Please describe your proposed solution.
With dwindling high quality farmland, pasture, and forest resources available to people in the overpopulated highlands of Ethiopia, inhabitants must look to new frontiers and adopt new means of scaling landscape-healing regenerative food systems.
These new frontiers are the lowlands, below 1400m. The lowlands are historically uninhabited due to heat and mosquitos. Much of the terrain is steep. However, these locations enjoy greater abundance of water and intact ecosystems. It is inevitable that the lowlands will become inhabited. It is critical that the resource base in this more pristine zone is conserved and when possible, (as in soil, water, forests) regenerated.
As a special Woreda (state) in the SNNPR region of Ethiopia, Yem enjoys less bureaucracy and corruption than much of the country. It is also home to over 100,000 people, mainly subsistence farmers, who are now exceeding the carrying capacity of their land.
If funded, we will send a permaculture expert, Tichafa, to Yem, where he and hand selected cohort of 10 participant will build an ecovillage in the lowlands. They will begin the iterative process of landscape-scale regeneration: hand-digging proper terraces and swales, perennial plantings, managed grazing, all while growing a deeper understanding of what best suits the land, the wildlife, and the people.
<https://youtu.be/3fZ7O2mnPRI>Now is our opportunity to establish best-practices for conservation and regeneration, to leverage local knowledge, global expertise, technology, people-power, and the power of nature to ease human pressure on the highlands and clear a path for widespread regeneration in Ethiopia and across the world.
We will do our part to strengthen Cardano's position within the regenerative movement, first by showcasing real-world use cases for novel NFTs, and inviting experts in by giving them skin in the game.
Cardano is uniquely poised to become a major economic platform for the regenerative movement, for both commercial ventures like the fund8 funded 21st century Agri supply chain (ideascale.com) and for the current proposal, which serves a community of subsistence farmers with minimal formal economic interaction. Both the Business/NGO world AND Grassroots World are important to bring under the Cardano umbrella. <u>We are here to support grassroots regeneration</u> in the cradle of humanity.
We will get to the NFTs shortly, but first a <u>Quick Primer on Regeneration</u>:
Regenerative Systems run on increased density of humans per acre, not greater acreage per machine. It is about nurturing soil life, not treating dirt as an inert medium for chemical inputs. It is about diverse, perennial-dominant polycultures, not monocultures. It is about closing loops within natural cycles on site, not ignoring externalized harms as they flow off-site. It has countless knock-on effects for carbon sequestration, groundwater, climate, biodiversity, health, livelihood, and not least of which: hope, in a world with less of it to go around.
To learn more about regen ag and investment, we recommend this video course from Koen van Seijen, host of the Investing in Regenerative Ag podcast and keynote speaker at our conference from February 2022.
<u>We seek to empower enterprising subsistence farmers and herders to initiate a cascade of regeneration on the landscape, connecting an isolated valley in Ethiopia to a global community of collectors and supporters. </u>
#1 Regen Leverage Point: Sun heat > Poo heat
With little remaining timber available for firewood, MANURE is burned as a source of heat instead of feeding the microbiome of the soil*.* The result: fertile topsoil that took millenia to accumulate is eroding away at an alarming rate. Alternative sources of heat must be used in order to return the cycles of life back to the soil. Solving the heating problem is a critical first step in making regeneration possible. Passive Solar Cookers are basically reflective bowls that concentrate photons onto a dark vessel or cooking surface. Thanks to the abundant sunshine in the region, these inexpensive heating devices offer a viable alternative. We have budgeted enough for materials to provide solar cookers for the ecovillage and some to spare for participants' families, but would love to sponsor more for the wider Yem community as it is perhaps the single most powerful tool to enable regeneration.
Solar Cooker Tokenomics: Beyond the scope of this proposal we are considering issuing solar cooker tokens. Fungible, Non or both, we are weighing the options. Either way the digital asset will represent a powerful real-world multiplier for carbon sequestration, herd density, wildlife habitat and food security.
Ruminant manure is base fertility and, tragically, it is burned throughout the world. People need viable alternatives and the financial support to transition. We welcome anyone to please steal our idea for solar cooker tokens to deploy anywhere and everywhere.
