Developing Repeatable Models® to scale the adoption of agricultural innovations, Acumen and Bain & Company

Growing prosperity: Executive summary - Bain Brief - Bain & Company



Microdrip irrigation systems. Drought-resistant hybrid seeds.
Asset-backed microloans. These innovations can transform the lives of
those farming on less than two hectares of land and earning less than $4
a day. Yet until relatively recently, they were unknown in most
smallholder farmer communities.





What does it take to get the developing world’s smallholder
farmers to try one of these products? Importantly, what would it take to
get them to buy these products again and again? For many of the 2.5
billion people living at the “base of the pyramid” and relying on
agriculture for their livelihood,1 adopting these innovations could improve their lives and the lives of future generations.




To answer these questions, Bain & Company and Acumen, with
the support of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, undertook a
joint four-month research effort2
focused on South Asia (India and Pakistan) and sub-Saharan Africa
(Ghana, Kenya and Uganda) to understand what it would take to catalyze
the large-scale adoption of innovations that could lead to more secure
and prosperous lives for smallholder farmers.


Monarch Butterflies on the Decline

Please consider planting milkweed in the spring if you can. And teach your kids about monarchs. The loss of monarch butterflies "should matter to more than butterfly enthusiasts... The lost habitat also affects ground-nesting birds and small mammals vital to the natural food chain, and pollinating insects such as bees, who provide an essential benefit to agriculture."

Monarch Butterflies on the Decline
Lansing State Journal
July 30, 2014




















Look closely outside.
Something’s missing. Something orange, black, white and fluttery.
Monarch butterflies, once a ubiquitous spring and summer presence throughout Michigan, are again a rare sighting this year.
It’s the result of two factors: An ongoing crash in the migratory monarch’s populations due to the loss of habitat — particularly milkweed — and Michigan’s long, cold winter causing many returning butterflies to hang further south or to arrive much later than usual.
“It’s really a big difference. It’s a tragedy,” said Diane Pruden, a Milford Township resident who serves as a citizen researcher for Monarch Watch, a nonprofit education, conservation and research program based at the University of Kansas.
Monarch eggs normally can be spotted in late May and through June on Michigan’s milkweed — a wild plant named for the thick, milky liquid that flows within its broad, green leaves, and upon which the monarch is uniquely reliant. Pruden saw her first eggs two weeks ago, she said.
“The fact it’s so late, I think, is a big problem,” she said.
So are the monarch’s numbers.
One of few migratory butterflies, the monarch travels up to 4,000 miles every fall to a concentrated over-winter location in Mexico, where hundreds of millions hang in high-elevation, oyamel fir forests.
Monarchs covered nearly 21 hectares of the Mexican over-winter grounds in the winter of 1996-1997, and have averaged 6.4 hectares of coverage annually. (A hectare is about 2.5 acres.) This winter, their numbers covered only 0.67 hectare, said Orley “Chip” Taylor, the founder and director of Monarch Watch and a professor in the University of Kansas’ Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology.
“The monarch population has been going down for the better part of 10 years,” he said. “It reached an all-time low this past winter.”
The butterflies that return to Michigan every year aren’t those fall vacationers — they lay eggs in Texas and Oklahoma and die off, and it’s their offspring that make the return voyage. The butterflies then may go through up to three hatching cycles in Michigan before the fall butterflies again make the southern migration.
The monarch has a worldwide range including Europe, Australia and Hawaii, so its overall population isn’t yet at risk of becoming threatened or endangered. But “there’s a great deal of concern that the monarch migration is on the verge of collapse,” Taylor said.
The northward migration, and the reproduction that occurs along it, is reliant on what Taylor calls “the milkweed corridor,” an area through the central plains states featuring the plant. But it’s this same area where agriculture has exploded, particularly expanded growth of corn coinciding with a push for ethanol fuel, and has reduced milkweed growth, he said.
Nearly 23.7 million acres of grassland, wetlands and shrublands were converted to agriculture in this corridor between 2008-2011, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
“They’re taking milkweeds out of the system, and monarchs are totally dependent on milkweeds; they can’t raise their caterpillars on anything else,” he said.
It should matter to more than butterfly enthusiasts, Taylor said. The lost habitat also affects ground-nesting birds and small mammals vital to the natural food chain, and pollinating insects such as bees, who provide an essential benefit to agriculture.
“Ranger” Steve Mueller, a resident of Cedar Springs in Kent County, nature columnist and president of the West Michigan Butterfly Association, said those who want to help should try to compensate for the milkweed plants lost to agriculture and development. Groups like Monarch Watch in the spring offer milkweed plants for home gardens.
“Our yards are going to become increasingly more important as our population continues to grow and we monopolize more of the natural area,” Mueller said. “If we do the landscaping around our homes more intelligently, there’s a much better chance for the monarchs.”
Because the butterfly lays so many eggs, and has a number of reproductive cycles within a year, conditions that change for the better can provide a real boost to their numbers, Midland-based monarch researcher and enthusiast Denny Brooks said.
Bad winter storms dropped the Mexican over-winter population of monarchs to 2.83 hectares in 2000-2001, down from 9 hectares the previous winter.
But the next winter, the population was back up to covering 9.35 hectares, Brooks noted.
“We’re looking for that rebound generation,” he said.
Keith Matheny
is a reporter for the
Detroit Free Press.


