Las comunidades podrían perder los beneficios económicos de la producción de guayusa, si las Asociaciones no cumplen con sus responsabilidades

• Riesgos Naturales

Como cualquier otro proyecto de carácter agrícola, enfrentamos riesgos naturales, como son: la sequía, inundaciones y plagas, que afectan directamente el volumen de producción, por ende las ventas.

• Riesgo de Políticas Gubernamentales del Ecuador

La política económica del Gobierno Ecuatoriano incidirá siempre sobre cualquier negocio que se ejecuté al interior del país, siendo imposible negar los efectos que tendría una política de incremento de sueldos, el alza del precio del combustible, el alza del precio del gas industrial o una modificación en la política arancelaria tributaria.

De igual forma, las relaciones internacionales del Gobierno del Ecuador, afectarán las exportaciones y las ventas globales de la empresa, por lo menos en el corto plazo.

1.b. Mitigaciones principales para cada riesgo

• Materia Prima

Con la premisa de que toda decisión administrativa se toma en base a los efectos positivos o negativos que ésta genere sobre la empresa, la medida de mitigación es garantizar precios justos y superiores a los del mercado, amparados en criterios de comercio justo, estableciendo políticas de compra a largo plazo que generen estabilidad económica y productiva a los socios de las Asociaciones.

En el proyecto, se contempla la adquisición de una propiedad que permita contar con viveros y cultivos propios, que sirvan como soporte en un momento de crisis que pudiéramos atravesar con nuestros proveedores, de tal forma que nuestros clientes, no perciban un desabastecimiento total del producto.

También estamos amparados por Convenios de Cooperación Comercial, Técnica y Financiera con la Asociación de Productores, y la suscripción de contratos de compra individuales con cada agricultor, que permitan afianzar los lazos entre la empresa y los proveedores.

• Financiamiento

Debido al impacto social y ambiental que genera el proyecto y la fuerza del modelo de negocios, la Empresa cuenta con el apoyo de distintas organizaciones que comparten nuestra visión y objetivos, de las cuales recibimos cooperación financiera no reembolsable, lo que nos permite cumplir actividades primordiales para alcanzar nuestras metas. Entre ellas, se encuentran la CORPEI, la DED y USAID.

Adicionalmente contamos con nuestro principal socio accionista en los Estados Unidos, del cual recibimos inversión directa extranjera, mediante los resultados de gestión de la búsqueda de inversionistas alrededor del mundo, que estén alineados con los propósitos de la empresa.

Grupo Runa incorpora varios actores con y sin fines de lucro, los cuales han demostrado su capacidad de recaudar fondos de diferentes inversionistas y donantes; esta apertura y diversidad de oportunidades para recibir financiamiento, es una característica única de la cadena de guayusa.

• Tendencias de Consumo

Las tendencias de consumo de té, son permanentemente monitoreadas por Runa LLC, la empresa ancla de Runatarpuna en los Estados Unidos, la cual ha ganado dos competencias de planes de negocios, debido al hecho de que tiene un producto tan innovador y un conocimiento del mercado muy fuerte.

Una de las fortalezas más importantes de Runa LLC, es la experiencia de su recurso humano, esto lo demuestra su Gerente de Ventas, con 25 años de trabajo en una de las empresas distribución de alimentos y bebidas naturales más grandes del mundo. Adicionalmente, la empresa respalda sus actividades y logros en su Consejo Directivo, que tiene más de 80 años en la industria de productos naturales.

Runatarpuna tiene el beneficio único de poder canalizar sus productos directamente a través de Runa LLC, aprovechando las diferentes oportunidades que ofrece el mercado, como por ejemplo: la guayusa no solo puede ser usada como té o bebida, sino también que puede ser utilizada en Productos de Belleza (por su alto contenido en cafeína), y en suplementos alimenticios, como batidos, barras de energía (por sus antioxidantes). Siendo así, nuestro producto puede entrar en una variedad de mercados.
Contamos con la capacidad de procesar y exportar otros productos innovadores para el mercado internacional, como el ají, balsa, hierba luisa, canela, entre otros. Nuestra estructura de producción, nos permite tener acceso a una diversidad de productos, y así ampliar nuestra oferta en el futuro

• Convenios de Cooperación y Contratos con Proveedores

En el caso de una ruptura de buenas relaciones entre Runatarpuna y una de las Asociaciones, la Empresa simplemente empezaría a comprar su materia prima de otra Asociación, o directamente de los proveedores (sin pasar por la mencionada organización).

Al tener una diversidad de productores (Kichwas, Shuar y Colonos) y zonas de producción de guayusa alejadas (desde Morona Santiago hasta Orellana), Runa no depende de ningún proveedor en particular. Esta diversificación de producción, garantiza que Runa tendrá una variedad de opciones para la adquisición de su materia prima a largo plazo.

• Factores Naturales

Las plantaciones en mono-cultivos son los sistemas más susceptibles para la propagación de plagas y enfermedades. En contraste, Runatarpuna, se encuentra comprometida a mantener estándares orgánicos y prácticas de sistemas agro-forestales que por naturaleza, utiliza la homeostasis ecológica para proteger las plantas.
Nosotros plantamos guayusa en sistemas integrales agro-forestales, donde la guayusa crece a lo largo de arbustos laterales nitrificantes, conjuntamente con otros cultivos locales. Esta estrategia también protege a las comunidades, garantizando una diversidad de ingresos y nunca dependan 100% de la guayusa

Adicionalmente, se está trabajando con la ESPOCH y el Departamento de Forestaría de la Universidad de Yale para realizar estudios botánicos, fitosanitarios, de plagas y enfermedades, con lo cual se espera obtener un conocimiento exclusivo y profundo sobre la guayusa, que nos permita prevenir y compensar cualquier problema productivo.

• Factores Externos Políticos

La diversificación de nuestra cartera de clientes en el mercado local y exterior, además de una correcta planificación tributaria, son herramientas con las que la empresa cuenta, para adquirir la flexibilidad necesaria al enfrentar este tipo de circunstancias.

Tell us about your partnerships

Aportes Financieros:

PRODEL / USAID:
Aporte de PRODEL: $175,000
Cronograma: Julio 2010 – Enero 2012
Actividades Financiadas: Asistencia Técnica en Napo, desarrollo organizativo, materiales para agricultores en Napo, inventario, marketing, etc.
Enfoque Geográfico: Napo y Orellana

CORPEI y GTZ
Aporte de CORPEI: $44,000
Cronograma: Diciembre 2009 – Diciembre 2010
Actividades Científicas: Investigación científica, registros sanitarios, participación en ferias, maquinaría, y talleres.
Enfoque Geográfico: Napo, Pastaza, y Morona Santiago

DED - El Servicio Alemán de Cooperación Social-Técnica
Aporte de DED: $23,000
Cronograma: June 2010 a Mayo 2012
Actividades Financiados: Sembrar 100 ha de guayusa en Cantón Arosemena Tola en Napo y levantar un vivero forestal
Enfoque Geográfico: Cantón Arosemena Tola en Napo

Ministerio de Coordinación de la Producción, Empleo, y Competitividad – Programa CreEcuador
Aporte de MCPEC: $16,000 ya entregados y la aprobación de una inversión de $500,000 millón USD en Julio de 2011
Cronograma: Julio 2011 a Enero 2015
Actividades Financiados: Construcción de nueva fábrica para procesar guayusa, inventario, y campana comercial
Enfoque Geográfico: Napo, Pastaza, y Morona Santiago

Other Partner Organizations

Municipio de Archidona - Co-funded Guayusa Value Chain Development project in conjunction with the Andean Development Bank (CAF)

Napo Provincial Government – Co-funded Guayusa Value Chain Development project in conjunction with the Andean Development Bank (CAF)

Peace Corps – Runa currently hosts 3 Peace Corp volunteers in the Ecuadorian Amazon and works closely with Peace Corp in Ecuador.

PROFAFOR - is an Ecuadorian company financed by the Dutch group, FACE (Forests Absorbing Carbon Emissions),that focuses on conservation and sustainable forest management. PROFAFOR and Runa are co-executing a reforestation program along the border of the Colonso National Reserve to create a land use buffer zone

USFQ - University of San Francisco of Quito sends interns and researchers to Napo to work with Runa.

Seeds of Change - provides 100% organic seeds of vegetables, flowers and herbs. Seeds of change donated over 20,00 organic heirloom seeds to Runa in 2009.

Towne and Forrester - provides environmental consultant and project development services. Partners with Runa on research and volunteer programs.

Trees for the Future - is a US-based non-profit organization that works to improve livelihoods and restore degraded lands to sustainable productivity through planting beneficial trees. Trees for the Future donated 40,000 seeds, 20 training manuals, and $450 to Runa in 2010.

Yachana Foundation - provides practical education to Amazonian youth to create ongoing community and economic development opportunities. Founder Douglas McMeekin serves on Runa’s Board of Advisors, Runa receives Yachana interns, and Runa and Yachana collaborate on reforestation projects along the Napo River.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$500,001‐1 million

Explain your selections

Friends and family - Investors in Runa LLC
Individuals - Angel investors in Runa LLC
Foundations - Funders (as described in previous question)
NGOs - Funders and strategic partners
Businesses - Clients for products and donors to non-profit
Regional government - Funder of regional programs
National government - Investor in Ecuadorian S.A. company
Customers - Buy Runa Products
Other - Farmers, Experted Advisers, Local Governments

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

Planting Guayusa and Providing Technical Assistance to Farmers
Runa’s eight field technicians provide indigenous farmers with training to help them reforest their land with guayusa and other endangered tree species. To date, they have planted over 250 acres of guayusa in agroforestry systems, and continue to plant ~ 40 acres per month, all of which will mature in 2-3 years. Our technical team will expand to include 20 technicians by year 3 to reach 2,500 farmers.

Growing Distribution for Runa Products through a "Cluster" Sales Strategy
Runa is following a “cluster” strategy entering two regions and five cities (Providence, New Haven, Boston, D.C., New York) in 2011, using these hubs to expand regionally. Local tea and coffee shops have responded positively to our great tasting, healthy product and commitment to social and environmental goals. By Year 5 we aim to be in 30% of the 3,000 natural food grocers in the US, and 6% of the 21,000 of the tea and coffee shops (does not include Starbucks).

Consumer Demos and Sampling
The most effective way to attract customers is through sharing a cup of tea. Live demos and tastings will represent the majority of Runa’s early marketing efforts. Our sales team and contracted sales representatives, recommended by our natural products advisor Bob Burke, will hit the streets and perform consumer demos and events in local cafés, teashops, and natural food stores. Our goal is to give samples to over 2 million people in the next five years. At Whole Foods Market, we have sold as many as 45 boxes during a 4 hour demo.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Restricted access to new markets

SECONDARY

Lack of skills/training

TERTIARY

Lack of visibility and investment

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

Runa is building a market for guayusa, a native Amazon tree leaf that has been the trusted source of energy and nutrition for Amazonian indigenous groups for thousands of years. However, it had never been processed or commercially exported before Runa. In addition to creating a new market for guayusa, Runa is training farming families to reforest degraded lands with guayusa agroforesry plots, to raise their income and improve local ecosystems. Lastly, Runa is providing grants to indigenous students, entrepreneurs, and groups, to provide additional capital to local businesses and education. Runa pays an additional 15% to a Social Premium Fund that is used to support farmer initiative and local programs.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Grown geographic reach: Within host country

SECONDARY

Enhanced existing impact through addition of complementary services

TERTIARY

Influenced other organizations and institutions through the spread of best practices

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

In order to reach our goal of benefitting 5,000 farming families in 5 years, Runa will grow to provide technical assistance and direct market access in the Napo, Pastaza, Morona Santiago, Orellana, and Zamora-Chinchipe provinces of Amazonian Ecuador.Runa's support of smallholder organic agriculture and Fair Trade commercial structure are jointly designed to support the incorporation of other plant products that promote biodiversity conservation over time (examples being native Amazonian cinnamon, Amazonian lemongrass, and local hot peppers). Additionally, as part of a project funded by the Andean Development Bank that Runa is managing, Runa is transferring knowledge of agroforesty and biodiversity business to local associations, the local governments, and regional government in Napo.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

Technology providers, NGOs/Nonprofits, For profit companies, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

Runa has taken to heart the indigenous tradition of drinking guayusa around a communal fire, and how this shared ritual brings together people in a cohesive manner. We also recognize that the agroforestry plots we plant are ecological strong because they incorporate many species, and that organizations also find strength in diversity.

Runa incorporates a wide range of stakeholders from farmers, to government, to investors, to consumers, and these collaborations are at the core of Runa's success and creativity.

Sustainable Products for the Middle Class Asian Customers

We want to change the focus of fair trade on tourists and export markets to fair trade for local customers in developing countries like Nepal. It is a fact that consumption by rising middle class in Asia is growing fast and creates a tremendous risk for the environment. Not only the community producers will suffer the most for environmental damage but they will also lack behind in the global competition and lose their livelihood. Hence, there is a need to reduce environmental risks of new consumer groups and connect local products from communities to markets.

About You

Organization: Development Voyage Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Tulsi

Last Name

Giri

Twitter

http://twitter.com/#!/giritulsi

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Development Voyage

Organization Country

Nepal, GA

Country where this project is creating social impact

Nepal, GA

Is your organization a

For‐profit

How long has your organization been operating?

1‐5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

Sustainable Products for the Middle Class Asian Customers

What change do you want to bring to the world?

We want to change the focus of fair trade on tourists and export markets to fair trade for local customers in developing countries like Nepal. It is a fact that consumption by rising middle class in Asia is growing fast and creates a tremendous risk for the environment. Not only the community producers will suffer the most for environmental damage but they will also lack behind in the global competition and lose their livelihood. Hence, there is a need to reduce environmental risks of new consumer groups and connect local products from communities to markets. Our store ‘Bazaar’ is creating a smooth introduction for sustainable products on the domestic market by promoting a mix of high value local products together with daily groceries and restaurant services.

What are the primary activities of your project?

The primary activities of our project are:

1. Local business development: Educating, training and motivating community producers to go into sustainable production concepts like bio/organic farming, eco-friendly production activities, fair-trade and sustainability.

2. Marketing: branding, promoting and selling local productions through ‘BAZAAR-a fair trade store’ established in Pokhara, Nepal.

3. Awareness raising: consult the communities about sustainable production and sensitize consumers that local/sustainable productions is not just for exporting to developed nations but also to be consumed in the local communities for promotion of local trade and sustainability.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

First of all our initiative is innovative for the way we introduce sustainable products to the Nepali middle class consumers. Bazaar is a department stores concept where you can only find sustainable products from around Nepal which previously didn’t exist. People are attracted to our store by daily groceries and restaurant/internet services and smoothly exposed to high value sustainable product such as handicraft picture frames and homemade herbal soap. We primarily focus on the products ranging from groceries to accessories and gifts that are produced in bio/organic, fair-trade, eco-friendly manners by the community producers. The second innovation is that BAZAAR actively reaches out to the communities as a business partner, consulting community producers on economic sustainable produce. We directly involve community producers in the supply chain and cut off informal brokers.

Nepal is at a critical juncture to work towards political stability and sustainable development while making ongoing peace process a success. Integrating sustainability issues into economic development of the communities is still in its infancy in Nepal and it is therefore a challenging task. The observed fact is that development and promotion of the local economy and markets at community level is essential for reduction of poverty, employment creation and sustainable development of the communities along with bringing lasting peace. Therefore, to address this issue our project in a new contribution to the field.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for less than a year

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

We have our project in Nepal. Nepal is a Himalayan country located between India and Chain with 147,181 sq. Km. area. Nepal has approximately 30 million population. Despite having diverse culture, rich natural beauties and famous for various unique features like Mt. Everest and Gautam Buddha, it is a developing country having one of the lowest Human Development Index (HDI) of 0.428. Around 24% population live under-poverty line and unemployment rate is around 46% (2008 estimates). Agriculture remains Nepal's principal economic activity, employing 80% of the population and providing 37% of GDP.

We have ‘Bazaar’ store in Pokhara. Pokhara is a second biggest sub-metropolitan city of Nepal with around 200,000 people living here. Pokhara is also the famous tourist destination of Nepal. The income of the people is increasing rapidly because of growing economic opportunities. This has given rise to more middle income families inside Pokhara who are only the consumers. Rapid urbanization, improvement in tourism industry and growing realty business are other factors that have lately increased the economic status people in Pokhara. Therefore, the market size of pokhara is growing day by day.

We work in the communities like Rivan village around 14 Km North-east of Pokhara in the production sector. Rivan is village development committee having 9 communities and around 2500 population. We are working directly with around 200 families of Rivan who are involved in the cooperatives. The major income source of people in Rivan is agriculture and labour migration of youth. Labour migration is one of the grim situations of the villages in Nepal which is hindering the production sector.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

I am 25 years old youth who has passion to work in the sector of sustainability. I was born in a middle class family in rural village of western Nepal. I have completed BA in Sociology and Anthropology. In fall 2008, I went to Switzerland to attend a semester course on Development Studies and Public Health followed by a four months internship in a Swiss NGO. In the same year, I founded a development organization named USSHA Foundation, Nepal to initiate sustainable community development actions through youth involvement. We are implementing 'Youth in Sustainable Development' project, among others, since August 2008 in Rivan village of Nepal. Now, Rivan has a Community Resource Centre (CRC) which provides computer and skills trainings to the youth and cooperatives on Bio-dynamic Farming, Tourism and Fish farming reaching 200 families as an income generating opportunities for them.

During my travel abroad I got opportunities to take part in conferences, courses and programs related to sustainability. Throughout this trip two things lured me the most i.e. the concepts of sustainability and the idea of market based approach to development. I attended 'Youth Encounter on Sustainability (YES Course)' in March 2009 in Tokyo which was one of the inspiring courses that has influenced my initiatives. During the time an idea emerged in my mind to start-up ‘Development Voyage’ with an aim to instil sustainability concepts into the market and communities of Nepal. Development Voyage thus initiated this project to link sustainable products from community producers to the market.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

In the initial phase of our project we have met the following positive progresses:

1. Community Engagement: In partnership with ‘Youth in Sustainable Development’ project of USSHA Foundation, our project has been able to initiate the bio-dynamic farming and fish-farming cooperatives in Rivan Village since September 2010. These cooperatives have started their productions which Bazaar will be marketing. Besides, we are also exploring other communities from where sustainable products can be brought to the market.

2. Customers flow: Since the formal launching of Bazaar in November 2010, we are receiving satisfactory flow of customers. We are having around 15 to 20 visitors per day in average. We are also conducting a market research to study the level of understanding and status of our potential customers regarding the sustainable products.