NFTs
We will use NFTs as a tool to on-chain:
- Background Information e.g. text from Tichafa describing his takeaways from a previous [failed] ecovillage project he was involved in in Ethiopia (p.s. it didn't fail bc of poor permaculture design)
- Research e.g. text outlining current and historic Yem agricultural methods and elders’ accounts of the changing landscape.
- Numeric Data: e.g. regular in-situ measurements of numeric variables such as water level in wells
- Observational Data: e.g. a participant captures the first incidence of a dung beetle in the region
- Significant Events: participants record an audio account of e.g. the behavior of wildlife around a newly constructed water catchment.
- On-Site Actions: e.g. textual or photographic proof the construction of a swale or planting a food forest attributed to multiple wallets for all involved.
- Off-Site Actions: e.g. a haiku about Newman building the backbone of our Miro board.
- Hard Assets e.g. photographic proof of the arrival of Catalyst-funded resources such as raw materials for solar cookers on site.
- Artwork: e.g. photos of art pieces such as Cardano Conks hand-etched by Philadelphia-based Ethiopian-American artist of e.g. dung beetles returning to the Yem landscape.
- Cultural “Assets” that the Yem might wish to preserve and offer digital versions of (in various formats) to collectors. These might include music, art, stories, memories.
- Personalities: e.g. artwork representing the participation of an individual in the project: both in Yem and abroad. *Team members will be issuing such NFTs to support their work on this project as they are not receiving Catalyst funding.
TBD: NFT minting platform(s). Considering:
- Full node for larger scale mints,
- SaaS products like NFT Maker Pro, CFactory, etc. for smaller/ongoing mints,
- Sales to be funneled through Yem Ethiopia Regenerative website to establish credibility and further engage our participants
Our philosophy around NFTs: These are purely collectible. We are keeping it simple: no smart contracts that might invite greater regulatory scrutiny. NFT don't represent Title to property nor ownership of hard assets. The information in the NFTs is not exclusively visible to the owner of the NFT. It is open for all to see. These NFTs are digital representations of aspects of the project that one can own.
A bit more on ownership:
- Who owns the hard assets: the shovels, the phones etc? Answer: The Project.
- Who owns the Project? Answer:
- Phase 1: For this initial funding round, Tegegne will be formalizing the Project as a legal Entity in Ethiopia. The Project will have limited Title to a portion of the land in the lowlands. It will own the hard assets for the duration of this initial phase. The participants will effectively be contract workers on the project.
- Phase 2 and beyond: while land cannot be "owned" by private individuals in Ethiopia, to the greatest extent possible we will give the Yem community sovereignty over the project after 6 months. They will take ownership of the hard assets and will continue to have responsibility for and reap benefits of the work the initial cohort performed.
While the project will be handed to the Yem community after 6 months, we have no plans to stop supporting their work. Quite the opposite: we plan to help them and others scale, replicate and seed similar projects throughout Ethiopia. When we acheive greater scale, we will need greater tooling to support that, and Cardano can continue to deliver.
DIDs and NFTs are small pieces of the Cardano toolset that are essential to the long-term success of this project and to regeneration projects of the future. Other tools include:
- Oracles for uploading and verifying data e.g. from satellites/historic weather data etc to add credence to other observations, e.g. by other oracles or human-collected on the ground
- Traceability in the supply chain flowing into and out of a regenerative project, and for larger projects: resource flow within the closed loop of the project, and tracking of would-be externalities.
- DAOs and fungible tokens to empower individuals in DAOs to take collective action
- ADA itself can be used to circumvent remittances to get funds directly to who needs them to do the work or alternatively to streamline inflow of to-the-people foreign investment through the necessary [on-chain] regulatory bodies of the host country.
To explore what else the future holds for Cardano x Regeneration, visit Tyler’s blog post from regenseed.io about using Cardano to regenerate the American Prairie with the mighty Bison. A thought experiment about rancher DAOs, Virtual Fencing, Oracles, Satellites, Mega-Herds and much more which he hopes to turn into a Catalyst proposal in a future fund.
This project in Yem is just the beginning of what we believe will be a fruitful relationship between Cardano and the grassroots Regenerative movement. We are here for the long haul, and here to onboard and support the people we need to join the Cardano network so that together we can create the greatest positive impact.
Please describe how your proposed solution will address the Challenge that you have submitted it in.