"The Fish We Eat"

This is a fascinating TED talk, one of many pointing to the dire need for people to pay attention to the world's oceans.

"There's a tight link between the ocean's health and ours, says marine biologist Stephen Palumbi. He shows how toxins at the bottom of the ocean food chain find their way into our bodies, with a shocking story of toxic contamination from a Japanese fish market. His work points a way forward for saving the oceans' health — and humanity's"

Watch Stephen Palumbi's TED Talk:
http://www.ted.com/talks/stephen_palumbi_following_the_mercury_trail

Save the oceans, feed the world!


What's a marine biologist doing talking about world hunger? Well, says Jackie Savitz, fixing the world's oceans might just help to feed the planet's billion hungriest people. In an eye-opening talk, Savitz tells us what’s really going on in our global fisheries right now — it’s not good — and offers smart suggestions of how we can help them heal, while making more food for all.

Listen to TED Talk

10 things you need to know about the global food system

There is enough food for everyone on the planet to lead a healthy and nutritious life, but the global food supply is deeply inequitable

Evan Fraser and Elizabeth Fraser
Guardian Professional,  

1. There's enough food for everybody

The most important thing to know about the global food system is also one of the least appreciated: there is enough food for everyone on the planet to live a healthy and nutritious life. In fact, the UN tells us that there is about 2,800 kcal per person per day available. But, the global food system is deeply inequitable. There are about 842 million people hungry on the planet, while at the same time there are about 1.5 billion who are overweight or obese.

2. Price volatility

The price of food is wildly volatile. In 2008, the United Nations Food Price Index almost doubled in less than a year before crashing in 2009. Prices then shot up again in 2010 and 2011. Despite this volatility, our supply of food stayed stable throughout this period. This suggests that the price of food is not determined by our ability to produce food at a global level.

3. One third of food is wasted

Approximately one third of the world's food is wasted before it is consumed (pdf). In the developed world most of the waste happens at the consumer end, when food spoils in grocery stores or in refrigerators. Most of the waste in the developing world happens on the farm as a consequence of inefficient storage and processing facilities.

4. Food for fuel

Not all food grown on our planet is being used as food. For instance, about 40% of the corn grown in the US is being turned into first-generation biofuels (pdf), such as ethanol. However, creating bioethanol only uses the sugar in the corn. This leaves a protein rich byproduct called dried distillers grain that can be fed to livestock.

5. Land buy ups

The landscape of who owns our food system is changing. Since 2008, more than 56m hectares of land (the size of France) has been purchased in the global south by international companies. Some believe that this represents meaningful foreign direct investment in places such as rural Africa. Others are worried that the companies are exploiting the land and labour of Africa to make rich countries to grow richer.

6. Corporate control

A very small number of corporations control the vast majority of the world's food trade: four companies produce more than 58% of the world's seeds; four global firms account for 97% of poultry genetics research and development; yet another four produce more than 60% of the agrochemicals farmers use.

7. Impact of agricultural policy

While we all know that people are eating more junk food, dairy and meat, we don't always appreciate that one of the causes of this rise is US governmental farm policy. In the early 1970s, the US started paying maize farmers to produce grain, resulting in overproduction. Between 1995 and 2012 maize subsidies totalled more than $84bn (£49.8bn). Enterprising farmers learned they could feed this extra to cows, pigs and chickens. This drove down the price of these produces and created the conditions for intensive livestock production. It was also discovered around this time that the sugars from corn could be removed and turned into high-fructose corn syrup. This has given rise to the junk food industry.

8. Environmental impact

The way we're producing our food is impacting our environment. Agriculture is responsible for 75% of deforestation worldwide, and is the largest contributor of non-CO2 greenhouse gas emissions. We're also rapidly losing marine food sources. In 2010, 53% of fisheries were fully exploited (pdf), 28% were overexploited, 3% were depleted, and 1% were recovering from depletion.

9. Adapting to climate change

While there may be enough food for everyone on the planet today, this may not be the case in the future. Recently published scientific work suggests that climate change may reduce crop yields by 2% per decade over the next 100 years. These reductions won't be the same everywhere. The poorest regions of the world are expected to be the worst hit. Whether these crop reductions happen, however, depends a lot on if farmers are able to use the tools they need to adapt to changing weather conditions.