3. Funding support: After initiating Bazaar we have been successful to receive hybrid fund support of Euro 30,000.00 from ACACIA, Basel and GLS Foundation, Germany. This support has helped us a lot to strengthen our financial base to meet our objectives.

4. Partnerships: We have also been able to establish partnership with various local NGOs like Annapurna Area Conservation Project (ACAP), producers groups like Fair-Trade Group (FTG), Nepal etc.

We will measure achievements of our project in two levels: (I) Market performance, and (II) returns to its developmental missions.
The indicators of market performance of the project are number of costumers visiting our store per week, total number of community producers, cooperatives etc. we partnered with, sales per week etc. The indicators of returns to its development missions are number of people directly or indirectly employed by the project, number of products and product categories bearing sustainability values, initiatives towards conversion of normal producers into sustainable productions etc. We monitor and evaluate these indicators by tracking our weekly sales/purchase reports, list of products suppliers, interactions with stakeholders etc. and prepare progress reports every six months of operation. These progresses made are included in the sustainability report prepared at the end of each fiscal year.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

1,001- 10,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

Over the next three years our project will evolve with venturing into more products line and community producers from around Nepal. At the moment we are directly working with one community i.e. Rivan and few other producer groups like Fair-Trade Group of Nepal and Women Skill Development Project. We also plan to reach around 5 different communities and more than 15 producer groups/cooperatives. We will open 2 additional stores in other cities of Nepal. This would help us to increase our customer base while creating wider market opportunities to community producers and easy access of sustainable products to customers of other areas. We also expect to extend our networks with like-minded stakeholders to establish our mission of promoting sustainable products to middle class families.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

The barriers that might hinder the success of our project are: i) understanding of the middle class population about sustainable products and their value-added benefits, ii) skills and knowledge of community producers regarding sustainable production methods, and iii) quality and brand of local productions.

To address and overcome these barriers we are recently conducting a marketing research in Pokhara, Nepal. This is a new research field in Pokhara. The area covered by this research are if our targeted population has any idea regarding the eco/bio/organic productions, fair-trade etc., if they have bought any of such products in last few months, where do they find those products, if they would like to know more about sustainable productions, what will help them to choose local products over other commercial products etc. We are very expectant that the result of this research will guide us a lot to address the issues of understanding of the middle class population of Pokhara regarding sustainable products. For addressing the second issue we have already worked on directly with the community and engaged them in trainings and orientations about organic farming and fair-trade. As an example we have formed farmers cooperative in Rivan and provided them regular training before they go into the productions. So, in the long run we will take similar steps to address this issue. For quality and branding we will train the community producers as well as our staffs in the methods of quality control. We are also working together with experts and stakeholders to develop certain criteria control the quality of our products and services. We will also try to certify the products with organic/bio or fair-trade certification with the relevance.

Tell us about your partnerships

We are partnering with various organizations in four different levels:

1. Production and Community Engagement: The primary partners in this sector are Village Development Committee, Rivan, Youth Clubs in Rivan, USSHA Foundation Nepal, One World Alc. and Eco-Center Nepal. We are partnering with USSHA Foundation for education, training and formation of cooperatives in Rivan Village for bio-dynamic farming and fish-farming. One World and Eco-Center are providing us the technical and knowledge based support in the community engagement for productions. We are trying to develop ‘Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)’ between our project and USSHA Foundation to work together in long run in sustainable production sector in other communities of Nepal as well. The District Agriculture Office (DAO) of Government of Nepal has also supported financially and technically in the fish-farming initiatives in Rivan. Likely, we are partnering with other producers group like The Association of Craft Producers, Members of Fair-Trade Group of Nepal etc. from where we are bringing local products which are already fair-trade certified. We are working closely with the bigger NGOs like Annapurna Conservation Area Project (ACAP) to explore and build-up production linkage with other communities around Pokhara region.

2. Networking and Promotion: We are partnering with IDEM Network, Basel, Nepal Tourism Board, Pokhara Chapter, Change Fusion Nepal for networking and promoting our vision. As IDEM Network is the project partner of Rivan project, it has supported us to build-up partnership in Europe for fund raising and project promotion. We were able to secure funds for Bio-dynamic Farming and Fish Farming in Rivan as well as partnership with ACACIA and GLS Foundation was through IDEM Network.

3. Market Research and Development: We are working directly with Global Entrepreneurs, Netherlands and Pokhara University, School of Management for conducting marketing research. Global Entrepreneurs has also supported us in business plan development and international match-making.

4. Funding: ACACIA, Basel, GLS Foundation, Germany are our funding partners. These two organizations has supported us Euro 30,000.00 as a soft loan to establish our Bazaar and strengthen ourselves in market.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$10,001‐50,000

Explain your selections

We initiated our project by receiving financial support from our friends and family members. Without their support we wouldn’t be able to take the first steps necessary for the start-up of our organization and then Bazaar project. National NGOs like USSHA Foundation and International NGOs like ACACIA/IDEM have helped to build-up networks both in community level and international scale to secure funding and promote our ideas. Nepali NGOs have also supported us to understand the value-chain, sustainable production methods, community engagement and business development ideas.

After we initiated Bazaar and started receiving customers we have been supported by them as well. Specially, as being the new business of its kind, they are providing us the ideas and experiences to develop and maintain quality in our services. Some of the customers have also linked us with the innovative local products, producer groups and other organizations working in the field.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

We would like to strengthen our project over the next three years through networking, community engagement and multiplying our stores. First of all, we would like to strengthen our existing networks and partnerships in different levels and also develop new partnerships with like-minded stakeholders which will provide us a strong base in our business growth. This will also strengthen our capacity, expertise and presence in the market as well as address the policy issues where necessary. We will also work with our diverse networks to aware/educate both the producers and the middle-class consumers regarding the value-added benefits of sustainable products and their positive impact in the health, environment and societies. Next we would like to explore other communities, community producers, groups and organizations to strengthen our sustainable products base. We will develop our partnership with community stakeholders to engage the producers and promote the ideas of sustainable production while strengthening the community innovations. Finally, our strength is to market varieties of sustainable products to the middle class consumers. Hence, we would like to establish at least two more stores in next three years in other cities of Nepal. This will increase our customer base while promoting the sustainable products in wider market. In the long run we would like to go into franchising after measuring the successes of these few stores.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Restricted access to new markets

SECONDARY

Lack of skills/training

TERTIARY

Lack of visibility and investment

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

Our innovation will tackle the barriers in following ways:
- The sustainable products in Nepal have two challenges; i) have no fair market linkage, ii) comparatively low brand and qualities which proves limited economic access for community producers. We will establish 'Bazaar' as market-outlet to tackle this barrier.
- The community producers lack skills and training to start sustainable productions to add-value to their products necessary to compete in the new market. We partner with other stakeholders to provide trainings to them.
- The community producers lack investment required to grow out of their existing production methods and market their products. Our project assist them to form cooperatives which supports individual producers with visibility as a group and also investments.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Grown geographic reach: Within host country

SECONDARY

Enhanced existing impact through addition of complementary services

TERTIARY

Influenced other organizations and institutions through the spread of best practices

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

First, we want to grow our geographic reach within the host country by establishing stores in other cities to meet our aim of covering wider customers and exploring market opportunities for unreached community producers. Second, we want to add complementary services like tourism activities in our producers’ communities, cooperative shops in the rural areas etc. These ideas will enhance our impact in both producers and customers by adding value to our visions. Third, Asia being the biggest middle class market in the world we alone will not be able to reach to these vast markets. Therefore, we will partner with like-minded organizations for joint efforts to develop our ideas and scale-up our initiative within and outside the host country.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

NGOs/Nonprofits, For profit companies, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

We collaborate with government agencies, NGOs, for profit companies and universities. We have collaborated with the District Agriculture Office, a government body, in Pokhara. They have supported our ideas of establishing sustainable agriculture in Rivan. As government agencies are regulatory and policy making bodies our collaboration with them will help to advocate and lobby our vision. Our collaboration with NGOs have helped us to share the ideas, knowledge and skills required to understand sustainable production and consumption. We are collaborating with universities to receive educated youth working together with us to spread our ideas. For e.g. we are conducting ‘Market Research’ together with Pokhara University about sustainable products for domestic market and their usage.

FAVE Bags- Creating Opportunities for Women in Rural El Salvador via a Network of Home-Based Enterprises

Over 50% of households in rural El Salvador struggle with poverty where there are few if any opportunities to earn the much needed cash to pay for school, medical or other essential expenses. Women in particular face a difficult time earning necessary cash due to their numerous household obligations. Instead of forcing women to leave for distant factories and cities in search of work, we are creating an embedded network of home-based enterprises in the countryside which produce FAVE Bags for export to the US and is empowering women to earn the cash needed to support their families.

About You

Organization: Sustaion Our World Enterprises Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Aaron

Last Name

Redman

Twitter

Facebook Profile

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Sustaion Our World Enterprises

Organization Website

Organization Country

United States, AZ, Maricopa County

Country where this project is creating social impact

El Salvador, PZ

Is your organization a

For‐profit

How long has your organization been operating?

Less than a year

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Innovation

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Entry Form title

FAVE Bags- Creating Opportunities for Women in Rural El Salvador via a Network of Home-Based Enterprises

What change do you want to bring to the world?

Over 50% of households in rural El Salvador struggle with poverty where there are few if any opportunities to earn the much needed cash to pay for school, medical or other essential expenses. Women in particular face a difficult time earning necessary cash due to their numerous household obligations. Instead of forcing women to leave for distant factories and cities in search of work, we are creating an embedded network of home-based enterprises in the countryside which produce FAVE Bags for export to the US and is empowering women to earn the cash needed to support their families. This new paradigm of decentralized production, made possible by the spread of IT, offers an alternative to standard export-lead growth, ensuring that benefits actual reach those who need it most, the rural poor.

What are the primary activities of your project?

We are working in El Salvador to offer an alternative to standard, factory-based, export manufacturing. FAVE Bags, a re-usable produce bag intended for sale in the US market, are being produced using a novel approach. In January of 2011, we began working with 25 women from San Pedro Nonualco and nearby villages. The women self-organized into seven different groups each of which is responsible for the assembly of 100-200 FAVE Bags, per month. These are delivered to a local coordinator who pays the women’s groups and ships the bags to the US for sale. The women are able to work in their homes (saving time and money from transportation) and on their own schedules (around meals, school hours, etc.). In addition to creating these immediate opportunities, we seek to foster their long term success by providing entrepreneurship training and a platform with which they can formalize and grow their enterprises. Raw materials and other necessities are purchased in bulk by the coordinator who then distributes them to the separate groups for production.
With this decentralized model of production, FAVE Bag manufacturing creates far more benefits for the people and communities of El Salvador than a typical factory. With no infrastructure, minimal staffing, and the low cost of working in rural areas, FAVE Bags can expect to be retailed at competitive prices in the US. The benefits of this project don’t end in El Salvador; it is expected that each bag sold in the US will result in the avoidance of production, use and disposal of at least 150 plastic bags, a boon for the planet as well.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

The status quo in El Salvador is to develop through centralized factory and industrial production for export. In El Salvador there are 18 "free-trade" zones with thousands of workers making clothing and other products for export. While factories and international trade offers opportunities, the current model creates few benefits for those who most need them (including even the employees). The alternative promoted by many is often called “fair trade.” This generally relies on independent artists and cooperatives handcrafting goods and selling them in a non-systematic way to a developed world buyer. The end result is that “fair trade” goods tend to be expensive, artisanal goods that are sold in specialty stores and while benefiting workers, does nothing to disrupt or offer an alternative to the dominant paradigm of production for export.
Our initiative proposes that a rural network of decentralized production can be price competitive while providing much larger benefits for workers and local communities (as “fair trade” proposes to do). Many village women are already expert sewers and have some spare time almost every day but not all-day blocks (which factories require). Our plan is to harness the assets of these women and the social cohesion of rural communities to create a low-cost and effective production process (w/few capital expenses). We are building an efficient and effective organization which can deliver consistently high quality products on-time and at competitive prices for sale at any grocery store not just “fair trade” stores.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for less than a year

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

San Pedro Nonualco is a rural municipality of about 10,000 people in El Salvador on the foothills of the Chichontepec Volcano. As in all of El Salvador the scars of the a decade long civil war are still healing twenty years later. Much more devastating were earthquakes which struck in 2001 destroying over 99% of houses in the municipality. Agriculture remains the largest employer here. In addition to the traditional corn and beans the region was a major coffee production zone but its cultivation is slowly being abandoned; instead many San Pedranos have taken up fruit cultivation, particularly oranges. Most young people though either have to leave at 5am every morning to travel and labor in the maquilas (export-oriented factories), head to the cities in search of work or attempt to emigrate to the US. Despite a years of “economic liberalization” (conversion to US dollar, joining CAFTA (free trade agreement), etc.), economic growth has been disappointingly slow in El Salvador and this manifests itself in the countryside with poverty affecting ~50% of people.
With earthquake re-building efforts having been recently quite a success most people have a positive experience and view of engagement efforts by outside groups. In addition like elsewhere this community is intimately linked to the US. Nearly ¼ of Salvadorans currently reside in the US and the cultural exchange flows both ways. With over 60% of exports destined for the US and the use of the US dollar, it makes setting up an innovative production model for export to the US extremely feasible in San Pedro Nonualco.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

Aaron Redman spent two years as a Peace Corps Volunteer living in San Pedro Nonualco, El Salvador where we have begun this initiative. During that time Aaron grew intimately familiar with the many challenges this community and many places like it face, but he also realized that these places have a lot of assets which are not being utilized by traditional development. Aaron returned with a dedication to creating opportunities for the people of San Pedro Nonualco. Too often in development “experts” have brought their own ideas or technologies from elsewhere and tried to impose those solutions on a place with sometimes disastrous results. Aaron works from the opposite premise- begin with a particular community and search for solutions that leverage its assets to attack its specific problems. He is at home in San Pedro Nonualco and the people there are his second family. He found the knowledge he needed at the new Master's program at the School of Sustainability at ASU, which gave him the perspective, rigor and training required to create Sustainability initiatives. Additionally, while here in the USA Aaron has always sought to reduce his ecological footprint and support efforts to ameliorate troublesome issues such as the overuse of disposable plastic bags. Thus this initiative offers the perfect synergy of his activities here in the USA with his passion and dedication to the communities in El Salvador.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

In six months of operating this project has been very successful considering the limited resources and scale of this initial effort. This can be seen through several metrics.
Participation by women entrepreneurs: The continuing and enthusiastic engagement of the original 25 women who signed up demonstrates that this project offers them a worthwhile opportunity for improving their lives. “I love this opportunity, by being able to work at my home; I can earn the money I need so that my kids can get ahead and have the great future I wish for them.”
Money injected into local economy: In six months of operation ~$3,000 has been invested in the local economy of San Pedro Nonualco. One of the key metrics we have yet to fully develop is the hourly earnings of the participants, since we pay per bag produced. Until we collect more data we assume that continued participation can substitute temporarily.
Increased entrepreneurial and business skills: The participants have begun a year long course offered by a local NGO and completed several modules so far.
Sales of FAVE Bags in the US: So far 785 bags have been sold in the US at several retailers, farmers markets and online. Ultimately it is these sales that are the engine for the project and thus its success may be the most important metric. In addition this is an important metric for us because we estimate that each FAVE Bag purchase represents ~150 bag reduction in the need for disposable, plastic bags- a windfall for the Earth.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

Fewer than 100

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

101- 1,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

Rather than seeking to expand first, we will consolidate and improve upon our current system, a network of 7 groups representing 25 women. For the next year we will work exclusively with these women to improve the efficiency and ease of manufacture of FAVE Bags and tweak the logistics and communications until they are their most effective. During this time we will be increasing sales in the US. We estimate that we can double output before we need to begin to grow our production. We will do this first by slowly adding new groups to the network to a maximum of 12. This is a number that appears reasonable to expect one local worker to coordinate and manage. From there our expansion plan will be to create a new node in another El Salvadoran town with its own network of 5-12 women’s groups.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

The most important barrier to the success of this project will be the sales (or lack thereof) of FAVE bags in the US. For this reason a designer and branding expert, Christen Forrester was brought onto the team from the beginning to help design the bags, create the look and labels and to craft an effective marketing campaign. Another barrier for sales is lack of knowledge about the concept of produce bags which will be addressed through advertising as well as an in-person at farmer’s markets and stores.

In El Salvador the biggest potential barrier for a project like this is a lack of trust and unfamiliarity with local traditions, laws and institutions. The reason for working in this community in the first places is Aaron’s deep relationship with the people and experience working in the local situation. The trust that was built after years of working in the community means that the women are willing to work and not get paid until the end of the month while the local postman helps to package and send the bags to the US for free because he sees the benefit for his community. The long-term success of this project will happen because of the local staff. To that end we have hired a local leader to facilitate and manage the decentralized production and are providing business and technical training to all the participants to increase their capacity for success. Finally, over the next ten years, the ownership of FAVE Bags will be passed to the local women who will during this time gain the experience necessary to own, operate and manage the business.

Tell us about your partnerships

San Pedro Nonualco Mayor’s Office: From the beginning we have been working closely with the local government to assure that we are in compliance with any local ordinances and maximizing our potential to bring economic benefits to the community.

CONAMYPE: This is a government ministry which facilitates training for entrepreneurs and small scale businesses. We have worked with them to provide monthly trainings for our participants.

Peace Corps El Salvador: Additional on the grounds support and initial help has been provided by Peace Corps volunteers located in and around San Pedro Nonualco.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$10,001‐50,000

Explain your selections

To start-up we have relied on capital from Aaron Redman, the Innovation Challenges Grant and hopefully Ashoka Changemakers as well! Once up and running though our only source of funding will be customers- buyers of FAVE Bags in the US (and eventually elsewhere as well). From the start our intention is to create a self-sustaining enterprises because this is the only way to create long-term viable opportunities for individuals and communities.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

We have three goals for our enterprise:

1) Improve our manufacturing network: This will including assisting the participating women in upgrading their sewing machines, formally incorporating in El Salvador, and improving communications/logistics. The outcome of these and other efforts will be to bring down costs and enable increased production levels.

2) Improve our supply chain: With this or other grants we will buy our raw materials in bulk, enabling us to significantly lower prices. Also we will work with experts to analyze and improve the sustainability of our supply chain (energy, materials etc.).

