World Economic Forum, Davos, Switzerland - 25 January 2007:
Mr. Achim Steiner, Executive Director of the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP), today announced the 10 finalists
for one of five Supporting Entrepreneurs for Environment
and Development (Seed) Awards.
The winners of the Seed Awards, an incentive scheme for
local entrepreneurs to promote economic growth, social development
and environmental protection will be announced at the forthcoming
United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development in
New York in May 2007. This announcement compliments a similar
release made at the World Social Forum in Nairobi, Kenya,
today.
"As we meet in Davos and Nairobi to discuss scaling
up sustainable solutions, the Seed Initiative is again offering
inspiring examples of local level entrepreneurs in all parts
of the world who are setting up new partnerships and using
'global/local' networks to address sustainable development
challenges with a business case approach,” said Steiner.
The Seed Initiative is an international awards-based scheme
and learning tool to encourage local entrepreneurs, communities,
companies and others to join forces in partnerships for
sustainable development. Partners in the Seed Initiative
include the World Conservation Union (IUCN); the United
Nations Environment Programme (UNEP); the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP); the governments of the United
States of America, Germany, the Netherlands, South Africa,
and the United Kingdom; and private sector partner Swiss
Re. The Seed Awards programme publicly recognises the contribution
of innovative, entrepreneurial partnerships to the achievement
of the Millennium Development Goals and the Johannesburg
Plan of Implementation.
Finalists for the Seed Awards 2007 take a range of promising,
locally-adapted approaches to sustainability, including
the promotion of traditional medicine and community-based
tourism and the production of alternative fuels. The countries
represented by finalist initiatives are Brazil, Ecuador,
India, Nepal, Kenya, Peru, Sierra Leone, Suriname, Tanzania,
and Vietnam.
Steiner underlined the importance of locally-driven, entrepreneurial
partnerships in the fight against poverty, adding: “These
connected entrepreneurs are planting seeds of hope. Their
example and accumulative impact holds enormous promise."
Previous winners, acclaimed for their innovative solutions
in improving both livelihoods of local communities and environmental
protection, include:
(i) “Cows to Kilowatts,” which aims to provide more than
2,000 households with household energy at 50% of the standard
price from the incineration of abattoir waste in the city
of Ibadan, Nigeria;
(ii) The Global Partnership for SRI Rice, an environmentally
friendly method of rice growing now employed by more than
400,000 small-scale farmers that reduces the amount of water,
agrochemicals and seed required while increasing yield in
more than 20 countries; and
(iii) “Agua para Todos – Water for All,” a Bolivian partnership
that envisages providing 75,000 people with access to high-quality
potable water at more than 50% less than the current cost
over the next five years.
The announcement of the 2007 finalists follows a rigorous
10-month selection process that drew together more than
230 applications from more than 70 countries worldwide –
representing close to 1,100 organisations from the private
sector, nongovernmental organizations, women’s groups, labour,
public authorities, UN agencies and others. The selection
process to shortlist finalists involved an external selection
team of ten international experts.
An international expert jury will now identify the five
winning partnerships from the 10 finalists. The awards ceremony
will be held during the high-level segment of the 15th session
of the Commission for Sustainable Development in May (New
York).
Nick Nuttall, UNEP Spokesperson
THE 2007 SEED AWARDS FINALISTS IN BRIEF:
(i) Western Hemisphere:
Brazil:
Projeto Bagagem: Building a community-based tourism network
in Brazil
Improves local communities’ livelihoods and promotes environmental
protection through the creation of community-based tourism.
Equador:
Handling and recovery of Andean tubers and cereals to improve
food security
Introduces organic farming practices and reintroduces native
species of Andean cereals and potatoes to diversify crops
with the goal of empowering women and improving food security.
Peru:
T’ikapapa: A new way to link Andean small-scale farmers
with new urban markets
Markets indigenous potatoes to supermarkets to improve local
farmers’ livelihoods and utilizes environmentally friendly
technologies to conserve local biodiversity.
Suriname:
Protecting the Future by Preserving the Past
Improves livelihoods and provides health services by using
traditional knowledge of plant extracts for therapeutic
purposes.
(ii) Africa:
Kenya:
Empowering the restoration of goods and services of Mt.
Kenya Forests
Promotes conservation enterprises and the sustainable development
of forest and mountain resources and improves livelihoods
through a series of reforestation and development projects.
Sierra Leone:
Tiwai Island Traditional Medicine Health and Fitness Village
Protects biodiversity and provides sustainable livelihoods
for local communities through the construction and operation
of an ecotourism health/fitness village, built around the
principles of West African ethno-medicine, located in the
southern part of the Barrie and Koya Chiefdom near the Tiwai
Island’s Gola Forest.
Tanzania:
Future Fuels
Provides an alternative fuel source from wood waste, reducing
dependency on forest products and opening a new market.
(iii) South Asia:
India:
Promotion of Natural Dyes in the Textile Industries
Produces yarn and fabric in an energy-efficient and less
polluting manner through the use of traditional natural
dyes.
Nepal:
Cotton thread production from Girardinia diversifolia (Allo)
Produces cotton thread from a traditionally used local species
for supply of national and international markets, involving
local communities in the resource management.
(iv) East Asia:
Vietnam:
Bridging the Gap: Bringing novel Vietnamese medicinal plant
products to the international market
Develops a local business network, marketing high value-added
products derived from the sustainable cultivation of traditional
medicinal plants.
Further information on the 2007 Seed Award Finalists may
be obtained from the Seed Initiative website on www.seedinit.org.