10. Increased demand

Recent studies suggest that the farmers of this world will have to produce 50% more food by 2050 in order to meet global population growth. This will have to be done against a backdrop of rising energy prices and climate change that is set to make food harder and more expensive to produce.
Evan Fraser holds the Canada research chair in Global Food Security in the department of geography at the University of Guelph. He is the author of Empires of Food: Feast Famine and the Rise and Fall of Civilizations. Elizabeth Fraser is completing her MA in Global Governance at the Balsillie School of International Affairs at the University of Waterloo
The food hub is funded by The Irish Food Board. All content is editorially independent except for pieces labelled advertisement feature. Find out more here.

http://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/food-blog/10-things-need-to-know-global-food-system?INTCMP=ILCNETTXT3487 

The Futures of Food and the Futures of Farmers

UCLA Regents' Lecturer Charles C. Mann
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
5:30 PM - 8:00 PM
Public Affairs Third Floor Terrace
UCLA

By the time today's UCLA undergraduates hit middle age, the world will hold almost 10 billion people, most of them affluent by historical standards. Dinner for the 10 billion, agronomists say, will be a huge challenge: We are running out of arable land, water supplies are stretched, and the advances of the “green revolution” are fading.

Researchers have proposed two broad solutions: maintaining the current system of large-scale industrial monoculture or switching over, at least in substantial part, to a much more localized, diverse system. The former involves extensive deployment of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), heavy chemical use and even heavier computer monitoring. Meanwhile, the small, highly productive farms touted as a model require vastly more labor—that is, vastly more people working on the land. The choice of system, a key task of the next generation, will have enormous impact on the kind of lives people lead tomorrow.

Charles C. Mann is the author of 1493, a New York Times best-seller, and 1491, which won the U.S. National Academy of Sciences' Keck award for the best book of the year. A correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly, Science and Wired, he has covered the intersection of science, technology and commerce for many newspapers and magazines here and abroad, including National Geographic, the New York Times, Vanity Fair and the Washington Post. In addition to 1491 and 1493, he is the co-author of five other books, one of which is a young person's version of 1491 called Before Columbus.

http://www.asia.ucla.edu/asia/event/10635

A Green Revolution, This Time for Africa

A Green Revolution, This Time for Africa

Social inequity vs. the environment is a false choice




It's time we stop pretending that inequality and environmental decline are two separate problems


As he begins his last few years in office, President Obama is finally addressing the worsening inequality in this country. In his State of the Union speech, he declared: “Inequality has deepened. Upward mobility has stalled. The cold, hard fact is that even in the midst of recovery, too many Americans are working more than ever just to get by – let alone get ahead.” I’m thrilled the president is shining a light on inequality. But for environmentalists, the debate over inequality – not only here in the US, but also the chasm between wealthy and poor countries – raises serious tensions and forces us to look beyond the mainstream conversations for solutions.

On the one hand, inequality is a huge problem, with many people prevented from accessing the resources they need for dignified lives. Inequality is inherently unjust, and is the root of an array of environmental, health, and social ills. In Spirit Level: Why More Equal Societies Almost Always Do Better, public health scientists Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett show that high levels of inequality correlate with a stunning array of ills that reduce quality of life for all of society.

And inequality undermines the workings of our democracy, which is a problem since we need a functioning democracy to solve big problems – like climate change and even inequality itself. Under the post-Citizens United system of campaign finance in the US, inequality is a near-absolute barrier to significant political participation by all but the super rich, making it hard to advance goals on the environment, education, and workers’ rights. Reducing inequality is not a cause environmentalists can afford to watch from the sidelines.

On the other hand, it’s undeniable that worldwide, and especially in the US, we’re already using too many resources. We have only one planet, but globally humanity is using raw materials and generating waste at a rate that would take 1.5 Earths to sustain.

Yes, many people need more resources to meet basic levels of health and security. At the same time, humanity is consuming too much. If our strategy to address inequality focuses only on increasing access to consumption without seeking bigger changes in the way we consume resources, we’ll end up hastening our ride over the ecological cliff.

The leading solutions put forward to address inequality are “growing the pie” and “raising the floor.” In other words, increasing economic growth so there’s more stuff to go around and raising low end wages to make it possible for poor people to access the stuff they need. Wages are raised so that people buy more goods; businesses expand to meet the increased demand by hiring more workers; more workers equals more people buying more stuff; and the wheel keeps turning.

But are these our only options? Accepting vast inequities in the name of curtailing consumption, or expanding the take-make-waste system so that we can all trash the planet equitably?

Not only is this a false choice, but I’d argue that solutions to the ecological and inequality problems are inseparable. If we address inequality without considering environmental issues, we speed up ecosystem decline. If we focus on environmental limits without addressing inequality, we end up with resource apartheid. Neither is okay. So let’s ask a different question: How do we transform today’s growth-at-all-costs economy into one that sustains the planet and all its people, including those who are currently left out?

It’s a big question, and I don’t pretend to have all the answers. But I do have some ideas of steps to get started.

First, we have to scrap the idea that GDP growth equals societal progress. New Economy thinkers and activists are working hard to develop a different economic model that serves people and the planet so that we’re increasing equity and living within the planet’s limits simultaneously.

Second, we need to get way more ambitious about using resources efficiently so we can meet more human need out of each unit of resource consumed. Our buildings, our cars, and our energy systems are all vastly inefficient and engineers tell us it’s possible to improve current efficiency tenfold. Instead of growing the pie, we need to ensure that none of the pie is wasted, freeing up resources that then could be divided more equally.