3) Create a nation-wide sales network: In three years we plan to have FAVE bags available in grocery stores across the US. We will do this by beginning in Arizona and expanding, state by state.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Underemployment

SECONDARY

Restricted access to new markets

TERTIARY

Lack of skills/training

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

Underemployment: There is very little employment in rural areas, and most people must cobble together various odd jobs to make ends meet, which changes dramatically by season. FAVE Bags will provide a steady stream of income for women by making their spare hours during the day much more productive without them having to journey to a distant factory.
Access: Without an effective and efficient organization and connection to a US-based organization, the barrier to accessing the US market, at scale would be impossible for this community.
Lack of skills/training: Basic accounting and other business skills are essential to succeed as entrepreneurs. Manufacturing FAVE Bags gives them a safe and steady space to practice and develop skills, which will also be directly imparted through trainings.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Grown geographic reach: Within host country

SECONDARY

Enhanced existing impact through addition of complementary services

TERTIARY

Influenced other organizations and institutions through the spread of best practices

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

As described early, to meet projected sales growth we will create new ‘nodes’ of 5-12 enterprises in other municipalities in El Salvador. This will only come though, after we have consolidated and streamlined our system in San Pedro Nonualco. As we are already doing, this network provides the opportunity to add impact through complimentary services. Beyond the business training we will look into things from health care outreach to the micro-consignment model, as other ways to leverage our network to create income opportunities for our participants and improve the community. Finally we will work with researchers and students at Arizona State University to catalog and research our process and outcomes and to publicize and share the results and best practices with the broader community.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

NGOs/Nonprofits, For profit companies, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

Working with NGOs, local government and national ministries were all essential to our success in establishing our manufacturing network in El Salvador. We also have collaborated with a, small, local printing agency to produce all of our labels and tags. In the US, several non-profit grocers and farmers’ markets were essential to kick-starting our sales. Finally Arizona State University providing the nurturing environment that brought together a team of people of different backgrounds, as well as a grant for start-up which were the foundation of our success.

Create online platform for sustainable consumption, linking the supply of sustainable products with consumers.

“Las Páginas Verdes” (LPV) (The Green Pages)’s goal is to catalyze a sustainable consumption movement in which consumers push the private sector toward more sustainable practices. LPV does this through two plans of action: first, by increasing the consumer base that demands sustainable alternatives, and secondly, by linking these consumers with those currently offering such products and services.

About You

Organization: Las Páginas Verdes, a New Ventures Company Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Rodrigo

Last Name

Villar

Twitter

Facebook Profile

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Las Páginas Verdes, a New Ventures Company

Organization Country

Mexico, MEX

Country where this project is creating social impact

Mexico, DIF

Is your organization a

Non‐profit/NGO/citizen sector organization

How long has your organization been operating?

1‐5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

Create online platform for sustainable consumption, linking the supply of sustainable products with consumers.

What change do you want to bring to the world?

“Las Páginas Verdes” (LPV) (The Green Pages)’s goal is to catalyze a sustainable consumption movement in which consumers push the private sector toward more sustainable practices. LPV does this through two plans of action: first, by increasing the consumer base that demands sustainable alternatives, and secondly, by linking these consumers with those currently offering such products and services.

Generating a market for sustainable product and services has the potential to create significant systems change in Mexico, where environmental degradation is a significant problem in both urban and rural areas and disproportionately effects the poor.

What are the primary activities of your project?

Mexico has a fast-growing group of internet users (AMAI) and this project will increase the efficiency of the market for sustainable products by connecting supply with demand, accelerating the development of the market for sustainable goods and services, as well as helping small and medium businesses grow. As a result, raise environmental consciousness, positively affecting both the environment and some of Mexico’s most vulnerable populations.

The project will continue to evolve to include richer listing and community participation. LPV has already begun to develop richer listings, offering participating businesses their own micro-site within www.laspaginasverdes.com.

Eventually, in order to establish itself as a differentiated site, LPV will offer features of an online marketplace in which users can buy and sell through a site based check-out system that unifies the directory “storefront” listings for the user.

Short term:
• Photos of businesses and their products. Currently access to the digital cameras and the technical knowledge to upload pictures is out of reach for many of LPV’s businesses. With the expectation of eventually moving the responsibility of pictures onto the businesses, there is a current unmet need for technical support.
• Capacity building for participating businesses regarding site use, development, advertising, and service and product delivery.
• Logistical study to determine the best way to standardize the delivery quality of products and services.
• Buyer surveys to test and improve the site.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

In what is currently a highly inefficient market for environmentally sustainable products and services, LPV increases market efficiency and as a result grows supply and demand. The site development of LPV is innovative because it takes lessons from the directory industry in developed countries, applies them in a new way, and grows the market for sustainable goods and small businesses within Mexico.

Generating a market for sustainable product and services has the potential to create significant systems change in Mexico, where environmental degradation is a significant problem in both urban and rural areas and disproportionately effects the poor. This particular project positions Las Paginas Verdes for future large-scale expansion in a manner that is distinct from other directories in Mexico and Latin-America. We see the migration of information moving to the internet and this is an innovative manner to catalyze market efficiency for an environmentally, socially, and financially sustainable cause.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for less than a year

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

Mexico, with a population of 100 million people and a GDP of $ 840 billion, still faces a high unemployment rate and 28% of its production comes from the informal economy. Mexico City is also one of the most polluted cities in the world and its vast rural and agricultural areas have been abandoned due to the overuse of chemicals, which have caused irreparable damage to productive use. The government made many efforts to support sustainability within small and large companies, but most have failed. First, there is a lack of venture capital and support structure. Second, there are few technical support or consulting services to advise future small and medium sized business entrepreneurs. Finally, the Mexican government has a history of starting new businesses through the distribution of government subsidies, which has led to a high level of dependency and a lack of new business efficiencies. Nevertheless, gradually more people became interested in investing in clean technology, alternative energy, ecotourism, organic agriculture, sustainable fishing, certified wood, and businesses focused on the bottom of the pyramid, among others.

The problem that most sustainable companies have faced is the lack of contact with their end customers. There is limited information available, regarding the so-called "green products", and many people are not aware of the benefits to be gained through sustainable consumption. The lack of a focal point and bridge, between producers and consumers of sustainable products and services, has been a major barrier and reduces the potential benefits for the general population from economic and socially responsible practices.

In addition, most of the rural inhabitants of Mexico, who make their living in agriculture, are considered “bottom of the pyramid”, making less than 1 dollar per day. The environmental issues affect these vulnerable populations most strongly. As a result, developing a movement toward an increased consciousness of environmental issues will most strongly impact the vulnerable population who make their living off the land.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

New Ventures is an initiative of the World Resources Institute’s Markets and Enterprise Program. It started ten years ago as an initiative that would harness the power of enterprise to turn ideas around sustainability into action.

New Ventures Mexico, whose official name is A.C. Sustainable Business Center, has had offices in Mexico City since 2006. Dedicated to accelerating sustainable business in Mexico, its main objective is to promote an entrepreneurial culture and responsible consumption, promoting the growth of the leading companies dedicated to environmental sustainability.

In 2008, New Ventures launched the first directory that brings together the supply of sustainable products and services in Mexico: Las Paginas Verdes (LPV), translated as The Green Pages. At this time, LPV received the Environmental Merit Award in the Environmental Communication category.

The first edition of Las Paginas Verdes, consisted of 90,000 free copies distributed nationwide. This issue drew more than 1200 companies that offer a green environmentally friendly alternative to traditional products and services. Thus, for the first time in Mexico, the consumer in search of this type of offer could find everything in one document: organic foods, certified wood, solar panels, ecotourism destinations, ECOROPA, paintings, biodegradable organic waste products, and hundreds of other sustainable consumption options.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

Las Paginas Verdes measures its impact through three indicators. First, LPV measures the number of businesses listed from year to year. Over the past 3 years, the number of listed businesses has increased by over 50%.

The number of listed businesses are as follows:
In 2008, there were 1002 listed businesses
In 2009, there were 1698 listed businesses
In 2010, there were 1877 listed businesses

The second indicator that LPV uses are the number of web page visits and social network users. At the moment there are 40,000 visits per month, which has grown from 10,000 in 2009. There are also currently 20,000 social network users compared to the 150 that LPV had in 2009.

Third, LPV does two annual surveys, one oriented toward users and the other toward listed and advertising businesses. Through these surveys we measure their level of satisfaction with the media and the extent to which they use it.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

More than 10,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

Over the next three years LPV will develop a complementary online presence and continue adding features to position LPV for the future. This plan is in response to the growth of the ABC segments, of increasing internet use by, and the trend of directories in developed countries. As LPV increases user statistics and feedback from surveys we will be able to make iterative adjustments. The online presence will provide a richer and more meaningful connection with an increased number of consumers and a more engaging advertising presence for businesses. As a result, the interaction will raise environmental consciousness, positively effecting the environment, and consequently, some of the most vulnerable populations who disproportionately depend on the environment.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

The greatest barriers to success are the threat of online substitutes, in particular, search engines. In order to overcome these threats, LPV will position itself for the future industry change as business and service look-up moves online.

The greatest trends in this industry are described below:
• Growth of ABC: ABC refers to the top 3 of 6 socio-economic levels described by the Mexican Association of Agencies for Market Research and Public Opinion (AMAI), the group that makes up LPV's target segment.
• Growth of internet use: Mexico is one of the nations with the fastest growing number of people using the internet. Among LPV’s target segment of ABC, internet use grew from 63% to 71% between 2008 to 2009 and continues to increase (AMAI).
• Trend of directories in developed countries: Looking at other countries, such as the US, we can see that directories have migrated online in correlation with the growing number of internet users.
• The quality standardization of logistical and inventory for participating businesses.

In order to address the industry trends and challenges above, LPV plans to maintain relevancy through the following:
• Differentiation through development of an online community and rich features
• Search engine optimization to use the competing search engines as an opportunity to direct traffic toward the site
• Use search engine advertising to cover potential LPV advertising inventory shortages
• In order to maintain the quality of logistics and inventory for participating businesses, LPV plans to train and then evaluate participating businesses through surveys and user reviews.

Tell us about your partnerships

Since its inception, LPV has been characterized as an inclusive project, working hand in hand with three key stakeholders: the private sector, the federal government and local civil sector organizations. We seek partners that allow us to maximize existing structures, such as promotional outlets or distribution channels. A few examples include the strong long-term relationships we have built with SEMARNAT, the SMA, and Librerías Educal, which are government agencies that support us through distribution and dissemination of the project; Starbucks, Grupo Editorial Expansion, and Schering Plough, who distribute 44% of the total copies; EUMEX and Clear Channel, who coordinate advertising and provide LPV with publishing space to spread our message.

LPV uses the same policy when choosing providers, who become more than just service providers. Our providers become partners in each of the projects that we undertake and must demonstrate a high level of commitment. For example, Stop Diseño and Quad Graphics have been responsible for editorial design and printing since the first publication in 2008. In addition, Calderón Capin & Associates provide legal advice and another partner, Shiatsus, was chosen as a socially and environmentally responsible partner for EcoFest 2011.

We are confident that companies who join as sponsors, not only believe in the capabilities of the project, but that they live it. Our sponsors are concerned about the details of creating a positive impact through their investment every step of the way. Foundation FEMSA and Fomento Ecológico Banamex have supported multiple LPV projects while Toyota, Green Works, SCA, and Wa-Mart have invested in LPV and expressed satisfaction with the results.

We want each of the synergies we create with our allies to be long term, addressing the interests of both parties so that the results are win-win.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$250,001‐500,000

Explain your selections

Most of LPV’s income comes from sponsors that buy advertisement to position their products in the green market. With their support we are able to distribute the directory for free to the consumers.

In 2010 we asked for financial support from the federal government to execute a green SME positioning project and this year we have received the request a second time..

In addition, we receive income from businesses that have had good results from a listing in LPV and decide to purchase an advertisement in the next publication.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

The Project’s timeline depends on a monitoring of the online population and adjustments as necessary based on user preference, growth, and the lifecycle stage of the directory industry.

Recognizing the growing relevance of search engines in Mexico, and their role as a future directory substitute, LPV will differentiate from, and partner with, search engines in order to continue to flourish and stay profitable.

The project will continue to evolve to include richer listing and community participation. LPV has already begun to develop richer listings, offering participating businesses their own micro-site within www.laspaginasverdes.com.

Eventually, in order to establish itself as a differentiated site, LPV will offer features of an online marketplace in which users can buy and sell through a site based check-out system that unifies the directory “storefront” listings for the user.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Lack of efficiency

SECONDARY

Restricted access to new markets

TERTIARY

Lack of access to information and networks

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

LPV connects SMEs to their target market, thereby increasing their sales and fomenting alliances. This is accomplished through two plans of action: first, by increasing the consumer base that demands sustainable alternatives, and secondly, by linking these consumers with those currently offering such products and services, improving the efficiency of the market.

The intention is to move beyond an online directory and to become a space for interaction between sustainable businesses with products and services and consumers interested in those products or services. This will begin through a platform which offers a new distribution channel for green SME’s. Many of the green SMEs already had an online presence before LPV, but commonly find it difficult to gain visibility in new markets.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Grown geographic reach: Within host country

SECONDARY

Enhanced existing impact through addition of complementary services

TERTIARY

Repurposed your model for other sectors/development needs

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

After 4 years of operation, we have had great success, one of which was the creation of our web page, which currently has around 50,000 visits per month. Nevertheless, the intention is to move beyond an online directory and to become a space for interaction between sustainable businesses with products and services and consumers interested in those products or services. This will begin through a platform which offers a new distribution channel for green SME’s.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

Technology providers, NGOs/Nonprofits, For profit companies, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

The key principle in LPV’s cost minimization efforts is to cooperate as much as possible with partners rather than traditional suppliers. By leveraging its partner network, LPV obtains significant cost savings, for example, 70% of distribution is accomplished through in-kind donations and exchanges. An internal study indicates LPV is able to create 3.89 pesos worth for each peso it invests.

Quantified partner benefit examples of LPV in Mexico include:
• Free consulting services (Bain & Company amongst others) – Saving of USD 300,000
• Discounted attachment to 68,000 Expansion (CNN/TimeWarner) magazines – Saving of USD 17,000
• Free distribution of 39,000 directories in Starbucks Coffee Shops – Saving of USD 11,000

Renewable Bazaar, a social network and trading platform for renewable energy products and services

We enable renewable energy solutions accessible to everyone in this world. We provide a platform for trading of quality and affordable renewable energy based products and services for the rural populations of the world.

Renewable Bazaar is an e-commerce and social networking portal for everyone interested in Renewable Energy and commerce associated with it. It acts as a platform for exchange of information, commerce, social networking, multidisciplinary resource-sharing and utilisation, development and deployment on Renewable Energy project opportunities.

About You

Organization: Renewable Bazaar Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Gunajit

Last Name

Brahma

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Renewable Bazaar

Organization Website

Organization Country

India, MM

Country where this project is creating social impact

India

Is your organization a

For‐profit

How long has your organization been operating?

Less than a year

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

Renewable Bazaar, a social network and trading platform for renewable energy products and services

What change do you want to bring to the world?

We enable renewable energy solutions accessible to everyone in this world. We provide a platform for trading of quality and affordable renewable energy based products and services for the rural populations of the world.

Renewable Bazaar is an e-commerce and social networking portal for everyone interested in Renewable Energy and commerce associated with it. It acts as a platform for exchange of information, commerce, social networking, multidisciplinary resource-sharing and utilisation, development and deployment on Renewable Energy project opportunities.

The Bazaar covers supply-of and demand-for projects, i.e. the actions taken by project sponsors, developers and investors (in a broad sense). It will also create employment for the rural people, by providing them trainings.

What are the primary activities of your project?

The key objective of the Bazaar is to facilitate the creation of an efficient global green energy market through sharing information related to project activities among stakeholders worldwide. It will also create jobs for the rural people by enabling them to sell and service the renewable products and providing training and education through our NGO partners.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

Renewable Bazaar is a global “virtual green market place” open to all interested parties. It is a facilitating initiative that helps to reduce transaction costs in the project cycle as well as to encourage increased information exchange and dialogue among current and potential future project participants and other market players.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for less than a year

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

We are catering to the BoP (Base of the Pyramid) population of the world, the energy poor people. With our product range of less than $300/-, we plan to provide green energy solutions to them and reduce their dependency on fossil fuel.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

Renewable Bazaar was founded by 4 like-minded and hearted individuals who believed in the philosophy that a clean green earth needs to include the rural populations of the world. This drove the founders to come up with the website which will connect buyers, sellers, NGOs, VOs and everyone interested in renewable energy to use it as a platform for exchange of ideas and information and as a trading platform.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

We already have over 360 registered members in our website and about 700 in our Facebook page (http://www.facebook.com/pages/Renewable-Energy/149703108402843). We are in talk with NGOs to provide sustainable energy solutions through them to the rural people. To start with, we plan to provide an NGO (sell through them), with whom we are in negotiation, 100 LED-based solar lamps in the rural areas of North East India.

Our success is measured both qualitative and quantitative, as we plan to provide energy solutions of less than $300 and will monitor the quality of it ourselves.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

101-1,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

Over the next three years, with over 10000 members in our site, we plan to provide energy solutions to about 1000 villages in India (through our NGO partners) and reduce the carbon footprints of these villages. We also plan to provide them carbon credits, by which we believe that their socio-economic conditions will improve. We plan to cater to every renewable energy sectors in the coming 3 years.

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

Governments involvement with promotion of Nuclear energy as an alternative is our main hindrance. But with recent problems and issues associated with nuclear power, we are hopeful that the governments around the world will consider renewable energy as the future and will promote and invest more on it.

We plan to increase our partnership with NGOs and VOs and through them, educate the general public about the benefits of renewable energy, and influence them to use renewable energy products and services.

Our other barrier is the quality issues presently involved with the renewable energy products. We plan to overcome it by providing a standardized protocol for such products across the world, and also provide training to provide quality services of such products.

Tell us about your partnerships

We are in talk with various NGOs to partner with us, through whom we plan to provide renewable energy solutions to the rural masses.

So far, we are in talk to sign MoU with iCareforDoon and to provide energy solutions to The ANT (The Action Northeast Trust). We are also in talk with a possible partnership with Ecoseed organisation.

We are in talk with sellers of renewable energy based products to put up their product details in our website and use our eCommerce platform for transaction and selling of their products.

We are also co-organising The Carbon Congress 2011 in New Delhi to be held on 5-7 October, 2011.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$10,001‐50,000

Explain your selections

Since our solutions are to provide clean energy to everyone in this world, everyone is a stakeholder.

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

Over the next three years, we plan to strengthen our network and partnership with various NGOs, VOs and training institutes across the world. These network will provide us with necessary customers and members to promote green energy solutions across the world.

Also, we will create our very own eCommerce platform to help buyers and sellers do business through our website.

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Lack of access to information and networks

SECONDARY

Lack of skills/training

TERTIARY

Underemployment

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

Since our innovations caters at providing a platform for social networking and trading of renewable energy based products and services, we plan to cater to the above mentions barriers directly.