From the campaign brief:
> “…Practical innovations offered on tackling the unique challenges faced by the continent. A clear roadmap that points to increased adoption.”
TACKLING CHALLENGES: While the challenges around food aren’t unique to the continent of Africa, much of the continent is facing acute threats to food security. If funded, our proposal has the opportunity to create a model for the integration of local regenerative food production X global network through 3rd-generation blockchain technology that can be replicated throughout Africa and the world.
INCREASING ADOPTION: Because of political issues, corruption and the skepticism of those in a country that has been exploited many times and which has historic struggles with corruption, the initial goal of IOG to onboard regular Ethiopians (beginning with students) has been slow to materialize. Our proposal, if funded, will initially onboard only a small cohort of new “identities”, however it will create an incentive for others to follow suit and onboard their DIDs so they may access 1) the financial support of members of the Cardano network and 2) the open-source intellectual property gathered via this project that will enable them to hit the ground running (after modifying for local nuance) on their own regeneration projects.
We feel that this proposal aligns with the goals of Cardano and will assist IOG, the Cardano Foundation, and the community to meet our collective goals for the region: putting power into the hands of people to make meaningful, positive change.
What are the main risks that could prevent you from delivering the project successfully and please explain how you will mitigate each risk?
Falsification: The success of this project rests on the interest of individuals from around globe desiring to have a stake in a project in a place so remote they will likely never see it in person. E.g. when someone purchases an action-based NFT representing a water catchment, they want to be as sure as possible that the swale exists and that those who say they participated in constructing it did so when and where they said they did. There is no way, with this budget, to invite third-parties with established trust to audit what is going on on the ground.
We mitigate the risks of potential falsification of actions and data by incentivizing truthfulness and disincentivizing lies. How do we do that? We don’t have all the answers right now. But it seems that it’s critical that participants have long-term skin in the game. There is skin in the game from the perspective of growing food to help their community avoid famine, and the skillset and toolset that comes with that. There is also an opportunity to give them financial skin in the game in the form of scarce “personal NFTs” (described in the first [IMPACT] section above) that potentially accrue in value as someone takes on notable roles in the project.
RE: Site Audits: While it isn’t feasible to audit each action, it is possible to have trusted third-parties with reputations on-the-line visit the site at a later date for purposes of documentation and auditing. Who might these trusted third-party/parties be? We don’t know yet, but it feels like the kind of thing the wider community should weigh in on and not something to leave to stakeholders in the project, including the Team behind this proposal.
Other risks come with the territory: political instability, war, and local corruption are all-too common in Ethiopia. To mitigate this risk, we have chosen the location Yem, a special Woreda without layers of bureaucracy and leaders who answer directly to the people.
Failure to design and execute permaculture properly means a lot of human and oxen calories are burned without the reward of future surplus calories. We have put our best foot forward by onboarding Tichafa, someone with beyond-sufficient credentials for the position. But we must also strive to onboard other regenerative design experts to weigh in from afar.
Unsuccessful participants: Regenerative systems are complex: they take a lot of patient observation, creative thinking, knowledge, skills and also a lot of hard physical work to get off the ground successfully. So, Tichafa must be selective in forming the initial cohort. To help him attract individuals with greater skills and potential, we decided to offer a stipend to participants, so that the opportunity isn't passed up for paying positions in the city. Additionally, we feel that "hiring" the initial cohort makes clear what the expectations are.
Food insecurity outside the community: As supporters of the Yem community we must be honest about what potential risks we are opening them up to when they are growing lots of food, with herds of animals, valuable farming tools, and if we’re really stretching: individuals worth ransoming…. The location of the project is available open-source, it is possible for people in-the-know to show up pushed by desperation to take what they can with violence. While remoteness offers a level of protection, there is no way to be sure this cannot unfold. It is our duty to listen to the concerns of their community, relay potential risks to them, and together formulate an appropriate plan to secure valuables and protect individuals, if it is of concern to them.
Finally, we are pushing real people to adopt digital identities which could theoretically be used to extract data from, surveill, and otherwise harm participants. We must insure that the Cardano DIDs that we require for participation are
1) adopted with full informed consent
2) include only personal information that is necessary at this stage
3) only share that personal information with parties explicitly stated