Third, we need to raise one of the most politically unpopular terms of the day: redistribution. If that word doesn’t fly in your circles, how about a more palatable version: share. Those of us who have more than enough can add more to our well-being by embracing sharing than by continuing on the treadmill of more, more, more.

Solving both inequality and environmental decline is possible, but only if we see the two struggles as one.


http://www.salon.com/2014/03/16/social_inequity_vs_the_environment_is_a_false_choice_partner/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=socialflow

Climate Financing


Find funding sources that are available for both adaptation and mitigation projects that reduce impacts of climate change.

http://climatefinanceoptions.org/cfo/

Policy makers and project planners in developing countries at national and city levels need access to information on potential sources of climate finance, inspiring best practice examples, research results and tools for better investment decision making. The global climate finance gap demands increasing levels of financial flows along with coordination at a level previously unseen between those providing financial resources and those seeking those resources. Adding to this picture, there is a pressing need for up-to-date information on country projects and programs prepared in line with national priorities in countries seeking financing.

There is a growing menu of climate funds that can be used to catalyze other sources for integrated investments in climate-resilient and low-carbon solutions. Policy makers and project planners in developing countries at national and city levels need access to information on all aspects of climate finance.

The UNDP/World Bank Climate Finance Options (CFO) Platform addresses that need by providing a window to such information. The web platform is the go-to site for information on climate finance. Within the framework of global negotiations on climate change, the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and the World Bank Group have jointly developed the web-based knowledge platform, which a number of UN agencies and multilateral development banks (MDBs) use as a joint conduit of information on investment finance. It is also building an interactive community of practice to share South-South experience and best practices in climate action for better development impact.

This Platform provides the following: •
  • A harmonised description of types of funds available, including (a) types of instruments, (b) eligibility criteria, (c) volume, (d) governance and administrative structures, (e) flows, etc.
  • Examples of successful cases of blending different types of grant and concessional funds to leverage private sector financing, in addition to enabling environments conducive to climate action; all of which will be supplemented by examples provided by stakeholders through discussion forums of registered Platform users. •
  • Knowledge centre with a glossary of terminology, a library with related publications, and a wide range of tools to enable project developers to analyse their own projects for better-informed decisions.
  • User community collaborative space for users to connect, share ideas, plan projects, and facilitate South-South networking.

Promoting Entrepreneurship and SMEs Development in Africa

Eugene Nizeyimana, Director for Strategy and Growth
http://s-scg.com/promoting-entrepreneurship-and-smes-development-in-africa/

Sustainable development of  African economy can only be achieved through further empowerment of entrepreneurs and small businesses, their integration into the multilateral trade system and strengthening of  business environment, industry competitiveness, policies and institutions. Enhancing entrepreneurial activities in Africa is thus a decisive element of job creation and economic growth strategies.

SMEs are a vital  backbone for every sector in  a growing economy and are indispensable partners for  MNCs investors and governments. Identifying promising business ideas, skilled entrepreneurs and provision of capital are the prerequisite for further development. However, to sustainably foster economic growth, SMEs do not only need support during their creation, but also throughout the processes of expansion, internationalisation and transfer of businesses. These processes bring organisational and bureaucratic burdens that require advanced managerial skills.

To encourage business creation and to enable entrepreneurs  successfully respond to these challenges, we  need to involve Africans in Diaspora, local businesses and entrepreneurs, who possess wealth of international experience, resources and networks. There is also a need to facilitate international trade through harmonisation of trade rules and policies,  supported through specific capacity building programmes and effective institutions. In addition, set incentives for the creation of industry clusters to develop strong supply chains and vertical integrated trade links.

Furthermore, establishing incubation centres and Business Development Services (BDS) dedicated to nurture entrepreneurship culture, start-ups and sharing expertise on a professional basis is crucial. Successful entrepreneurs and businesses should invest in businesses that are either upstream suppliers or downstream buyers of their core products to settle production processes within regions and to profit from the benefits of established clusters.

African entrepreneurs face overwhelming market complexities and difficulties accessing capital to bring their business ideas into reality. To promote a credit culture in Africa and to foster investment in the SMEs sector, it is essential that infrastructural reforms are made in the banking system, collateral and bankruptcy laws are to be improved and the financing instruments strengthened through innovation. Key banking reforms include enhancing financial markets competition, pursue effective capital market integration, improve  collateral and bankruptcy laws to facilitate lending, expand micro finance institution and develop financing instruments suited for SMEs , tighten security to curb fraudulent activities within financial system and corruption within supply chains.In addition, financial institutions should seek to improve macroeconomic management with a view to achieving sustainable economic growth, lower transaction costs, favourable interest and exchange rates, low rates of inflation and banking linkages.