Our website will be a one-stop-solution of information and network for parties and individuals interested in renewable energy. The website will also act as a job portal for promotion of green-collar jobs and provide training and necessary skill-sets for improving employment opportunities to anyone who considers green jobs as their career option.

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Grown geographic reach: Global

SECONDARY

Influenced other organizations and institutions through the spread of best practices

TERTIARY

Leveraged technology

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

Since Renewable Bazaar is an online portal, our present activity is to grow global. Leveraging technology on an on-going basis is what we plan to achieve in the near future and influencing other is a long term prospective where we want to bring in everyone in the sphere of green technologies, so that their impact on Mother Earth's pollution be minimal, and together we can build a clean green planet for our future generations.

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

Government, Technology providers, NGOs/Nonprofits, For profit companies, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

Since we are providing energy solutions for everyone in this world, we want to collaborate with every stakeholder.

Thunk in India: Innovations for a green and ethical existance: Upcycling & Empowering underprivileged communities in its process

1) Reducing the amount to waste reaching the landfills by Up-cycling to create high-end value added products. Innovating with mainly non-biodegradable waste materials that generally find their way into landfills, and transforming them into useful, durable and well-designed day-to-day-use products,

2) Uplifting the livelihoods of Underprivileged communities (slum workers, craftsmen) by involving them in the various aspects of the project

3) Providing alternatives for conscious and ethical consumerism

About You

Organization: Thunk in India Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Suren

Last Name

Vikhash

Twitter

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Thunk in India

Organization Website

Organization Country

India, TN

Country where this project is creating social impact

India, XX

Is your organization a

For‐profit

How long has your organization been operating?

1‐5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

Thunk in India: Innovations for a green and ethical existance: Upcycling & Empowering underprivileged communities in its process

What change do you want to bring to the world?

1) Reducing the amount to waste reaching the landfills by Up-cycling to create high-end value added products. Innovating with mainly non-biodegradable waste materials that generally find their way into landfills, and transforming them into useful, durable and well-designed day-to-day-use products,

2) Uplifting the livelihoods of Underprivileged communities (slum workers, craftsmen) by involving them in the various aspects of the project

3) Providing alternatives for conscious and ethical consumerism

What are the primary activities of your project?

1) Innovative Waste Management
2) Empowerment of people from various Underprivileged communities around us.

By looking at different ways to manage waste at source and by understanding how the existing system works, we understood how intervention at various points with small changes would result in big differences. We decided to make useful products from waste by providing value to otherwise discarded materials. We use these waste as new rich raw materials to innovate with (processing innovations, weave exploration and product innovation. This not only utilizes the waste materials and increase their life span but also reduces new natural resources from being used up.

Thunk is a start-up company, established in 2009. It came forth from a design project carried out by Suren in the field of waste in 2007- 2008. The project consisted of designing compositors that converted organic waste into manure. That project lasted a year, and during that period Suren familiarized himself with the current waste management system in Bangalore, and understood the various stakeholders’ roles in the entire system. This led him to start exploring other options with the waste materials. One such identified interventions was Up-cycling waste materials. He designed various products using waste materials like tetrapak cartons and polythene covers. At the end of 2008, Suren realised that a lot of people were interested and supported (by purchasing) the concept and the products. Moreover, many companies and stores were increasingly interested in selling these high end products made from waste materials. After completing a successful pilot stage, he realized that there was demand for such products and that it was worthwhile to start an organization, which constantly innovated with waste. Rag pickers play a crucial role in the waste management system who initiate the process of waste management by primary waste collection. Through this project, we empower the livelihoods of these people.

Social and environmental effects:
1) By up-cycling waste materials, we reduce the quantities of waste reaching the landfills and dump yards. Dumping waste in dump yards poisons the land, the water bodies connected to it, and the environment around. Thus, through our venture, lesser land is polluted by garbage.
2) Utilisation of waste materials
3) People from various underprivileged communities are empowered
4) We indirectly reduce the amount of new resources being used from the earth. When a customer buys our product (made from waste materials), rather than a new product that uses fresh natural resources, they reduce the amount of new resources being used and eaten from the earth.

What is innovative about your initiative? How is it a new contribution to the field?

1) Our method of Up-cycling
2) Cradle to cradle approach
3) Reducing the use of new natural resources by Reusing wasted resources.

Thunk in India is passionate and dedicated towards innovating with waste materials that generally find their way into landfills, and transforming them into useful, durable and well designed day-to-day-use products. Thunk is establishing itself as a Brand, and our products have the assurance of great design and quality. Through the process of conversion of waste into useful products, the lives of various Underprivileged Communities (slum women) and Craft Communities (weavers, tailors etc) are benefited.

By looking at different ways to manage waste at source and by understanding how the existing system works, we understood how intervention at various points with small changes would result in big differences. We decided to make the so-called 'useless' waste ‘useful’, providing value for these otherwise discarded materials.

Whether the materials are from household waste, industrial waste or natural waste,a lot of these waste materials have a long life span, but only a small percentage of its life span is utilized before it is discarded and reaches the dump yards. We use this so called waste, as new rich raw materials to innovate with (processing innovations, weave exploration and product innovation. This not only utilizes the waste materials and increase their life span but also reduces new natural resources from being used up. We re-use and thereby “up-cycle”, following a cradle to cradle design approach

What stage is your project in?

Operating for 1‐5 years

Tell us about the community that you engage? eg. economic conditions, political structures, norms and values, demographic trends, history, and experience with engagement efforts.

Important ways in which we empower the livelihoods’ of the Underprivileged communities:
Identifying and Implementing appropriate saving schemes:
Most of the money the people from the underprivileged communities earn goes into their day-to-day expenses like food etc. They can barely save INR2 to INR5 a day. Unfortunately, to even open a bank account, one needs to have a minimum initial deposit of INR500. We are in the process of adopting the Bhima Saving Scheme ( a micro-personal saving scheme ) where one can open an account with as little as INR1, and also save as little as INR1 per day.

Good living and working conditions:
For most of them basic necessities like electricity and potable drinking water are unavailable. We aim to ensure that these basic conditions for good living are available at their residences. This is not an issue that can be solved in one day. It requires fighting for these basic rights for the poor. At the workspace we maintain proper hygiene. For example, when the slum women segregate waste with their bare hands, they are exposed to a lot of diseases and become vulnerable to skin allergies. Gloves are not a convenient solution to these issues, as they are uncomfortable to wear while segregating waste. It slows the segregation process and makes it harder. We are intervening here, co-creating with them to design a better product that will ensure safety and hygiene and at the same time be comfortable to use.

Identifying and creating awareness of the need for health insurance:
We intend to educate them of the importance of health, and the necessary rewards of having health insurance. In “normal” circumstances the women cannot afford to treat themselves or their children at a hospital, as it is too expensive. Saving a small amount for this everyday and getting the safety of health insurance would ensure good medical facilities.

Providing education for their children:
Most of the children from these underprivileged communities are the ones who are involved in begging. We identified this and plan to change this situation. As a long-term goal, we want to set up schools that will provide basic education.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

I,Suren Vikhash studied at Rishi Valley (KFI) and then went to Srishti (specialized in product design, graduated in dec'2008). Got inspired to do something that makes a difference to the place I live in, and for the underprivileged communities around me. I am now a Social Entrepreneur and currently leading this project, Thunk in India.

Doing several projects for big companies,I began questioning and looking more deeply into what exactly I was doing and where I was contributing and its socio-economical impact. I realized that most of the times it had very little value. I believe that I have one life time for sure and can use my design learning for the betterment of the place I live in and for those not so privileged communities.

I truly believe that design is a tool that can be used to address a lot of problems around us. I do not agree that technology is a solution to all problems. However, technology can aid in implementing various creative solutions. I feel privileged to have studied design and I would like to spend my time creatively addressing various problems around me that need to be immediately looked into. One of them being the problem of waste. I would also like to empower the livelihoods of various underprivileged communities around me by providing them various platforms.

Through this model, I would like to use design as a tool to uplift various communities around me and also address various crucial problems we are facing around us.

Social Impact

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Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured

Social and environmental effects: 1) By up-cycling waste materials, we reduce the quantities of waste reaching the landfills and dump yards. Dumping waste in dump yards poisons the land, the water bodies connected to it, and the environment around. Thus, through our venture, lesser land is polluted by garbage. So far around 100 tonnes of non-biodegradable waste have been converted into useful products. 2) Utilization of waste materials 3) We indirectly reduce the amount of new resources being used from the earth. When a customer buys our product (made from waste materials), they reduce the amount of new resources being used and eaten from the earth. 4) People from various underprivileged communities are empowered. Currently, 10 weavers and 40 Slum men and women get benefited by our project. Livelihoods are empowered by a) Income generation: Currently each of the slum workers engaged with us earns INR120 a day / 3000INR per month on average (This income is earned by waste management: waste collection, segregation and processing). We also help our workers by linking them with government schemes such as appropriate saving schemes, health insurance schemes, in addition to providing them basic facilities and infrastructure for good health and hygiene at work spaces. b) Teaching professional skills such as waste management, waste processing, tailoring and weaving to our workers. Once they have acquired these skills, they are equipped with assets which they can use to earn a living for the rest of their lives even if they want to work independently. c) Identifying and Implementing appropriate saving schemes: We are in the process of adopting the Bhima Saving Scheme ( a micro-personal saving scheme ) where one can open an account with as little as INR1.00, and also save as little as INR1.00 per day. d) Improved Living Conditions: We are linking up slums we work at, with the relevant authorities and NGOs to ensure that they have access to these amenities. e) Identifying and creating awareness of the need for health insurance: The importance of health, and the consequence of having health insurance is being promoted and linkages to the relevant insurance companies are being secured currently. f) Providing education for their children: we plan to set up schools that will provide basic education and vocational training.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

Fewer than 100

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

101- 1,000

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

Our products and concept will reach a larger audience globally.
We will strengthen our R&D activities.
We will focus on producing exceptional designs with great finishing.
We will increase the tonnes of waste we up-cycle P.A.
Will provide a platform for artists and designers to ideate on up-cycling ideas.
We will engage and empower 200 more slum workers.

We will broaden our focus from innovation from waste to Innovation for a green and ethical existance, which will work on the following areas:

1) Innovative waste management including Up-cycling trash,
2) Designing and producing desirable Organic Alternatives (food, clothing and cosmetics) at affordable prices,
3)Innovative applications of renewable energy ( human powered, wind, solar etc), and
4) Ethical reforms

Sustainability

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What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

Our project is a new venture. It requires us to modify existing well-established techniques and approaches, and connect various stakeholders to form a new system. There is some amount of risk with trying out something new.

Here are some of the problems we foresee:
Waste materials changing with time:
The kind of waste materials generated keeps changing with time. We keep up-to-date with the new materials coming into the market. We also work with a large variety of waste materials: different types of plastic, tetrapak, e-waste, natural waste etc. Every 3 months, we do an analysis to observe the kinds of waste materials and the quantity currently being generated. We explore the potentials of various waste materials and develop different ways of using them.

Reduced sales of products due to recession
We focus on developing day-to-day use products that are based on needs. We create products that have a high functional value, which are in demand irrespective of the recession. We also price the products competitively. We create products of great design with high functionality and quality.

Competitor challenges
We are in the process of patenting some of our unique process of converting waste into useful products. Patenting is a long-term process and would take another year for the patent to be passed. We also focus on innovation and come up with a new range of products every 3 months. We give importance to the products aesthetic appeal. The product creates a need for the user. It is also a statement one makes by buying and using our products. We work on designing unique products that are new in the market.

Stagnation of products
A lot of innovative concepts such as ours are initially well accepted in the market, but after a period of time, the users get bored with the products. In order to avoid this, as mentioned earlier, our designers constantly work on creating a new range of products every 3 months. We also come up with various collections according to seasons. With every range of products coming out into the market, we ensure new, better-finished, functionally smart and fresh designs.

Labour related problems
We identify alternative people who can perform the functions of the existing labourers. We train some of our labourers with multiple skill sets, so that they can replace other positions for a short period of time when necessary. We also identify spaces where labour is available with ease. For example, in the village where our weaving unit is located, only 3 out of 40 weavers work with us. More weavers are available all around us.

Supply of raw materials
Raw materials are generally available at low cost. But sometimes due to external factors such as rain, our material can become temporarily non-usable. We are creating an inventory whereby materials required for a month are processed in advance and stored. We interact with the market on a regular basis, to foresee and ensure the supply of other materials.

Slow market development for such products from waste materials
Our communication designers explore different ways of strategic communication, advertisement and publicity. We also market the products as high durability and cost-efficient products. Their being made from waste materials and by people from underprivileged communities is just a “story” behind the products. Most of our products cannot be identified as made from waste materials unless specified. This attracts a larger audience as well.

Hygiene of the waste materials obtained
We explore the different ways of cleaning our waste materials to make them 100 percent clean and hygienic. We use organic detergents and also intend to test our cleaned raw materials for 0 percent bacteria. We are also in the process of getting an authorisation by the pollution control board for our products.

Electricity and water
Most of the process in our project, from waste cleaning to fabrication are hand-done and do not require electricity. However, there are certain parts of our process, which are dependent on electricity and water. We store water in drums for urgent use and also intend to buy a generator in case of sudden electricity shortage.

Tell us about your partnerships

Thunk is currently funded by Suren Vikhash, founder of Thunk in India. A capital of 50000Rs was used to begin this venture.

This venture was an off shoot to Suren Vikhash’s product design graduation project ‘ waste containers’ During the course of this project, he got a grass root level understanding of the entire waste management system in Bangalore and also identified all the stake holders involved. Identifying various intervention points in this system, where small changes could lead to big differences, he conceptualized and prototyped various products and services. For one of the outcomes- Up-cycling waste , he was awarded the PAN IIT Innovation award where he received a sum of 50000 Rupees. With this money, Suren took forward my graduation project and started this venture.

Apart from this, his parents gave him 1 Lakh to start the project.
Currently, money comes in from the products we sell at various stores, customized products we make for clients and the various services we offer. Thunk’s focus is to make this system self-sustainable and viable.
Currently Thunk has not invested in buying production tools. Instead, we outsource them. We mainly invest in research and development at the moment.

Current annual budget of project, in US dollars

$10,001‐50,000

Explain your selections

How do you plan to strengthen your project in the next three years?

Challenges

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Which barriers to employment does your innovation address?
Please select up to three in order of relevancy to your project.

PRIMARY

Underemployment

SECONDARY

Lack of skills/training

TERTIARY

Other (Specify Below)

Please describe how your innovation specifically tackles the barriers listed above.

We provide job opportunities to the poorest sections of society.We work with Slum dwellers and train them with various skills such as tailoring,weaving etc.that are key needs of our project.We believe that paying well is important but just that does not solve their problems or empower their livelihoods.Equipping them with various skills ensure that they can make money even if they leave our company.Otherwise,with no skill there are basic to square one if they stop working with us.We also encourage those with entrepreneural qualities and provide a platform to various opportunities and markets.So for example we provide new markets and clients to the self help group we create,so that they need not only work for us and be dependent on us.We make them independent of Thunk and self sustainable

Are you trying to scale your organization or initiative?
If yes, please check up to three potential pathways in order of relevancy to you.

PRIMARY

Grown geographic reach: Within host country

SECONDARY

Grown geographic reach: Multi-country

TERTIARY

Grown geographic reach: Global

Please describe which of your growth activities are current or planned for the immediate future.

1)We plan to initially expand our stores that we retail to from 15 (current) to 50 across India.
2)We plan to begin exporting our products. We have already been approached by some companies
3)We intend to sell our up-cycled materials like fabrics (not just our finished products) to various countries. This expands the potential, where different people and companies can make products using our materials
4)Managing waste for various corporates and converting their non biodegradable waste into customized products for their own use (eg: in-house stationary, corporate gifting, conference bags etc)
5)Developing a new range of furniture from Automobile waste
6)Developing a range of lifestyle accessory products
7)Opening our own high-end stores in select cities India and abroad within 3 years

Do you collaborate with any of the following: (Check all that apply)

NGOs/Nonprofits, Academia/universities.

If yes, how have these collaborations helped your innovation to succeed?

Collaboration and Co-creation are key to the success of our project. May it be resources, skills, advise or talent. We believe is collaborating with various experts (individuals and organization) who can bring value to the table. Our focus is clear and we cannot dive into all aspects of a system at the start. We also don't intend to reinvent the wheel. For example, one of our focus is to design solutions for non-biodegradable waste, so we sell all the biodegradable waste ( paper...) that have a vale to secondary vendors.We collaborate with the following people and organizations:
1) Designers and Artists
2) Business advisers
3) marketing advisers
4) Educational institutes ( faculty and student interns)
5) NGO's for waste collection and segregation
6) Self Help Groups for production

Solar Sister

Location

Uganda

Solar Sister empowers women with economic opportunity while eradicating energy poverty. They combine the breakthrough potential of solar technology with a deliberately woman-centered direct sales network to bring light, hope and opportunity to even the most remote communities in rural Africa.

www.solarsister.org

CLEAN ENERGIES: EFFICIENT TOOLS FOR SOCIAL COHESION SOLAR COLLECTORS IN VULNERABLE COMMUNITIES

The project aims at providing hot and clean water to a community sports centre and to 5 houses by installing solar collectors for water heating. This service will be extended to other houses and community facilities, thus providing continuity to a multisectoral-approach strategy where the State, the private sector and society commingle to generate sustainable development in the most disadvantageous areas in the city of Buenos Aires. New technologies will be implemented to promote energy saving and environmental awareness.

About You

Organization: Dirección General de Relaciones Internacionales y Protocolo, Gobierno de la Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Fulvio

Last Name

Pompeo

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Dirección General de Relaciones Internacionales y Protocolo, Gobierno de la Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires

Organization Website

Organization Phone

(+54.11) 43239400 int. 2127

Organization Address

Av. de Mayo 525. Of.137. Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires

Organization Country

Argentina, C

Country where this project is creating social impact

Argentina, C

Is your organization a

Government

How long has your organization been operating?

More than 5 years

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Innovation

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Entry Form title

CLEAN ENERGIES: EFFICIENT TOOLS FOR SOCIAL COHESION SOLAR COLLECTORS IN VULNERABLE COMMUNITIES

Describe your project

The project aims at providing hot and clean water to a community sports centre and to 5 houses by installing solar collectors for water heating. This service will be extended to other houses and community facilities, thus providing continuity to a multisectoral-approach strategy where the State, the private sector and society commingle to generate sustainable development in the most disadvantageous areas in the city of Buenos Aires. New technologies will be implemented to promote energy saving and environmental awareness.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for less than a year

What makes your project unique as it relates to the theme of this competition?