Finally, governments and institutions should seek to foster  entrepreneurship as key to creating employment opportunities and sustainable economic growth through the incorporation of entrepreneurship in the curriculum of education systems and training institutions. This is increasingly becoming important as global economy continue to shift, increase in youth unemployment, advancement of disruptive innovation, changes in prosumer and market characteristics. Thus, entrepreneurial thinking is not only necessary for those who want to become entrepreneurs but for everybody in a performing market society. All members of the  society should be familiarised with the concept and spirit of entrepreneurship from primary school on and must have the opportunity to attend specific education and training programmes that correspond to  real market requirements.

Egypt's Entrepreneurial Revolution: A Community Of Startups Rises From The Ashes


A growing number of entrepreneurs and investors are determined that innovation is the way out of the country’s mess, and they're creating apps to help regular citizens deal with complicated life post-revolution and military takeover.



In post-revolutionary Egypt, where young people make up a quarter of the population, the number of startups, incubators, competitions, and angel investors has grown into a rapidly evolving sector.
“After January 25, we took ownership of our country, we do not wait for help from someone else,” says Gamal Sadek, a co-founder of Bey2ollak, a user-driven traffic application that won Google’s first startup competition in the Middle East and North Africa region.

Two and half years later, Egypt’s entrepreneurs have seen incredible challenges. After the Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohamed Morsi became the first democratically elected leader of the country, his ouster by the military has caused unrest that left hundreds dead and thousands of Muslim Brotherhood supporters remain in prison.
The ongoing state of emergency and curfew had put additional pressure on retailers and e-commerce sites, while families and business partnerships have fallen apart because of political differences and polarization of Egyptian society.
The rapid changes in Egyptian society are forcing startups to hone their ideas and services or move faster to introduce new products in response to a changing security situation and customer demands.
“A few companies are shifting their strategies or moving to other parts of the world instead of launching locally because of the current situation,” Ramez Mohamed, CEO of Flat6Labs, a startup incubator that launched in 2011 and has since graduated five cycles of startup companies. “There are so many problems that we can’t [afford to] wait for the government to solve, the problems are not decreasing,” he notes.

Bey2ollak

As the security situation deteriorated following Morsi's removal from office in July, Bey2ollak introduced a new service which used a mobile application to coordinate convoys of up to 40 cars to travel to Egypt’s north coast.
“Lots of people were afraid to travel from Cairo to Alexandria. We saw this on social media and created a new category for ‘traveling groups,’ a new feature for specific routes,” Sadek says. “Most of the users are older drivers, mothers with children.” The company hands out Bey2ollak stickers for participating cars to identify each other. It also highlights “convoy of the day."

Mawenly

Other startups target more specific demands. Mawenly, a GPS mobile application tracking working gas stations, launched in the midst of a gasoline shortage in June, a crisis that helped stoke the popular anger and ouster of Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohamed Morsi. At the stations where there was gas, many lines lasted for hours, allowing drivers to order food and shisha while waiting in their cars.
Mawenly, which means “fill it up” in Arabic, created a user-driven mobile application that allows its users to report on gas stations which had gas and how long the lines were. “After the crisis ended, people kept downloading it,” says Islam Zawawi, a co-founder. “We work hard to tweak it for everyday use, not just when there is a gasoline crisis.”
Now that the large-scale urgent demand for gasoline has subsided, the founders have moved on to the next challenges, preparing to launch two new applications in the coming months: a car services application and a mobile movie tickets application.

PieRide

PieRide, a commuting solution that launched on September 1, offers riders a safer commute alternative amid ongoing checkpoints and roadblocks on the country's streets.
Karim El Mansi says the original idea was to introduce shuttles connecting popular residential and business centers, because a typical commute across Cairo’s congested roads can now take several hours.
PieRide, a commuting solution that launched on September 1, offers riders a safer commute alternative amid ongoing checkpoints and roadblocks on the country's streets.
Karim El Mansi says the original idea was to introduce shuttles connecting popular residential and business centers, because a typical commute across Cairo’s congested roads can now take several hours.
“This has to be done by the government, it cannot be done by a startup,” El Mansi says. “So we started with a simple solution: just introducing cars with trained drivers.”
One of the key features is safety. Each car is equipped with a GPS and the company trains drivers specifically to address security concerns.
“It’s definitely much safer than being alone in a car or taking a taxi,” says El Mansi.

El Wafeyat

El Wafeyat, an online obituary platform, launched last week. It aims to fill a niche left by the dying newspaper industry, by announcing the time and location of funerals and allowing users to create their own obituaries.
In Egypt and other Muslim countries, attending a funeral and honoring the deceased is culturally significant, especially given short time window to bury the dead allowed by Islamic law.
“You can miss a wedding or a birthday, but you can’t miss their funeral,” says Yousef Samaa, a CEO of El Wafeyat. “Not everyone reads the newspaper anymore, so there are no proper tools to get the news.”
The company plans to expand regionally to United Arab Emirates and other Muslim countries.
A similar site, called Deadboard.net, also launched recently. It's a nonprofit site that relies heavily on social media, allowing users to create their own online obituaries to honor the deceased, search for the names of the dead and disseminate information about funerals. With Egyptians being killed in protests and police action around the country in huge numbers, it's a place for family and friends to see if a missing loved one fell victim to violence. The board or obituaries are sorted by categories, honoring deceased including police, media as well as broader categories like politics and religion.
Domestic investors, and those from the Gulf region, are taking note of Egypt’s maturing startup space.
“The number and size of investments is increasing at angel level,” says Con O’Donnell, regional entrepreneurship advisor at MC Egypt, a for-profit subsidiary of Mercy Corps. “We’ve come to a tipping point of an explosion: the maturity of ideas and teams is growing stronger.”
Not everyone is convinced; many investors remain in “wait and see” mode.
“The startup scene is still nascent, the ecosystem is still building,” says Christopher Schroeder, author of Startup Rising: the Entrepreneurial Revolution Remaking the Middle East. “What they need most of all is a more predictable, stable environment to scale their enterprises.”
When they don’t succeed, many entrepreneurs go elsewhere, as there are not many options available and they are not willing to take on more risk.

"When the business is not working, they leave the country--that is a worrying development. These are some of the brightest people in the country, they are not satisfied with regular jobs,” says Hossam Allam, founder of Cairo Angels, Egypt’s first network of angel investors. “It does show the magnitude of stakes.”






Four Cities Developing The World's Best Sustainable Transport Systems

Ben Schiller

February 21, 2014 | 10:08 AM

Many cities are trying to reduce automobile dependence, encourage walking and cycling, and ramp up public transit. By de-emphasizing cars, they hope to create healthier, more sustainable places and cut commute times in the bargain. Four cities were chosen by the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy, a New York City-based think tank that makes annual awards for sustainable transport.

BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA

Argentina's capital, a city of three million people, recently introduced two major bus rapid transit services. The old 20-lane Avenue 9 de Julio--the widest avenue in the world--now has just 10 lanes for cars. The rest is taken up with a "surface subway" that combines aspects of a conventional bus service with the comfort of a subway. "It used to take more than 40 minutes to cross the city. Now it takes an average of 14," says ITDP.

SUWON, SOUTH KOREA

Suwon, a city south of Seoul, organized a month-long festival to help residents imagine what a car-free environment might feel like. The EcoMobility World Festival 2013 asked people to go car-free, leaving more space for walkers and cyclists and "showing that basic needs can be fulfilled without being dependent on an automobile." It has since kept some of the infrastructure and introduced car-free weekends in the neighborhood of the festival; other areas are thinking of doing the same.

LANZHOU, CHINA

Lanzhou, in Northwest China, also introduced bus rapid transit in 2013--Asia's second-largest system. ITDP praises the five-mile-long corridor for its integration with a bike share system (14,000 docks planned), bike parking, and greenways.

INDORE, INDIA

"Like many Indian cities, Indore is facing a growing population, increasing congestion, and environmental degradation due to ever-higher vehicle use," says ITDP. Its 6-mile iBus BRT is a downpayment on a much larger 70-mile-plus network. Some politicians aren't happy that it takes away car space. But the Institute argues that "it will continue to improve traffic conditions in the city and enhance the overall quality of life" for residents.

http://www.fastcoexist.com/3025399/4-cities-developing-the-worlds-best-sustainable-transport-systems

LAUNCHING: Journal on Education in Emergencies






The International Network for Education in Emergencies (INEE) is pleased to announce the launch of a new Journal on Education in Emergencies, and the selection of Professor Dana Burde as the Journal’s first Editor-in-Chief.

This peer-reviewed journal is set up in response to the growing need for rigorous Education in Emergencies (EiE) research to strengthen the evidence base, support EiE policy and practice, and improve learning in and across organizations, policy institutes, and academic institutions. The Journal on EiE will close a gap existing in the academic space: currently, there is no journal dedicated to this topic.

Full release: http://www.ineesite.org/en/journal

Gender in Agriculture Sourcebook

Women play a vital role as agricultural producers and as agents of food and nutritional security. Yet relative to men, they have less access to productive assets such as land and services such as finance and extension. A variety of constraints impinge upon their ability to participate in collective action as members of agricultural cooperative or water user associations. In both centralized and decentralized governance systems, women tend to lack political voice.

Gender inequalities result in less food being grown, less income being earned, and higher levels of poverty and food insecurity. Agriculture in low-income developing countries is a sector with exceptionally high impact in terms of its potential to reduce poverty. Yet for agricultural growth to fulfill this potential, gender disparities must be addressed and effectively reduced.


http://worldbank.org/genderinag 

'The Future Young African Women and Girls Want'

Statement Delivered During The 22nd African Union Summit

Farai Gundan

...