Given the current trend to improve the use of renewable energy, solar thermal energy for the generation of hot water, both for individual and community installations, is the most practical way to reduce the emission of polluting gases in urban areas.

The installation of solar panels is included within an urbanization plan carried out by the Government of the City of Buenos Aires in the most vulnerable areas of the city. Using the most beneficial renewable energy source in this program generates awareness of this technological product in the market (solar panels) and provides a conceptual strategy for sustainable housing construction.

This project stands out as it represents a comprehensive approach which seeks to solve structural problems through the implementation of low-cost and innovative solutions in social vulnerability situations (as the one this area of the city suffers).

Furthermore, its multisectoral and participative character provides legitimacy and long-time sustainability to the project.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

The project was first developed thanks to the joint work of an NGO, the IADS (Argentine Institute for Sustainable Development) and 2 departments of the Government of the City of Buenos Aires: the CBAS (Organization for the Development of Southern Buenos Aires) and the APRA (Agency of Environmental Protection.) The IADS develops innovative proposals to promote sustainable development through projects and policies. The APRA promotes actions intended to protect the urban environment. The CBAS develops public services which favor human and urban development in order to balance inequalities in the most marginalized areas of the city of Buenos Aires.

This project arose out of the ideas and efforts of each participating entity. In the search for promotion of sustainable development, the relationship between environment and poverty has always been treated but never seriously considered. Thanks to the interaction between environmental and sustainable development organizations (IADS and APRA) and the entity which is related to socio-urban parameters (CBAS), it was determined that the relationship above may be materialized through this initiative. The results obtained show that it is possible to solve environmental and social problems simultaneously.

Social Impact

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Who or what (i.e. youth, women, environment, etc.) benefits from your project, and why is your project critical?

Direct beneficiaries of this intervention will be 3,860 people (1,149 households), who reside in Los Piletones and who use the Community Sports Centre, as well as five families who have installed solar panels in their houses. For many years, local authorities and other agents have been working on the urbanization and humanization of this space. Energy supply has been one of the many barriers they encountered (at present, the Government pays energy vendors to supply the neighborhood).

It is essential to complement the urbanization plan with energy sustainability strategies, economic saving and environmental awareness for the long-term and overall sustainability of the project.

Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured.

This project has been successful in many areas:

• The inter-organization approach and the different viewpoints have enriched the project, thus helping overcome the many barriers we have faced.

• Technology appropriation and the improvement in direct beneficiaries’ welfare have been effective. There are even other neighbors who are willing to implement this solution.

• Technical, political, institutional and social barriers were identified, which will be considered when implementing this project in other areas.

The project’s follow-up and the measurement of its impacts have been carried out by monitoring the hygiene conditions and life quality of the neighborhood’s inhabitants both before and after the installation of solar collectors, in order to identify changes to habits and customs as well as to assess the level of satisfaction. Moreover, it is worth mentioning that, ever since the solar panels were implemented, energy costs are lower and the registry of consumption shows a substantial decrease in this respect.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

101 - 1,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

The main barrier is the capability to purchase new solar panels. The office of International Relations and Cooperation is working to give publicity to this initiative and to obtain grants that guarantee its continuity. Another barrier is related to the resistance to change by the inhabitants of marginalized neighborhoods, who claim priorities related to subsistence. In order to overcome this issue, it will be necessary to strengthen the participation of neighbors and major social organizations that are already working there. Building deficiencies would be a potential barrier as they prevent some houses from having solar panels installed. In order to overcome this barrier, the CBAS would make the necessary improvements, as it has done so far.

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

Over the next three years, the project will evolve in the following three directions:

1) Extend solar panel installation to other community buildings in Los Piletones (dining facilities, health centers and schools) as well as to more houses. These will be selected following criteria which will be democratically defined by neighbors through the participation of Neighborhood Associations.

2) Incorporate this type of technologies in the bid documents for Social Housing plans for the city of Buenos Aires.

3) Become a reference model by transferring good practices and sharing our experience with other cities in Argentina and abroad.

Sustainability

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For each selection, please explain the financial and non-financial support from each

The main financial support was provided by the Embassy of Germany (USD 20,000), which allowed us to purchase solar collectors.

The Argentine Institute for Sustainable Development provided specialized human resources for the project coordination and performance.

The CBAS provided USD 5,000 for expenses concerning logistics, human resources and conditioning of houses selected (which were not prepared for the installation of solar panels). Moreover, it provided human resources that would be in charge of the social work within the neighborhood.
The Agency of Environmental Protection provided technical and human resources, as well as equipment and broadcasting materials. Furthermore, it supplied materials for conditioning houses and for installing solar collectors.

The Neighbors Association of the Los Piletones Neighborhood and the neighborhood’s Public Library worked on a voluntary basis by discussing problems and making decisions at key stages of the project (as the selection of beneficiary houses). This granted adequacy and legitimacy to its implementation.

How do you plan to grow and/or diversify your base of support in the next three years?

The current multisectoral partnership provides a great potential to develop this project in the future and to overcome difficulties. A broadcasting plan will be prepared so as to communicate, both at national and international levels, the existence of the project and the changes to the beneficiaries’ lives. This plan will provide the necessary publicity to reach new agents and industries which may collaborate in the diversification and extension of our bases of support.

Current trends show a growing willingness to purchase solar panels, which may make the technology market for renewable energy more dynamic. In this sense, the private sector may become, in the medium term, one of the most important pillars for the support of this project and of others related to social interests.

The inclusion of these technologies in governmental Housing Plans (for the city of Buenos Aires and other provinces) would promote a new concept of sustainable housing with beneficial economic, social and environmental impacts, which would also contribute to market acceleration.

Collaboration

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Please select your areas of intervention in the home improvement market

Financing, Technology, Sanitation, Water, Infrastructure, Energy conservation, Renewable energy, Green housing, Environment, Urban development, Citizen/community participation, Public policy.

Is your innovation addressing barriers in the home improvement/progressive housing market? If so, please describe in detail your mechanisms of intervention

Poor settlements, as Los Piletones neighborhood, receive energy through community devices. Whenever there is a conflict related to tariffs or a technical malfunction related to the energy company, energy supply is firstly reduced in marginalized areas.
Panels provide autonomy to houses and allow energy saving, water storage and hot water supply in places that used to be impossible to reach. Also, accidents and environmental damage due to carbon monoxide escapes (from devices which have not been properly installed or which function under unstable conditions) will be prevented.

Taking into account that, in 2006, the government of the City of Buenos Aires declared this zone as an area of “sanitary risk” due to the collapse of sewage networks, rainwash discharge and water supply, the urbanization tasks performed allowed us to improve housing conditions through the use of technology.

Are you currently collaborating with private companies, or have you partnered with private companies in the past? With which companies?

The company Energe is participating in this project as provider of solar thermal energy equipments. This is a company with offices in Argentina which was originally created in the Argentinean University of Cuyo. Not only is its purpose to reach financial profitability, but also to generate positive social impact.

Please describe in detail the nature of the partnership(s)

Materializing the use of alternative energy in this project leads to the association of the sustainability concept with an urbanization and house-conditioning strategy. This conceptual association represents an innovation in the building industry and provides publicity to the companies which could successfully implement it with positive social impact.

Select the unit(s) with which the partnership was formed

Other (please specify).

PROVIBIS 2011 – Prototype of Bioclimatic Social Housing

Resources depletion and climate change imply a change in the building criteria. PROVIBIS is a bioenvironmental, sustainable building approach addressed to poor families based on waste recycling which can be carried out by the families themselves. PROVIBIS rooms are equipped with thermal comfort, rainwater recovery, biodigester, energy saving, solar heater and design economy. Since the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) was approved in 1948, the right to adequate housing has been acknowledged as one of the most important needs to be solved.

About You

Organization: Asociacion Ecologista Nueva Tierra Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

jorge omar

Last Name

lema

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Asociacion Ecologista Nueva Tierra

Organization Website

Organization Phone

54 011 4839 0258

Organization Address

Francisco Gonzalez 1995 – primer piso

Organization Country

Argentina, B

Country where this project is creating social impact

Argentina

Is your organization a

Non‐profit/NGO/citizen sector organization

How long has your organization been operating?

More than 5 years

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Innovation

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Entry Form title

PROVIBIS 2011 – Prototype of Bioclimatic Social Housing

Describe your project

Resources depletion and climate change imply a change in the building criteria. PROVIBIS is a bioenvironmental, sustainable building approach addressed to poor families based on waste recycling which can be carried out by the families themselves. PROVIBIS rooms are equipped with thermal comfort, rainwater recovery, biodigester, energy saving, solar heater and design economy. Since the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) was approved in 1948, the right to adequate housing has been acknowledged as one of the most important needs to be solved. In Argentina more than 30% of the population does not have a house and lives in slums, tenement houses or occupied houses.

What stage is your project in?

Operating for 1‐5 years

What makes your project unique as it relates to the theme of this competition?

The fact that PROVIBIS is a unique project within the UNASUR (Union of South American Nations) and because it proposes ten actions to improve social housing
1) Solar water heating device. It consist of a solar collector with adjustable inclination aimed at domestic water heating (shower)
2) Wind generator – fitted to the solar heating device, it allows to charge a battery (for leds)
3) LED technology for lighting. 5 slots downstairs and 5 upstairs.
4) Side or parallel shadow meshes. It depends on the house orientation. They generate deep shadows thus making houses much cooler.
5) Rainwater recovery: by means of drain pipes that feed the toilet tank. The second tank (drinkable water) is within the technical room space.
6) Use of transoms. Strategically placed over the stairs, these allow having a cooler house.
7) Anti hail glass panel: to achieve more natural light throughout the day (energy saving)
8) Open floor: the walls and doors expenses are eliminated and these are replaced by two 1,20 m x 2,40 meters wardrobes. It provides more flexibility to the private sector.
9) PROVIBIS BIODIGESTER.- an organic waste recovery system by which waste is turned into gas was invented.
10) Walls are mainly built with Ductal® concrete panels (concrete and recycled plastic materials PET) and residents themselves build their bricks

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

- We always say: HELP US TO BUILD THIS DREAM, and it has to do with providing a housing solution to the poorest people on the planet, and here in the south (Argentina) it is necessary to apply PROVIBIS concepts.
- As founder of this idea (newspaper articles attached) my proposal is to drastically change social housing by means of:
-design and surface economy
-Improvement in ventilation and overcrowding.
- Optimization of resources, spend less – do more
-Incorporate new materials and building methods
- Include beneficiaries in volunteer work
- Teach building jobs (more than 30)
- Social moral and civic education
- Disseminate the performed work so that much more people adopt the model
- Adapt PROVIBIS to the weathers and regions of the world (flexibility)

Social Impact

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Who or what (i.e. youth, women, environment, etc.) benefits from your project, and why is your project critical?

People who benefit from the initiative are those living in marginalized neighborhoods, poor people including environmental refugees.
Volunteers are benefited by their supportive work
Technical school students who participate are also benefited.
The whole community is benefited because marginality and poverty are eliminated.
In view of a State that does not intervene (as usual in all underdeveloped or developing countries).

Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured.

In December 2010 PROVIBIS was granted the First Regional Award issued by the most important Argentine authority in the social housing field – the Ministry of Federal Planning. With the most important panel of judges in the country, the faculty of Engineering, construction unions, national institute of technical schools and officers of the Argentine government. 60 researches were submitted.
In 2009 the ultra-high performance fiber-reinforced concrete bricks project (ductal concrete) was awarded the first prize issued by the most important scientific authority in Argentina, Instituto Sabato (sustainable bricks)
Before that the San Martin University Foundation awarded the Accesit Prize to me in connection with the social health housing project called Your House is Your Health that proposes adequate housing solutions to avoid diseases, mainly in children, unprotected by their living conditions (contaminated rivers, factory pollution, lack of ventilation, lack of thermal insulation, contaminated water, etc).

How many people have been impacted by your project?

101 - 1,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

It is just a financial issue. Partnerships with NGOs are already developed or can be developed at the investor’s request. The housing cooperatives (a legal concept in our country) are already established and working within poor neighborhoods. Ideas, projects and technical solutions have already been solved. There is a lack of political will or strategic partnership for the financing of PROVIBIS prototypes building to start providing solutions and be able to show the results.

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

PROVIBIS was highly acknowledged by the end of 2010. This acknowledgement, carried out in the public sector, will be completed in 2011. This added to international acknowledgement which is very beneficial for UNASUR – (Argentina – Brazil – Uruguay – Paraguay – Bolivia – etc.) that is evidencing an exponential growth without military conflicts.
A region that has natural and human resources to solve the problem of adequate housing. We need everyone’s effort and in the triennium 2011 - 2013 we will achieve a more prosperous region with improved living conditions (poor but decent). This is the dream I would like to accomplish.

Sustainability

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For each selection, please explain the financial and non-financial support from each

o Foundations (20%)
o Non government Organizations (10%)
o Companies (10%)
o Regional government (30%)
o National government (30%)

How do you plan to grow and/or diversify your base of support in the next three years?

Basics are already in the working cooperatives and technical building team.

Growth will be achieved by involving Municipal, provincial and national governments; as well as foundations, companies and NGOs.

The diversification of the base of support may be related to the Ministry of Social Action and Housing Institutes at provincial level.

Collaboration

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Please select your areas of intervention in the home improvement market

Design, Technical assistance, Infrastructure, Renewable energy, Green housing, Environment, Income generation, Urban development, Rural development, Citizen/community participation.

Is your innovation addressing barriers in the home improvement/progressive housing market? If so, please describe in detail your mechanisms of intervention

Energy saving.
Sustainability and durability over time
Recycling-recovery
Clean energy generation
Social aid to vulnerable communities
Employment solutions
Housing solutions
Moral and civics solutions

Are you currently collaborating with private companies, or have you partnered with private companies in the past? With which companies?

No. we have not partnered with private companies yet

Please describe in detail the nature of the partnership(s)

Select the unit(s) with which the partnership was formed

R&D department.

Transition Vila Delgado

Location

Volta Redonda
Brazil

O projeto Transition Vila Delgado quer desenvolver um trabalho de Revitalização das moradias dessa comunidade que vivem as margens do Rio Paraíba do sul e enfrenta sérios problemas de infraestrutura como: falta d´água; saneamento básico precário; as residências estão construídas muito próximas umas das outras, sem ventilação e com problemas sociais. Em parceria com o setor público e privado, pretendemos realizar a reforma e a revitalização de forma sustentável com a participação dos moradores e alunos do IFRJ no processo de reforma.

Sistema Modular Agricultara Ecotelhado

Location

Porto Alegre
Brazil

Analisando os problemas das grandes cidades com desigualdade social, problemas de inundações, poluição, casas e favelas populares com grande emigração o meio rural e seus habitantes com claros sinais de pobreza com baixo acesso à alimentação, decidimos dar nossa contribuição e conhecimento para melhorar a vida destas comunidades sofridas.
Foi pensando neste segmento populacional que desenvolvemos o Sistema
Modular Agricultura Ecotelhado para agricultura familiar urbana.

SOLABODE AFFORDABLE PREFAB MODULAR ECO HOMES (a 'first world' solution only)

Affordability and sustainability are paramount! Using locally grown and manufactured engineered plywood roof, wall and floor panels, factory finished for assembly on any site, provides a mass produced low cost solution that uses less fossil fuel with less pollution and boosts the local economy. Modular plan options provide for easy additions when budgets and families grow. Suspended concrete floor slab provide superior comfort via passive solar design. The whole prefab kit will fit in/on a truck or shipping container for fast delivery and assembly on site.

About You

Organization: Ecotect Limited Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Mark

Last Name

Fielding

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Ecotect Limited

Organization Website

Organization Phone

64 3 5468760

Organization Address

163 Cleveland Terrace, Nelson

Organization Country

New Zealand

Country where this project is creating social impact

n/a

Is your organization a

Please select

How long has your organization been operating?

More than 5 years

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Innovation

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Entry Form title

SOLABODE AFFORDABLE PREFAB MODULAR ECO HOMES (a 'first world' solution only)

Describe your project

Affordability and sustainability are paramount! Using locally grown and manufactured engineered plywood roof, wall and floor panels, factory finished for assembly on any site, provides a mass produced low cost solution that uses less fossil fuel with less pollution and boosts the local economy. Modular plan options provide for easy additions when budgets and families grow. Suspended concrete floor slab provide superior comfort via passive solar design. The whole prefab kit will fit in/on a truck or shipping container for fast delivery and assembly on site. Panel design provides for a popular contemporary style so that owners feel proud without the stigma of low cost housing. Floor plan designs are mirrored for the northern hemisphere. New Zealand has the resources but lacks capitol funding

What stage is your project in?

Idea phase

What makes your project unique as it relates to the theme of this competition?

Home affordability is an ever decreasing reality, this can be addressed with mass production provided that the product is safe, comfortable and visually attractive. Add environmental sustainability with a boost to the local economy and you provide a consciousness raising example for other business. With clever design all these aspects can be balanced so that we all win.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

As an architectural designer interested in all things ‘green’ since my hippy days in the 1970’s, the practise of designing ever bigger and ‘brighter’ homes gradually lost interest for me and I began to seek out inspiration from other sources. Local colleagues were already working with natural materials like earth which appealed greatly to me as the most sustainable building material on the planet. Others such as Michael Reynolds in New Mexico were building completely self sufficient shelter from recycled garbage and salvaged materials and showing how a home does not need to take from the earth’s resources nor put pollution back in.
With these influences I set out to find the ultimate solution that perfectly married affordability with sustainability and provided for optimum comfort using free solar energy –and it had to look good! My region exports more raw materials than it uses for manufacturing, I saw that we can easily add value to change that poor economic balance, so we don’t become another third world country where once we were one of the wealthiest in the world.

Social Impact

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Who or what (i.e. youth, women, environment, etc.) benefits from your project, and why is your project critical?

As mentioned above, all sectors benefit from sustainably produced affordable housing. Local economies benefit by adding value to raw materials that are otherwise exported only to be imported back as manufactured items which increases foreign debt. Purchasers benefit by not being overly burdened with mortgage debt. The environment benefits first because the plantation timber resource is renewable and second because with less transportation, fossil fuels are preserved and less pollution is emmited. All these things are critical to a sustainable human population of this over burdened world.

Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured.

This project has only seen some early prototypes built and tested by home owners. While many aspects were sucessful, lessons from those experiments led to redesigning the concept and re evaluating priorities.
I have approached some businesses with my idea already and have received favourable responses but no financial commitment as yet. One client has agreed to commission one building as a holiday home and has agreed to allow promotion of the concept. Nelson has a large and busy international port only a few minutes truck drive from possible factory sites.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

Fewer than 100

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

Capitol investment is the main barrier to this project even starting at this stage. I have thought through how promotion of this product is the key to its success, the design and manufacturing aspects can quickly be perfected with a few prototypes. The base resources and industries to support the manufacturing of this project are already in place, it just needs a good business plan, management and a committed team.

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

Once capitol funding is provided along with a sound business management team, then prototypes can be evaluated both at design level and at manufacturing level ready for a marketing launch after about one year. After a two year local marketing campaign, the company would be ready to expand globally to other western and Asian nations. Nelson has one of the busiest ports in New Zealand so exporting is direct from the manufacturing base. Mass marketing is the key, the homes not only feel good, they look good and meet current market housing trends, particularly for first home or the holiday home markets. The appeal of a three week assembly time on site will be a major selling point and people will feel good and proud of their affordable eco home with envious neighbours buying in to the deal.

Sustainability

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For each selection, please explain the financial and non-financial support from each

As this is an idea only at this stage, it is only myself and few interested clients that are funding the project.

How do you plan to grow and/or diversify your base of support in the next three years?

The only resource I have at this stage to grow is to show and tell about my ideas to as many powerful people and organisations as I can. This competition is another avenue.

Collaboration

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Please select your areas of intervention in the home improvement market

Design, Technical assistance, Energy conservation, Green housing.

Is your innovation addressing barriers in the home improvement/progressive housing market? If so, please describe in detail your mechanisms of intervention

My mechanisms of intervention...hmm, well as described above, I am trying to bring quality affordable housing to the masses. Quality meaning safe, comfortable, non toxic, low energy use, made with sustainable and renewable materials using local industry and workforces. The prefab nature of these homes makes them also possible to be kitsets for homeowners to assemble themselves, provided they have basic skills. The tools and fixings can be provided with the kit, all panels are screwed together with sealants applied prior to joint battens.

Are you currently collaborating with private companies, or have you partnered with private companies in the past? With which companies?

No, I have sought such partnerships but none so far have 'run' with the ideas. My region lacks capitol, or I just havn't found it yet. The interest and praise was high but businesss here are staying with their core industry as the recession continues.

Please describe in detail the nature of the partnership(s)

None at this stage, but the idea was to have all material/manufacturing companies be proportional partners according to their value input.

Select the unit(s) with which the partnership was formed

TriBurbia - An Organic Self-Supporting Sustainable Community

Triburbia is a proposal to create a LIFE-WORK-FARM Community , divided into different housing types and food cultivation. The Design features a self - sustaining internal model and financing scheme. It provides for housing single people , typical townhomes , and multi - generational homes. The heart of the concept is that each person helps to raise and prepare the daily food and food income products as part of a wholistic life among like minded folks.

About You

Organization: Design Vision Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

william

Last Name

badrick

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Design Vision

Organization Phone

503 224 5117

Organization Address

1722 nw Raleigh St

Organization Country

United States, OR, Multnomah County

Country where this project is creating social impact

United States

Is your organization a

Not registered

How long has your organization been operating?

More than 5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

TriBurbia - An Organic Self-Supporting Sustainable Community

Describe your project

Triburbia is a proposal to create a LIFE-WORK-FARM Community , divided into different housing types and food cultivation. The Design features a self - sustaining internal model and financing scheme. It provides for housing single people , typical townhomes , and multi - generational homes. The heart of the concept is that each person helps to raise and prepare the daily food and food income products as part of a wholistic life among like minded folks.

What stage is your project in?

Idea phase

What makes your project unique as it relates to the theme of this competition?

This project is special in that it integrates shared community sustainable LIFE/WORK values into the lives of one and all. By bringing all residents into the food nurturing/preparation process , we will tie the hearts and minds of the community together. The benefits made visible to the people of seeing their handiwork fill their tables and their community bank , will re - integrate them with a richer human experience.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

Bill Badrick has been engaged in Design and Sustainability issues for 24 years. Bill has exhibited Green Artworks in NYC,LA,SF and Portland.
Bill is currenlty advocating for the inclusion of a Park Roof for the on-going 3.6billion CRC Interstate Bridge.
Bill is strongly inspired to build TriBurbia as a way for all of us to see that a better , more socially and organically integrated life is within our reach.

Social Impact

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Who or what (i.e. youth, women, environment, etc.) benefits from your project, and why is your project critical?

We all benefit from Triburbia because it will be an example of a better way to live in a sustainable future. By spending time raising and preparing community foods , all Triburbians will re-integrate their lives with nature and each other. Triburbia is critical because we need a new sustainable form of living in balance with our fragile planet. Humankind can start now to make a more logical and harmonious form of life and work.

Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured.

Triburbia has been featured in a Green Case Study Book now available on AMAZON.COM. The Book has been shared with many of the largest green web blog communities.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

101 - 1,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

1001‐10,000

What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

Communication of the idea to funding people. - Promotion and exhibitions.

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

The project will evolve from Concept to Promotional Package to Funding Group to Resident Gathering. We believe the power of the concept will drive it to success. The critical component is just to share it with the general public and Venture Funders in the appropriate venues.

Sustainability

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For each selection, please explain the financial and non-financial support from each

Individuals have provided financial support for creation of the Presentation Artworks and the Publication of the Book.

How do you plan to grow and/or diversify your base of support in the next three years?

The base will grow through the spread of the idea and the development of founding partners. The power of word of mouth in the enlightened communities will drive the growth of participants and the base of Venture Funders.

Collaboration

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Please select your areas of intervention in the home improvement market

Design, Energy conservation, Renewable energy, Green housing, Environment, Income generation, Citizen/community participation.

Is your innovation addressing barriers in the home improvement/progressive housing market? If so, please describe in detail your mechanisms of intervention

The key barrier we address is the housing of individuals with limited needs and means. We have a design for a micro - home that will open the door for many to live for the first time in a home of their own.

Are you currently collaborating with private companies, or have you partnered with private companies in the past? With which companies?

Please describe in detail the nature of the partnership(s)

Select the unit(s) with which the partnership was formed

TSD will develop the cities of tomorrow with the communities of today.

To create sustainable cities within our lifetimes it is imperative to successfully retrofit existing urban areas. TSD grows sustainability one dwelling at a time, to create sustainable streets, then expanding to entire eco-neighborhoods.

Our key product is a bespoke web application for design review, discussion, resources, and feedback. We see the client as a collaborator, and the community as a stakeholder. TSD works to empower people for tailored design.
By sharing knowledge and bringing together localized communities discourse and collaboration can occur.

About You

Organization: Taylor Square Designs Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Erika

Last Name

Whillas

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Taylor Square Designs

Organization Phone

7185308088

Organization Address

244 Carlton Ave, apt 2, Brooklyn

Organization Country

United States, NY, New York County

Country where this project is creating social impact

United States, MI, Wayne County

Is your organization a

For‐profit

How long has your organization been operating?

1‐5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

TSD will develop the cities of tomorrow with the communities of today.

Describe your project

To create sustainable cities within our lifetimes it is imperative to successfully retrofit existing urban areas. TSD grows sustainability one dwelling at a time, to create sustainable streets, then expanding to entire eco-neighborhoods.

Our key product is a bespoke web application for design review, discussion, resources, and feedback. We see the client as a collaborator, and the community as a stakeholder. TSD works to empower people for tailored design.
By sharing knowledge and bringing together localized communities discourse and collaboration can occur.

What stage is your project in?

Idea phase

What makes your project unique as it relates to the theme of this competition?

TSD works in an inclusive and bottom up approach, to develop sustainable urban communities. Rather than demolish and rebuild we seek to recycle and improve building stock. By working with existing communities we can retain established social fabric and avoid the catastrophic upheaval witnessed in the major Post-WWII ‘urban renewal’ projects in America. Sustainable retrofitting technology has wide scale implications given that most existing dwellings will still be in use in 50 years time.
Currently in Detroit there are no viable conduits for relationships between existing communities and potential investors to work together for mutually beneficial small-scale dynamic developments. TSD will implement a model that works to vastly improve social and environmental conditions in distressed urban areas that can be replicated throughout the city, and ideally throughout the country.
The equitable path established will not purely result in gentrification – our goal is to create socially and economically diverse communities, not polarized neighborhoods.
By creating more wealth for an area, everyone wins.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

Erika Whillas first conceived the idea at Columbia Univeristy’s social innovation boot camp, where she quickly found other potential collaborators. The project has captured the interest of range of international experts willing to volunteer their time to the initial phases of development.
With a background in web production, Erika has experienced that with appropriate web tools people can collaborate around various projects. A clear example is housing. Typically delivered by property developers and driven by an economic bottom line, home buyers, particularly the less affluent, are required to buy what the market delivers. There is a massive disconnect between the needs of the occupants, and the market product.

In developing TSD’s model, Erika was inspired by the neighborhood of Vauban in Germany, where small collectives of like minded individuals came together to co-invest in a shared vision for their homes and environment.

TSD will provide participants the knowledge and tools to replicate such an approach – empowering them to build the sustainable communities they want.

Social Impact

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Who or what (i.e. youth, women, environment, etc.) benefits from your project, and why is your project critical?

Cities are major polluters and our current urban models are unsustainable. Cities, also, provide one of the best opportunities for building a sustainable future.
Detroit is a “shrinking city”, and as this city retracts to its urban core, and potentially urban villages, there is immense opportunity to establish vital and sustainable communities.
Currently in Detroit there are no viable conduits for relationships between communities and potential investors to work together for mutually beneficial small-scale dynamic developments.
TSD will provide digital tools for communities and investors to participate in the urban development process, and ensure all key stakeholders’ voices are heard.

Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured.

TSD is a social enterprise. Our goal is to create sustainable urban developments while also keeping the company economically stable. By leasing properties while simultaneously refinancing on them we will continue to grow momentum and financial stability.
Our metrics of success are:
- Retention: continued participation of stakeholders from development to occupancy
- Sustainability: optimal use of energy, water, and waste management, suitable to the projects bioregion
- Financial return: for the investors and the property owners
- Social return: achieved by engaging the community in the entire process.

In the race to design a sustainable city many are planning the cities of the future, ignoring current urban landscapes. TSD works in an inclusive and bottom up approach, to develop sustainable urban communities.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

Fewer than 100

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

1001‐10,000

What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

Our project will be under time and resources constraints and will need to be tightly aligned to its budget and timeline.
Thankfully the ‘urban sustainability’ landscape isn’t about competition, it’s about collaboration. The challenge is providing people with the knowledge, tools, support and supply chain to empower them to make the best decisions in this rapidly evolving area. Fortunately, there are many great programs engaging in Detroit who would act as peers, consultants, and collaborators on sustainable urban development projects, including:
- The Greening of Detroit
- The Building Community Workshop
- The Urban Neighborhood Initiative

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

Our projects’ key phases over the next three years are as follows:
1. Provide a digital platform to the localized community to build a project resource base and a mechanism for dialogue. Conversations here are fuelled by TSD with best practices and evidence based case studies.
2. Feedback from the digital platform is incorporated into rapid prototyping, which is then reviewed and refined.
3. The implementation of the design solution is paired with real time digital feedback, so that necessary adjustments are made swiftly.

Sustainability

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For each selection, please explain the financial and non-financial support from each

Several private revenue sources have expressed interest in the ‘Growing Sustainability’ project, and we are discussing pooling investments from friends and family to invest in community development.

The project has captured the interest of range of international experts willing to volunteer their time to the initial phases. The core team and its consultants span 3 continents, and include architects, urban designers, web engineers and web producers.

How do you plan to grow and/or diversify your base of support in the next three years?

Detroit is a perfect city to trial our ideas, and if this project is successful TSD will pursue government funding through US Federal agencies such as the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).

In regards to the financial narrative for the community, our properties will be rented to low income families with the option of “lease to own”. By doing this we aim to assist the community by providing access to affordable housing, as well as an opportunity to improve their credit ratings with financial institutions.

Collaboration

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Please select your areas of intervention in the home improvement market

Financing, Design, Technology, Energy conservation, Renewable energy, Green housing, Environment, Urban development, Citizen/community participation, Public policy.

Is your innovation addressing barriers in the home improvement/progressive housing market? If so, please describe in detail your mechanisms of intervention

Rather than demolish and rebuild we seek to recycle and improve building stock. By working with existing communities we can retain established social fabric and avoid the catastrophic upheaval witnessed in the major Post-WWII ‘urban renewal’ projects in America. Sustainable retrofitting technology has wide scale implications given that most existing dwellings will still be in use in 50 years time.
Our properties will be rented to low income families with the option of “lease to own”. By doing this we aim to assist the community by providing access to affordable housing, as well as an opportunity to improve their credit ratings with financial institutions.
Currently in Detroit there are no viable conduits for relationships between existing communities and potential investors to work together for mutually beneficial small-scale dynamic developments.
TSD will implement a model that works to vastly improve social and environmental conditions in distressed urban areas that can be replicated throughout the city, and ideally throughout the country. The equitable path established will not purely result in gentrification – our goal is to create socially and economically diverse communities, not polarized neighborhoods. By creating more wealth for an area, everyone wins.
Our implementation plan is as follows:
i. Identify a suitable Detroit neighbourhood to buy a property. Examine:
- Density
- Transport
- Community programs
- Council services
- Existing qualities
- Improvement opportunities
- affordability

ii. Engage local residents, discussing:
- Unmet needs
- Sustainability opportunities
- Successful case studies
- The community’s priorities
- Community support

iii. Renovate property:
- Provide more inclusive/attractive streetscapes to meet local community needs
- Improve building sustainability in terms of energy operations and fuel demands
- Develop gardens and seek opportunities for local food production
- Improve the sense of community with low side fences, seating in front yard, etc.
- Incorporate on-site water sensitive urban design

iv. Rent property, targeting low income families

v. Explore community program options:
- Seek partners to improve the public realm, e.g. street tree planting
- City garden
- Recycling
- Food truck bays
- Bicycle facilities

vi. Refinance property to buy another in the area. Repeat the above steps.

Are you currently collaborating with private companies, or have you partnered with private companies in the past? With which companies?

Not at this time.

Please describe in detail the nature of the partnership(s)

Select the unit(s) with which the partnership was formed

Sea Turtles Win in Court

[Editor's note: This article was written by Alicia Graef and was originally featured on Care2.com.]

More sea turtles died or became disabled in the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico than in any other event in the past two decades, according to the National Wildlife Federation, the Sea Turtle Conservancy and the Florida Wildlife Federation.

Green Access Services

Location

Lagos
Nigeria

Green Access was born in furtherance of the efforts of its promoter, Maxwell Marshall, to make shelter accessible with green technology. His ideas received recognition from Ashoka: Innovators for the Public, and his election as a fellow of that organisation in 2007 led directly to the establishment of Green Access.

Youth in GeoTourism

We want to create the possibility for young people to travel, make impact to society, discover new cultures and at the same time promote GeoTourism conception. Upon return to native country young changemakers will make presentations to show beauty and problems of the region to increase awareness and bring change.

About You

Organization: YOUNITEAM Union in the sphere of social entrepreneurship Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

Section 1: About You

First Name

Natalia

Last Name

Najmi

Organization

YOUNITEAM Union in the sphere of social entrepreneurship

Country

Morocco, RSA

Section 2: About Your Organization

Organization Name

YOUNITEAM Union in the sphere of social entrepreneurship

Organization Website

Organization Phone

Organization Address

Is your organization a

Not registered

Organization Country

n/a

Your idea

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Name Your Project

Youth in GeoTourism

Country your work focuses on

Morocco, RSA

Describe Your Idea

We want to create the possibility for young people to travel, make impact to society, discover new cultures and at the same time promote GeoTourism conception. Upon return to native country young changemakers will make presentations to show beauty and problems of the region to increase awareness and bring change.

Would you like to participate in the MIF Opportunity 2010?

No

Innovation

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What makes your idea unique and innovative?

We want to propose self-sustainable conception for young people to make their own impact for preservation of coastal destinations during their summer holidays. Young people can make their important contribution still being the students. They will use unique approach using games and competitions on the beach to activate community for coastal cleaning and preservation. We plan to create innovative web site where travellers-changemakers will put their photos and videos not only of cultural heritage of the place of their visit, but of existing problems and changes they succeeded to make during their travel. This site will show to international public the beauty of the place, how this beauty can be damaged by irresponsible tourists and how everyone can preserve this beauty respecting the conception of GeoTourism. The participants of the project will have possibility to integrate with the culture and native population, feel themselves as native citizens and “see the existing situation with their eyes”.

Do you have a patent for this idea?

No

Impact

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What impact have you had on your clients and the tourism sector?

We want to bring up the community of socially responsible entrepreneurs who are leading their activities and important social projects worldwide and also who are able to travel all over the world even being young. We divide special attention to tourism and travel sector in our Union as we believe that every person being socially responsible himself can bring and inspire by this the other people and communities while travelling. We are developing several projects with unique conceptions currently that aim to give the opportunity to young people to explore new countries, cultures and languages and with aim to bring positive change. We will implement GeoTourism conception to all our travel projects to value and enhance environment, heritage and culture of native population. We plan also initiate travel projects that develop and bring knowledge to local communities.

Problem

The shores in Morocco are very beautiful and attract tourists from all over the world to get rest and admire the beauty of the ocean. At the same time, what can be seen in Rabat region, there are the rides on horses and camels organized on the shores and nobody clean the shores after. Tourists and native population do not pay much attention to preserving the shores and water and throw cigarettes and other garbage straight on the shores. The main city beaches are usually cleaned, but the shores on the suburbs of the city can stay long time without cleaning. But even city beach can make not at all nice impression on somebody who wants to see the sunset at the end of the day. The government do not pay too much attention as well as there is no or not enough trash boxes on the shores.

Actions

There will be the following steps in the project: 1. We will announce the start of the project and make eConferences on the GeoTourism conception. 2. We will select participants from different countries to participate in Youth in GeoTourism 2011 in Morocco. 3. We will agree with hotels to host changemakers. 4. Realization of project: Participants will make entertaining and at the same time educating activities for the tourists in the hotel and in nearby shores. 5. Together we will attract media and the public attention to existing problems and possibility to solve them on the level of personal responsibility. 6. Participants will upload photos and videos to the site of the project to show the change to international public and inspire new changemakers to take part in the next editions of the project.

Results

We expect the following results: 1. Popularization of GeoTourism among large number of people worldwide (we will track the number of people on every eConference). 2. Establish nice relationships between country members and their collaboration – several people from different countries benefit for the positive change in Morocco. 3. Involving companies (partners) and hotels to support GeoTourism. 4. Receiving positive feedback from all parties upon project realization: participants, hosting hotels, partner companies and organizations. 5. Having several interview and broadcasts of the project in media. 6. Obtaining long-term impact after realization – by promoting the project site showing real changes possible for everyone to make to international public.

What will it take for your project to be successful over the next three years? Please address each year separately, if possible.