Livia Oliver, 23 from South Sudan said “Leaders and mediators must listen to us girls and young women – we can tell them the truth about conflict, and other issues facing Africa.” Olivier who arrived in Addis Ababa after a five-day journey from the embattled country, reiterated “I was born in war, I grew up in war.” The group focused its statement around education, social and economic development, health, agriculture and climate justice, offering specific prescriptions under each theme. Making up half of the continent’s population, African women and girls are at the epicenter of Africa’s development. The statement served as a invitation to harness the potential of African women and girls by including them in the decision-making process.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/faraigundan/2014/01/31/the-future-young-african-women-and-girls-want-statement-delivered-during-the-22nd-african-union-summit/ 

The New Extremes (Climate Models for Landscape Architects) - by Paul Coseo

Climate science gives landscape architects more precise methods to predict the increasingly volatile ways the elements may behave around the sites they design.
 

By Paul Coseo
Landscape Architecture Magazine, November 2013

When we design places, our designs exacerbate
climate change impacts or lessen them. For
instance, increased precipitation owing to climate
change is made worse by impervious surfaces, which
contribute to stormwater flooding. Finding ways to
incorporate less impervious surface and more tree plantings
into landscape designs can lessen this effect. Before
we design, we should understand the important natural
and social processes of a place. Especially with climate
change, we require accurate information. A system of
monitoring and prediction provides that critical information
necessary to plan and design for changing climates.

The much-anticipated Climate Action Plan released by the
Obama administration in June of this year addresses greenhouse
gas mitigation and the impacts of climate change. Included
in this plan are directives to consider climate resilience (the
ability to successfully adapt to climate impacts) when federal
agencies provide funding and grants to state and local agencies.
Landscape architects will increasingly be asked to address
climate resiliency in projects—awareness among clients has
been rising steadily. Genuinely resilient and adaptive designs
must incorporate the latest science on regional climate trends
and future scenarios. Society’s adaptation to climate change
requires landscape architects’ unique ability to weave together
the knowledge of natural processes with social factors to create
beloved and healthy landscapes.

Paul Coseo is an Adjunct Lecturer in the Department of Urban and Regional
Planning at the University of Michigan and a registered landscape
architect in the State of Illinois. His research examines the
interrelationships between the built environment and urban climate.


http://www.zinio.com/www/browse/issue.jsp?skuId=416283270&prnt=&offer=&categoryId=&pss=1


Promising Agricultural Technologies for Feeding the World’s Poorest

The role of agricultural technologies

Feeding the world in the decades leading up to 2050—decades that will see an increase in food demand spurred by population and income growth and stronger impacts of climate change on agriculture—will require increased and more sustainable agricultural production. To determine how to achieve such production, the authors of the study Food Security in a World of Natural Resource Scarcity used a groundbreaking modeling approach to assess the yield and food security impacts of a broad range of agricultural technologies under varying assumptions regarding climate change and technology adoption. Their approach combines process-based crop modeling of agricultural technologies with sophisticated global food demand, supply, and trade modeling. The authors’ focus was on the world’s three key staple crops: maize, rice, and wheat.


Farm Innovations Could Take a Bite out of World Hunger

Karl Plume, Reuters  |  02/12/2014

A tailored mix of farming technologies could significantly improve global food security by mid-century as the world's population swells to a projected 9 billion and the risk of adverse weather from climate change threatens crops and disrupts trade, according to a study published on Wednesday.

Global corn yields could jump by as much as 67 percent by 2050, while wheat and rice yields may rise around 20 percent if certain innovations are paired, the International Food Policy Research Institute said in a study titled "Food Security in a World of Natural Resource Scarcity."

Widespread adoption of technologies, including biotech seeds, irrigation and no-till farming, could slice world food prices by nearly half and cut food insecurity by as much as 36 percent, IFPRI said.
The study weighed the impacts of 11 different technologies on corn, rice and wheat yields, crop prices, trade and world hunger and found that certain combinations worked better than others. The findings could help identify practices that cash-strapped developing nations should target to combat hunger.

"The reality is that no single agricultural technology or farming practice will provide sufficient food for the world in 2050," said Mark Rosegrant, the study's lead author.

Farmers in the developing world would see the biggest overall yield gains. Drought-tolerant grain should be targeted by producers in the Middle East and parts of Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, while heat-tolerant varieties offer promising yield results in North America and South Asia, IFPRI said.

Yield gains from specific technologies were higher when combined with irrigation.

"We also find that a lot of these technologies can make really large impacts on the environmental side," said Claudia Ringler, co-author of the study.

"We find reductions in harvested area needed to feed the world. We find much better outcomes on calorie availability, the number of malnourished children and generally the population at risk of hunger, and they use less natural resources," she said.

IFPRI parsed the world's arable farmland into 60 by 60 kilometer (37.3 by 37.3 mile) squares and gauged the impact of 11 different technologies and practices on yields of staple grains corn, wheat and rice under two different climate change scenarios.

Positive yield findings were then plugged into an economic model that projected their impact on commodity prices, trade and food security.


IFPRI found that no-till farming boosted corn yields by 20 percent. But when combined with irrigation, yields could rise 67 percent. Corn yields in Sub-Saharan Africa could double by 2050 with widespread adoption of irrigation and no-till.