Second year of project realization: Realizing the project in different coastal cities in Morocco – interested participants will themselves contact planned hosting hotels, present the conception of GeoTourism and agree on their participation / after our guidance + catching attention of lots of people all over the world to GeoTourism by project web site, conferences, etc. Third year of project realization – Going Global: creating community of people who support the conception of project worldwide and creating initiative groups to realize the project in different countries of the world.

What would prevent your project from being a success?

Unexpected geo or political conditions in the region that belong to the category of force-major such as natural cataclysms, war or weapon conflicts, terrorist attack, etc. We also need certain support such as coaching, help with development better detailed conception, promotion, etc as we do not have enough experience in this sphere and Youth in GeoTourism project was inspired by the current challenge when we first get in touch with the topic , realized its importance and become passionate to make a change. As our main change force are people themselves there is the risk not to have enough supporters, but we hope to prevent it with our work and enthusiasm.

How many people will your project serve annually?

1001‐10,000

What is the average monthly household income in your target community, in US Dollars?

$100 ‐ 1000

Does your project seek to have an impact on public policy or introduce models and tools that benefit the tourism sector in general?

Yes

Sustainability

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What stage is your project in?

Idea phase

In what country?

Morocco, RSA

Is your initiative connected to an established organization?

Yes

If yes, provide organization name.

YOUNITEAM Union in the sphere of social entrepreneurship

How long has this organization been operating?

1‐5 years

Does your organization have a Board of Directors or an Advisory Board?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with NGOs?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with businesses?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with government?

Yes

Please tell us more about how these partnerships are critical to the success of your innovation.

We believe that we can realize the project even using our own efforts only. Still the help of travel companies will make possible visas consultation and assistance, booking the flights for participants, etc; governmental support will make it possible more likely to involve media attention to the project; partner NGOs can help with popularization of the project and volunteer people involvement when needed.

What are the three most important actions needed to grow your initiative or organization?

1. Get in touch with communities of change agents where the people support important initiatives and struggle for positive changes. 2. Community activation by proposing challenging and sustainable occupations in the sphere of passion of each concrete individual and community as a whole. 3. Showing the results on the sites of the projects to international public and transmitting the information with concrete examples of changes made by individuals and groups; bringing this understanding from person to person like an Olympic flame to increase the number and impact of socially responsible people in the world.

The Story

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What was the defining moment that led you to this innovation?

Youth in GeoTourism project was inspired by the current challenge – GeoTourism Challenge 2011: Places on the Edge :) We were thinking of creating important social projects in the touristic sphere and this challenge inspired us for creating such a project, brought the understanding of importance of GeoTourism and gave us a push to look for more information in this sphere and to brainstorm ideas to make the changes possible in the nearest future.

Tell us about the social innovator behind this idea.

Me, Natalia Ukho, I was working as volunteer in the international students’ organization AIESEC for 4 years in People Development department and also as Event coordinator. I was developing local committees in Ukraine, Belgium and Morocco. During this period I took part in trainings from multinational companies on leadership, entrepreneurship, etc as well as acquired understanding of existing world problems and great motivation to become a change agent. I was one of the organizers of event for more than 50 children in small town in Ukraine to inspire them for personal achievements as well organized other social, teambuilding and leadership events and conferences for young people. I received the certificate of international facilitator after training course in Belgium in 2005 as well as different other honors and certificates for personal and professional achievements. As a vice-president of international charitable fund “Commonwealth of Nations” organized 3days festival for 220 talented children in 2009. Since November 2008 working in the sphere of social entrepreneurship and developing ideas and conception of own project for initiative community YOUNITEAM Union in the sphere of social entrepreneurship.

How did you first hear about Changemakers?

Web Search (e.g., Google or Yahoo)

If through another, please provide the name of the organization or company

50 words or fewer

Navigating the canals of the manatee

This is a joint conservation project which preserves a tropical rainforest reserve where several endangered species live, for instance, the Great Green Macaw and the Almendro tree. Within the reserve, there are lacustrine and palustrine wetlands, which are part of the habitat of the manatee. The 87-hectares project is located in Sarapiquí, Costa Rica. Families of the rural community where the project is located are deeply involved in this enterprise as producers and providers of sustainable goods and services.

About You

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Section 1: About You

First Name

Last Name

Website

Organization

Country

n/a

Section 2: About Your Organization

Organization Name

Organization Website

Organization Phone

Organization Address

Is your organization a

Organization Country

n/a

Your idea

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Name Your Project

Navigating the canals of the manatee

Country your work focuses on

n/a

Describe Your Idea

This is a joint conservation project which preserves a tropical rainforest reserve where several endangered species live, for instance, the Great Green Macaw and the Almendro tree. Within the reserve, there are lacustrine and palustrine wetlands, which are part of the habitat of the manatee. The 87-hectares project is located in Sarapiquí, Costa Rica. Families of the rural community where the project is located are deeply involved in this enterprise as producers and providers of sustainable goods and services.

Website URL

Would you like to participate in the MIF Opportunity 2010?

No

Innovation

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What makes your idea unique and innovative?

Do you have a patent for this idea?

No

Impact

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What impact have you had on your clients and the tourism sector?

Problem

Actions

Results

What will it take for your project to be successful over the next three years? Please address each year separately, if possible.

What would prevent your project from being a success?

How many people will your project serve annually?

Fewer than 100

What is the average monthly household income in your target community, in US Dollars?

Don't know

Does your project seek to have an impact on public policy or introduce models and tools that benefit the tourism sector in general?

No

Sustainability

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What stage is your project in?

In what country?

n/a

Is your initiative connected to an established organization?

No

If yes, provide organization name.

How long has this organization been operating?

Does your organization have a Board of Directors or an Advisory Board?

No

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with NGOs?

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with businesses?

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with government?

Please tell us more about how these partnerships are critical to the success of your innovation.

What are the three most important actions needed to grow your initiative or organization?

The Story

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What was the defining moment that led you to this innovation?

Tell us about the social innovator behind this idea.

How did you first hear about Changemakers?

If through another, please provide the name of the organization or company

Revitalising rivers with sustainable eco-tourism

Globally rivers are being degraded through over-exploitation and pollution. Too often waterways suffer from piecemeal decisions that fail to consider the need to manage at a whole-of-river scale. This project uses sustainable eco-tourism 'trails' (fishing, camping, boating etc) along a whole river to address this major flaw in river management.

About You

Organization: RiverSmart Australia Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

Section 1: About You

First Name

Bill

Last Name

Phillips

Organization

RiverSmart Australia

Country

Australia, ACT

Section 2: About Your Organization

Organization Name

RiverSmart Australia

Organization Website

Organization Phone

61 2 62817470

Organization Address

36 Badimara Street, Waramanga, ACT, 2611

Is your organization a

Non‐profit/NGO/citizen sector organization

Organization Country

Australia, ACT

Your idea

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Name Your Project

Revitalising rivers with sustainable eco-tourism

Country your work focuses on

Australia, NSW

Describe Your Idea

Globally rivers are being degraded through over-exploitation and pollution. Too often waterways suffer from piecemeal decisions that fail to consider the need to manage at a whole-of-river scale. This project uses sustainable eco-tourism 'trails' (fishing, camping, boating etc) along a whole river to address this major flaw in river management.

Would you like to participate in the MIF Opportunity 2010?

No

Innovation

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What makes your idea unique and innovative?

This idea is innovative as it deliberately sets out to overcome a major public policy failure (piecemeal management) through using a financial and social 'tool' (sustainable eco-tourism) to drive change in management practices. Our pilot study along 400 kilometres of river in the rural heartland of eastern Australia is already showing that stakeholders in the communities that share this asset resonate to the concept of being able to enjoy 'trails' to move along the river and its corridor. We're documenting opportunities to paddle, camp, fish, ride, walk or drive from one end of the river to the other to create these 'trails'. In so doing there is a growing recognition that upstream and downstream communities need to work together for a broader well-being.

This concept is underpinned by the benefits sustainable eco-tourism can deliver to the river communities through the opening up of new business opportunities which flow through into employment, and sustainable development. It also broadens the economic base of these rural communities to help them cope with times of drought and other adversity.

The trails will unite those businesses geared to support eco-tourism in a collective marketing effort to attract international and national tourists to the region. Environmentally the benefits are created through stronger community care and concern for the condition of the river and its assets such as water and wildlife, which provide the foundations for the success of the eco-tourism 'trails'. The 'trails' will be promoted through a marketing campaign, the production of printed 'glovebox' guides, web-based materials and satellite navigation technology.

Do you have a patent for this idea?

No

Impact

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What impact have you had on your clients and the tourism sector?

The pilot study has attracted interest and support from nearly 30 local organizations and businesses already. A recent audit indicates there are close to 100 more that could become part of the river 'trails' initiative over the coming 12 months as we create a marketing brand and begin the roll out of those trails that are ready to be launched.

Interest has also come from regional development organizations wishing to work with us in this trial. The cross-section of organizations, from local government, farming to community service and Indigenous groups, fishing and boating clubs, nature, hiking and adventure sports, and their support industries, tell us that this concept has great potential to overcome the traditional impediments to whole-of-river management where sector-based interests have traditionally been allowed to dominate.

The tourism sector is also becoming more interested in this innovative approach with a number of these organizations approaching us to offer expertise and advice. We know from the feasibility study completed in early 2010 that if we can grow eco-tourism in the region by just 15% this will inject approx. US$30m per annum into the local economy and create 330 new jobs. In a rural region with depressed economy and little job creation this is seen as a major initiative for providing the young people in these communities with reasons to stay and not drift toward the major cities of Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne.

Problem

The primary problem is the piecemeal management of rivers and their water resources, so that they suffer 'death by a thousand cuts' with incremental accumulation of problems and impacts and over-allocation of water.

Whole-of-river or catchment/watershed management is not a new idea but countries around the World struggle to operationalise the concept. In many situations the major users of water are allowed to dominate water sharing negotiations. Other stakeholders struggle to be heard in such decision making processes and feel disenfranchised.

This initiative is about creating a stronger economic and social imperative for a broader consideration of the ecosystem services that rivers deliver if they are kept healthy and managed for sustainability. By marketing the values and opportunities that healthy rivers can offer along their entire length (not in one part or another) this creates a driver for public policy change that results in whole-of-river stakeholder engagement and decision making.

Actions

See 12 below. In addition to the eco-tourism 'trails', supporting this are a range of community engagement activities such as river festivals, paddle-a-thons, outdoor movies by the river, wildlife and water monitoring programs, schools curriculum materials and programs, outdoor education trails, fishing competitions etc. These are all designed to ignite community stewardship for the river. Lack of funding is the constant threat to this initiative reaching its full potential.

Results

In the short-term we expect to see several eco-trails created and operational within the next 6-12 months. These will then be catalysts for the development of further trails and interpretive technologies. The hope is that these will start to boost the regional economy and generate jobs. From a policy perspective we expect to see our concept of 'healthy rivers = healthy businesses = healthy communities' emerge over the coming 2-4 years as a new approach to water sharing is decided for this particular river system.

What will it take for your project to be successful over the next three years? Please address each year separately, if possible.

In the coming year we plan to complete the industry audit and market research to allow us to focus the future promotional effort on specific target groups from outside the region and internationally. This year will also see a brand and web site created with industry 'famils' held to promote an understanding among the eco-tourism operators of what the whole river has to offer. This year will also see the first 'trails' launched; these certain to include fishing, boating, camping and possibly wineries and other local primary producers.

In year two, assuming funding is forthcoming, we will move into 'building' additional trails, promoting these opportunities to additional target markets, and seeking funds for new trail creation infrastructure and businesses. Year three, again assuming funding is available, will be a continuation of growth toward a target of 'trails' that cover all natural and cultural assets of the river and its corridor.

What would prevent your project from being a success?

Lack of funding to allow us to move forward beyond the current development phase.

How many people will your project serve annually?

More than 10,000

What is the average monthly household income in your target community, in US Dollars?

$1000 - 4000

Does your project seek to have an impact on public policy or introduce models and tools that benefit the tourism sector in general?

Yes

Sustainability

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What stage is your project in?

Operating for less than a year

In what country?

Australia, NSW

Is your initiative connected to an established organization?

Yes

If yes, provide organization name.

RiverSmart Australia Ltd

How long has this organization been operating?

Less than a year

Does your organization have a Board of Directors or an Advisory Board?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with NGOs?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with businesses?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with government?

Yes

Please tell us more about how these partnerships are critical to the success of your innovation.

This initiative relies on broad cross-sectoral support and engagement. The very issue it targets is sector-based approaches and so without securing strong engagement from across stakeholder groups it will not succeed.

What are the three most important actions needed to grow your initiative or organization?

Finding on-going funding, continuing to build support and trust among a broad cross-section of interests and continuing to gather information about the condition of the river so that our work is well informed by science.

The Story

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What was the defining moment that led you to this innovation?

See below. The creation of RiverSmart Australia in late 2008 was the initiative of Dr Bill Phillips, CEO and Director of this not-for-profit organization. After working in government for nearly 15 years in Australia and then for nearly three years as Deputy Secretary-General of the global Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, Dr Phillips saw the need for more innovative approaches to gain community and local stakeholder engagement in river and water management.

Tell us about the social innovator behind this idea.

Mr Ian Rogan made the initial suggestion about developing an eco-trail idea for this river. The evolution of that idea to being a vehicle for promoting whole-of-river management came from Dr Bill Phillips, CEO of RiverSmart Australia and was supported by several local organisations.

How did you first hear about Changemakers?

Web Search (e.g., Google or Yahoo)

If through another, please provide the name of the organization or company

50 words or fewer

Project Blue

Project Blue creates mini marine protected areas off resort and developments worldwide. Leveraging resort and developments desire to increase tourism revenues by creating unique and green visual incentives for the global dive community. With increased regional tourism off shore resorts and development become invested in the success and health of these regional sites which in turn become mini marine protected areas.

About You

Organization: Shark Divers Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

Section 1: About You

First Name

Patric

Last Name

Douglas

Organization

Shark Divers

Country

United States, CA

Section 2: About Your Organization

Organization Name

Shark Divers

Organization Website

Organization Phone

415-235-9410

Organization Address

san francisco

Is your organization a

For‐profit

Organization Country

United States, CA

Your idea

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Name Your Project

Project Blue

Country your work focuses on

n/a

Describe Your Idea

Project Blue creates mini marine protected areas off resort and developments worldwide. Leveraging resort and developments desire to increase tourism revenues by creating unique and green visual incentives for the global dive community. With increased regional tourism off shore resorts and development become invested in the success and health of these regional sites which in turn become mini marine protected areas.

Would you like to participate in the MIF Opportunity 2010?

No

Innovation

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What makes your idea unique and innovative?

Marine protected areas are typically a function of NGO's and governments. Traditionally these sites, especially in third world settings, have issues with both sheer size and marine enforcement. Smaller, privately owned and managed, regional marine protected areas that are protected because they provide increased tourism for resort and developments bypass the often tedious marine protected area process, and address the issue of enforcement. Regional invested sites patrol and take care of themselves because they are both local and financially incentivised for sustainable tourism. This is the unique vision behind Project Blue we create mini marine protected areas with our unique site developments geared towards the dive, and water user community.

Do you have a patent for this idea?

No

Impact

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What impact have you had on your clients and the tourism sector?

Problem

Actions

Results

What will it take for your project to be successful over the next three years? Please address each year separately, if possible.

What would prevent your project from being a success?

How many people will your project serve annually?

Fewer than 100

What is the average monthly household income in your target community, in US Dollars?

Less than $50

Does your project seek to have an impact on public policy or introduce models and tools that benefit the tourism sector in general?

Sustainability

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What stage is your project in?

Idea phase

In what country?

n/a

Is your initiative connected to an established organization?

No

If yes, provide organization name.

How long has this organization been operating?

1‐5 years

Does your organization have a Board of Directors or an Advisory Board?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with NGOs?

No

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with businesses?

No

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with government?

No

Please tell us more about how these partnerships are critical to the success of your innovation.

What are the three most important actions needed to grow your initiative or organization?

1. Resort and development partnership

2. Test bed site identification

3. Regional build out

The Story

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What was the defining moment that led you to this innovation?

Doha 2010. NGO's and governments are at a disadvantage in today's globalized world. Species protections that demand reductions in commercial take often fail. We need to bypass the process that requires by in from governments or enforcement action to protect hard won set aside marine areas. Project Blue accomplishes this.

Tell us about the social innovator behind this idea.

How did you first hear about Changemakers?

Email from Changemakers

If through another, please provide the name of the organization or company

50 words or fewer

The Green Marine Angling Programme (GMAP)

The South African Shark Conservancy (SASC) has developed GMAP to empower unemployed subsistence fishermen from Hawston – a coastal community in the Western Cape of South Africa. The fishermen will be employed as shore angler guides for local and overseas tourists. Tag and release fishing will be encouraged along with biological data collection thereby allowing for a sustainable use of marine resources while contributing towards scientific data collection pertaining to local marine species for management purposes.

About You

Organization: The South African Shark Conservancy Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

Section 1: About You

First Name

Tamzyn

Last Name

Zweig

Organization

The South African Shark Conservancy

Country

n/a

Section 2: About Your Organization

Organization Name

The South African Shark Conservancy

Organization Website

Organization Phone

Organization Address

Is your organization a

Non‐profit/NGO/citizen sector organization

Organization Country

n/a

Your idea

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Name Your Project

The Green Marine Angling Programme (GMAP)

Country your work focuses on

South Africa, WC

Describe Your Idea

The South African Shark Conservancy (SASC) has developed GMAP to empower unemployed subsistence fishermen from Hawston – a coastal community in the Western Cape of South Africa. The fishermen will be employed as shore angler guides for local and overseas tourists. Tag and release fishing will be encouraged along with biological data collection thereby allowing for a sustainable use of marine resources while contributing towards scientific data collection pertaining to local marine species for management purposes.

Would you like to participate in the MIF Opportunity 2010?

No

Innovation

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What makes your idea unique and innovative?

Hermanus – an eco-friendly destination – receives many foreign and national visitors who are keen anglers, but are unprepared for the angling conditions in the area. Being unfamiliar with angling localities, techniques and bait collection procedures for Hermanus and surrounds, these visitors are keen to wet a line, but remain generally unaware of angling ethics, including responsible bait preparation techniques, angling procedures and handling guidelines, and responsibilities under the Marine Living Resources Act (South Africa. 1998).
It is proposed that, through the GMAP, unemployed subsistence fishermen will be given the opportunity to earn an income while being educated in fish biology and ecology, conservation issues; responsible bait collection and recreational fishing permit regulations. This sustainable, eco-aware message is transferred to visitors by the Guides themselves, instilling a greater sense of stewardship for the marine environment and promoting Hermanus as a leader in the development of alternative marine–based livelihoods. By expanding their knowledge and using their vast experience, the Guides will be able to take advantage of the expanding eco-tourism industry in South Africa, earning a sustainable income and becoming empowered members of their community. With further training and assistance, those guides identified as successful and diligent, can become watchdogs to report on illegal activities and educators within their respective communities. To promote compliance and monitoring within the angling community these guides will be trained in soft compliance.

Do you have a patent for this idea?

No

Impact

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What impact have you had on your clients and the tourism sector?

The SASC facility, situated in the Old Harbour in Hermanus, is open to the public during working hours (weekdays 8am – 4pm). Visitors are not charged an entrance fee, although donations are encouraged. Visitors are introduced to SASC’s research projects, educational and outreach programmes. Guests experience a guided tour of the Shark Laboratory where endemic shark species and rocky shore organisms are kept for educational purposes. Visitors are able to interact with the animals as their guide shares pertinent information regarding the animal’s biology, ecology and management. The SASC educational centre displays children’s art work from SASC education programmes. Educational displays include confiscated shark jaws and fins, literature and posters. The centre hosts public educational programmes during annual environmental awareness events such as the Hermanus Whale Festival, World Oceans Day and International Coastal Cleanup Week. SASC recognises the importance of the ecotourism industry and therefore developed the White Shark Training Programme (WSTP). The programme, designed to educate industry members about the biology, ecology and management of white sharks in SA. The WSTP encourages industry members to apply ethical handling practices and share accurate information regarding the sharks with tourists who visit their business.

Problem

Hawston, a coastal community 15 minutes outside Hermanus (Western Cape, South Africa), was negatively impacted by the closure of the abalone (Haliotis midae) fishery in 2008. Although the fishery was reopened in 2010, licences were awarded to a small minority of fishermen, leaving many members of the community without an alternative income. The majority of previous rights holders have no skills training in any other areas which can provide a source of revenue. Abalone stocks have been negatively affected by illegal poaching as unemployed rights holders are forced to provide for their families by illegal poaching of abalone.

Actions

On implementation of GMAP, the programme will be self sustaining. The fishing equipment will be housed at the SASC facility free of charge. SASC will not profit financially from the programme and all proceeds from the initiative will go directly to the employees of the programme. Included in the operational budget submitted to the Elgin Learning Foundation are financial allocation for uniforms, cellular telephones, identification cards and fishing tackle/equipment. Advertising and marketing of the programme are included in the proposal for funding. Community members will be interviewed to ensure that they are suitable candidates for the programme. The SASC webpage and Facebook page will host links to the GMAP. Without funding it will not be possible to carry out this initiative. Comprehensive training in species identification and biological data collection is vital. With the proper training the Guides will contribute significantly to the management of local marine species while earning a sustainable income.

Results

Through sufficient training and marketing the programme has the potential to provide a sustainable income for approximately 20 members of the Hawston community on the outset of the programme. The potential of growth of the programme is being investigated. Community members will have the opportunity to increase their earnings through the sale of salted/dried/smoked fish and hosting visitors at their homes for authentic and traditional South African cooking and hospitality. Biological and ecological data collected by the Guides will contribute to the management of local marine species.

What will it take for your project to be successful over the next three years? Please address each year separately, if possible.

The project is primarily reliant on funding to be successful. If successful, the programme can be implemented in other coastal villages in South Africa. The west coast of SA is in a similar situation with regard to the loss of subsistence fishing licences. In order to implement the programme in other areas, a facility for training and storage of gear will be located. Effective marketing targeted at local and foreign tour operators is essential to the success and growth of the programme. Guides will require evaluation through customer feedback. The programme -once in the self sustaining phase- will require a fulltime project manager responsible for customer feedback and ensuring legal and ethical practices are maintained. The project manager will collect biological data sheets and forward them to SASC who will ensure the correct management authority receives the information.

What would prevent your project from being a success?

Without sufficient funding SASC will not be able to develop the programme. There is a potential for legal transgression by the Guides being offered money to “turn a blind eye” to illegal activity. There will be zero tolerance for illegal activities and the Guide will immediately lose his/her position as a Guide if found to be transgressing the law.

How many people will your project serve annually?

Fewer than 100

What is the average monthly household income in your target community, in US Dollars?

Less than $50

Does your project seek to have an impact on public policy or introduce models and tools that benefit the tourism sector in general?

Yes

Sustainability

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What stage is your project in?

Idea phase

In what country?

South Africa

Is your initiative connected to an established organization?

Yes

If yes, provide organization name.

The South African Shark Conservancy

How long has this organization been operating?

1‐5 years

Does your organization have a Board of Directors or an Advisory Board?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with NGOs?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with businesses?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with government?

Yes

Please tell us more about how these partnerships are critical to the success of your innovation.

Sponsorship and branding of equipment required for the programme will allow local businesses to advertise their business and reduce the cost involved in purchasing equipment for the programme. Good relationships with NGOs assist in the promotion of the programme. The financial support of the Elgin Learning Foundation (NGO) is vital to the programmes success as SASC is unable to fund such a venture. The SASC advisory board includes an environmental lawyer who assists with contracts, indemnity forms and any possible legal issues which may arise. A good relationship with fisheries compliance officers is essential to ensure that if transgressions in compliance are witnessed and reported by the Guides. A relationship with the South African marine resource governing body, Marine and Coastal Management is essential if the data collected by the Guides is to be used in the management of local marine species.

What are the three most important actions needed to grow your initiative or organization?

1. The receipt of funding in order to develop course material, purchase equipment and finance marketing. Adequate marketing is vital to the success of the programme.
2. The participants in the programme on completion of training will require constant evaluation. This can be achieved through customer feedback forms. Transgressions by the Guides with regard to non compliance of the Marine Living Resources Act (South Africa 1998) and Recreation permit conditions relating to the Act will not be tolerated.
3. The programme will require that the Guides present tourists with a positive experience. The Guides will therefore need to be taught good customer care, be familiar with local fishing hotspots and how to deal with difficult customers.

The Story

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What was the defining moment that led you to this innovation?

The South African Shark Conservancy’s mission statement is: “Committed to conservation, sustainability and research”. When the abalone fishery was closed in 2008, SASC director Meaghen McCord sought alternative solutions to the crisis faced by the Hawston community. As members of the community turned to illegal poaching to put food on their tables, Ms McCord realized that the only way to resolve the issue of poaching and thereby preserving abalone stocks, was to seek alternative sustainable practices as a solution. The concept of angling guides is not new, but in SA it has never been developed in the Hawston community

Tell us about the social innovator behind this idea.

Meaghen McCord (Managing Director) founded the South African Shark Conservancy in 2007. With her background in Fisheries Science (MSc Rhodes University) and marine biology (BSc Dalhousie University) Ms McCord has become well known in the scientific community, both locally and abroad. Meag’s research interests include elasmobranch biology, fisheries management and sustainable resource utilisation.

How did you first hear about Changemakers?

Email from Changemakers

If through another, please provide the name of the organization or company

50 words or fewer

indigenous micro-enterprise recycling program

The indigenous microenterprise recycling program is intended to develop a small cooperative among the waster pickers on the island while at the same time incorporating a much needed recycling program. It will raise awareness regarding solid waste minimization, separation and collection and most importantly - community empowerment by the incorporation of waste pickers into the recycling program.

About You

Organization: Roatan Marine Park Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

Section 1: About You

First Name

Johanna

Last Name

Naradzay

Organization

Roatan Marine Park

Country

Honduras, IB

Section 2: About Your Organization

Organization Name

Roatan Marine Park

Organization Website

Organization Phone

594 445 4206

Organization Address

west end, Roatan, Honduras

Is your organization a

Non‐profit/NGO/citizen sector organization

Organization Country

Honduras, IB

Your idea

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Name Your Project

indigenous micro-enterprise recycling program

Country your work focuses on

Honduras, IB

Describe Your Idea

The indigenous microenterprise recycling program is intended to develop a small cooperative among the waster pickers on the island while at the same time incorporating a much needed recycling program. It will raise awareness regarding solid waste minimization, separation and collection and most importantly - community empowerment by the incorporation of waste pickers into the recycling program.

Would you like to participate in the MIF Opportunity 2010?

Yes

Innovation

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What makes your idea unique and innovative?

The creation of a recycling cooperative will improve both the marine ecosystems and land masses significantly while at the same time making a profitable business for the waste-pickers themselves. Most importantly, it will improve their quality of life, health and safety and give them the dignity that they deserve. The collecting, sorting and recycling of reusable materials from waste provides income to hundreds of thousands of people worldwide. Even though they often work under conditions that are harmful to the environment and to their health, informal waste collectors help prevent many cities from being buried in waste. They are an informal private sector, which refers to people who work in unprotected areas conditions- low degree of organization, labor intensive production, low pay and lack of social security, among other characteristics. This innovative and unique program involves people who should be incorporated into the formal sector and be provided with sanitary working conditions.
Through the combination of recycling management with the potential of experienced waste collectors, the reuse and recycling of solid wastes can be fundamental in the development of a sustainable economic activity and the creation of jobs. It can be seen as a way to achieve community empowerment and participation. The creation of recycling cooperatives integrated by waste pickers can be a step towards improved conditions of life and work for this group whose work is not sufficiently recognized by the society.

Do you have a patent for this idea?

Impact

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What impact have you had on your clients and the tourism sector?

Problem

Located off the northern coast of Honduras, the island of Roatán is one of the primary tourist centers in the Caribbean, with an exponential tourism growth that went from 900 tourists in 1969 to more than 800,000 in 2009. The figure is still expected to increase as a result of population expansion and economic development and with it, the growth in waste generation.

Solid waste management on Roatán is in the present situation not sustainable, therefore it is a major public health and environmental concern. The amount of waste generated is high and is expected to increase due to the population expansion and economic development that the tourism industry is creating on the island. At present, 82.73% of wastes generated are disposed at the landfill and the rest, 17. 27%, are burned, buried or disposed in other ways. The landfill was constructed in 2002 by an external support agency. Unfortunately due to improper management it has turned into an open dump site where the generation of greenhouse gases and the production of lixiviates are polluting the land and bodies of water; The capacity of the landfill is decreasing and seriously affecting the environment.

Actions

1 Education, Awareness and Minimization
An effective environmental education and awareness program that is developed along the process of the recycling project is to be created. The purpose of the program is the involvement and training of the community in order to develop awareness of the economic value of wastes and the environmental damage they cause when they are not separated, collected and disposed properly
2. Separation and Storage
Regarding storage, the same author suggests that for low population densities, a drop-off system where accumulated recyclables are taken by the consumer to a central location and placed into individually marked receptacles, is generally the preferred option. The type, size and location of recycling receptacles or containers are very important factors.
3. Cooperative microenterprise
The creation of a recycling cooperative can be achieved by following a number of steps, starting with the constitution of the group of wastepickers that will form part of the cooperative. Therefore, the first step is the registration of all actors who want to be involved in the process. They should all be informed about the purposes and goals.

Results

• Improved marine ecosystems after the recycling program is implemented over a long period of time
• The implementation of a plan that raises the awareness of waste minimization, separation and recycling is important to recover the situation of Roatán’s landfill, protect the environment and contribute to improve the quality of life of the waste pickers.
• Waste pickers are the best knowledgeable of recycling/recovering activities. They should be incorporated into the recycling program by organizing and incorporating them into a recycling cooperative.
• Success is achieved by creating good human resources. Training of the waste pickers is therefore important at the beginning and through the whole development of the program.

What will it take for your project to be successful over the next three years? Please address each year separately, if possible.

1. Building awareness in the local community, especially among the dive shops, the restaurants and bars in the area. Placing environmental bins in community areas, and having the businesses follow suit.

2. • Wastepickers can be incorporated into Roatán’s recycling program by providing them with training and supporting them in the creation of a Recycling Cooperative.

3. Revenue Sharing
One of the most important aspects to be considered in the formation of a cooperative is the sharing of the profit among its members. the most positive and fair distribution is the one done based on the roles (degree of responsibility) and the total number of hours worked in the month. To make a proper division of profit, the following must be considered:

1. It is important to have a timesheet of the number of hours worked by each person per month.
2. The cooperative should have a control of fixed and variable costs.
3. The monthly report should have the total profit, which would be used to calculate the value of each hour.
4. The role and responsibilities of each category of work should be defined, as well as the percentage that each will get according to the profit.
5. All regulations must be approved by the general assembly
. Each person gets what is proportional in regards to their work and level of responsibility within the cooperative. It is also recommended to establish a monthly evaluation system among the members of the cooperative in which they are evaluated by themselves. The individual and collective evaluation process is common among organizations and reflects the 21st century’s new model for work management. This evaluation process is not implemented to fire the employee, but to provide feedback for him in order to improve his/her work performance

What would prevent your project from being a success?

The biggest issue would be convincing the businesses, tourists and locals to start using the recycling program, as it would mean changing their daily habits and ingrained lifestyle. There would be an issue involving the recycling micro enterprise cooperative other than organization and education.

How many people will your project serve annually?

1001‐10,000

What is the average monthly household income in your target community, in US Dollars?

Less than $50

Does your project seek to have an impact on public policy or introduce models and tools that benefit the tourism sector in general?

Yes

Sustainability

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What stage is your project in?

Idea phase

In what country?

Honduras, IB

Is your initiative connected to an established organization?

Yes

If yes, provide organization name.

Roatan Marine Park

How long has this organization been operating?

1‐5 years

Does your organization have a Board of Directors or an Advisory Board?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with NGOs?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with businesses?

Yes

Does your organization have any non-monetary partnerships with government?

Yes

Please tell us more about how these partnerships are critical to the success of your innovation.

The Municipality has agreed to provide a concession of the land for the construction of the center and will exempt the cooperative from the paying of municipal taxes. Support has been requested from international cooperation such as the Coca Cola Foundation. Finally, ZOLITUR and the local NGOs (RMP and BICA) have committed to guide and support the cooperative in the whole process.

What are the three most important actions needed to grow your initiative or organization?

The most important actions are where the community in Roatan organizes around the recycling program and the local government continues to support the program.

The Story

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What was the defining moment that led you to this innovation?

Honduras is one of the poorest countries in the western hemisphere, next to Haiti. It is in dire need of community development as well as stronger environmental conservation. Seeing land pollution everywhere right next to the beautiful coral reefs while walking next to prostitutes and destitute children made the Roatan Marine Park want to connect a recycling program with improving the poverty conditions. The types of workers that get the least attention because they are relatively unseen in the community are the waster pickers who literally work everyday in the land fills and collect the trash to make a meager amount of money. This program, once carried through, will make an impact, both socially and environmentally.

Tell us about the social innovator behind this idea.

How did you first hear about Changemakers?

Email from Changemakers

If through another, please provide the name of the organization or company

50 words or fewer

MIF Opportunity 2010

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Has your organization been legally constituted or registered in your country or one of your target countries for at least three years?

Yes

Does the applicant organization have sufficient financial resources to guarantee the co-financing required by MIF during the execution period of the project? (This amounts to at least 50% of the project’s total budget with 25% in cash and 25% in-kind.)

No

Does the applicant organization have experience managing projects co-financed by international organizations? Please describe below

yes. the Roatan Marine Park managed many co-financed grants including from USAID.

Please classify the applicant organization according to the options below

Community based Organization

What problem-area does your project address?

Access to financing.

How will your project address this problem?

Through the combination of recycling management with the potential of experienced waste collectors, the reuse and recycling of solid wastes can be fundamental in the development of a sustainable economic activity and the creation of jobs. It can be seen as a way to achieve community empowerment and participation. The creation of recycling cooperatives integrated by waste pickers can be a step towards improved conditions of life and work for this group whose work is not sufficiently recognized by the society. A group of 23 wastepickers work daily at Roatáns landfill by collecting, classifying and selling PET 1 bottles and aluminum cans. Prior to the world drop in oil prices, they were making a profit of around 5 300 Lps. Revenue will be based on the amount of recyclable products sold. Based on the figures of waste generation on Roatán. The cost-benefits of the action plan were assessed resulting in a monthly profit of US$ 28 440.

Who is benefited by the initiative? (Please highlight the type and number of beneficiaries, and their role in the tourism value-chain.)

The waste pickers, the tourists, the businesses, the locals all will benefit through financial development and environmental conservation

How will the project's results assist the region’s tourism sector and micro, small and medium-sized enterprises?

the recycling cooperative will form a small micro-enterprise and bring more financial gain to that side of work.

A. Total Budget (100%)

$20,000

B. MIF Contribution (up to 50% of total budget and US$. 500.000 max)

$10,000

C. Cash co-financing (at least 25% of total budget)

D. In kind co-financing (at least 25% of total budget)

$5,000

Solar Roofs on every house.

Dow Chemical just received UL certification for their Solar Shingles. All new construction in the US should incorporate Solar Shingles on the South, West and Eastern roofs.

About You

Organization: Offgrid-Living.com Visit websitemore ↓↑ hide↑ hide

About You

First Name

Rod

Last Name

Borghese

About Your Organization

Organization Name

Offgrid-Living.com

Organization Website

Organization Phone

Organization Address

Organization Country

Canada, ON

Country where this project is creating social impact

United States, DC

Is your organization a

Please select

How long has your organization been operating?

More than 5 years

The information you provide here will be used to fill in any parts of your profile that have been left blank, such as interests, organization information, and website. No contact information will be made public. Please uncheck here if you do not want this to happen..

Innovation

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Entry Form title

Solar Roofs on every house.

Describe your project

Dow Chemical just received UL certification for their Solar Shingles. All new construction in the US should incorporate Solar Shingles on the South, West and Eastern roofs.

What stage is your project in?

Idea phase

What makes your project unique as it relates to the theme of this competition?

This invention will make it possible to reduce our consumption of non-renewable energy resources.

Share the story of the founder and what inspired the founder to start this project

I have been writing for OffGrid-Living.com for several years now and I have been waiting for a break-thru in solar technology. With Dow's Solar Shingles and mass production we can lower the cost so that everyone can afford solar energy by 2011.

Social Impact

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Who or what (i.e. youth, women, environment, etc.) benefits from your project, and why is your project critical?

Every Citizen of the earth would be positively affected by this project. The time is now.

Please describe how your project has been successful and how that success is measured.

This Project will be successful as we take each household off the grid. Every Rooftop would become an energy producer.

How many people have been impacted by your project?

More than 10,000

How many people could be impacted by your project in the next three years?

More than 10,000

What barriers might hinder the success of your project and how do you plan to overcome them?

Availability of Liscenced Contractors.

How will your project evolve over the next three years?

I will be working with DOW Chemical to bring this technology across the US and Canada through 2011 and into Europe the following years.

Sustaina