Drought-tolerant corn could bolster yields by 13 percent in the United States and China, the top two corn consumers. Heat-tolerant varieties of wheat could raise grain yields by 17 percent and, when combined with irrigation, yields may jump 23 percent. Precision agriculture technology was found to boost wheat yields by 25 percent. Nutrient-efficient rice varieties could produce 22 percent more grain, the study said.

http://www.cattlenetwork.com/cattle-news/latest/Mix-of-farm-innovations-could-take-a-bite-out-of-world-hunger-245250461.html 

The Best Books of 2013 on Africa

Nicolas van de Walle's Picks
The professor in the Department of Government at Cornell University selects the most important books on Africa reviewed during the last year. Here are his reviews, culled from recent issues of the magazine.

http://www.foreignaffairs.com/features/collections/the-best-books-of-2013-on-africa#

The Global Rise of Female Entrepreneurs

LAUNCHING: Journal on Education in Emergencies


We are pleased to announce the launch of a new Journal on Education in Emergencies, and the selection of Prof. Dana Burde as the Journal’s first Editor-in-Chief.

This peer-reviewed journal is set up in response to the growing need for rigorous Education in Emergencies (EiE) research to strengthen the evidence base, support EiE policy and practice, and improve learning in and across organizations, policy institutes, and academic institutions. The Journal on EiE will close a gap existing in the academic space: currently, there is no journal dedicated to this topic.

Don't Date a Girl Who Travels


Don't Date a Girl Who Travels
"Don’t date a girl who travels as she tends to speak her mind. She will never try to impress your parents or friends. She knows respect, but isn’t afraid to hold a debate about global issues or social responsibility. Don't date a girl who travels. She is hard to please. The usual dinner-movie date at the mall will suck the life out of her. Her soul craves for new experiences and adventures. She will be unimpressed with your new car and your expensive watch. She would rather climb a rock or jump out of an airplane than hear you brag about it."

To read the entire thing: A Girl Who Travels

Michigan Winter

Michigan Winter!

Sarah Simons

Sarah Simons

Sarah Simons

NEW YORK TIMES - paper copy!


NEW YORK TIMES - paper copy!

We get the Sunday NYT delivery and I just have to say that reading the paper copy is a totally different experience than online reading. I can take my time reading it, leave it on the coffee table as long as I want, the articles are waiting there for me,  and I don't have to stare at a computer.

Sarah Simons

Full page spread - very cool messaging.

Sarah Simons

Smartphone Freedom in Zambia: Crowdsourcing a government

  Mobile entrepreneur Gilbert Mwiinga has released Constitution App, an ingenious tool that lets Zambian citizens participate in the country’s ongoing constitution-drafting process — effectively allowing almost any Zambian adult to help forge the nation.






For More Wonder - On Rewilding

A great TED Talk

George Monbiot: For more wonder, rewild the world

http://on.ted.com/Monbiot
Wolves were once native to the US' Yellowstone National Park -- until hunting wiped them out. But when, in 1995, the wolves began to come back (thanks to an aggressive management program), something interesting happened: the rest of the park began to find a new, more healthful balance. In a bold thought experiment, George Monbiot imagines a wilder world in which humans work to restore the complex, lost natural food chains that once surrounded us.

The speaker, George Monbiot:
http://www.monbiot.com/about/ 
Here are some of the things I love: my family and friends, salt marshes, arguments, chalk streams, Russian literature, kayaking among dolphins, diversity of all kinds, rockpools, heritage apples, woods, fishing, swimming in the sea, gazpacho, ponds and ditches, growing vegetables, insects, pruning, forgotten corners, fossils, goldfinches, etymology, Bill Hicks, ruins, Shakespeare, landscape history, palaeoecology, Gavin and Stacey and Father Ted.

Here are some of the things I try to fight: undemocratic power, corruption, deception of the public, environmental destruction, injustice, inequality and the misallocation of resources, waste, denial, the libertarianism which grants freedom to the powerful at the expense of the powerless, undisclosed interests, complacency.

Here is what I fear: other people’s cowardice.

Jorge Luis Borges

1899–1986 Argentine author Jorge Luis Borges exerted a strong influence on the direction of literary fiction through his genre-bending metafictions, essays, and poetry. Borges was a founder, and principal practitioner, of postmodernist literature, a movement in which literature distances itself from life situations in favor of reflection on the creative process and critical self-examination. Widely read and profoundly erudite, Borges was a polymath who could discourse on the great literature of Europe and America and who assisted his translators as they brought his work into different languages. He was influenced by the work of such fantasists as Edgar Allan Poe and Franz Kafka, but his own fiction "combines literary and extraliterary genres in order to create a dynamic, electric genre," to quote Alberto Julián Pérez in the Dictionary of Literary Biography. Pérez also noted that Borges's work "constitutes, through his extreme linguistic conscience and a formal synthesis capable of representing the most varied ideas, an instance of supreme development in and renovation of narrative techniques. With his exemplary literary advances and the reflective sharpness of his metaliterature, he has effectively influenced the destiny of literature."
The Poetry Foundation

Sarah Simons