South Africa hosts worlds’
new breed of entrepreneurs - environmental entrepreneurs
The Winners of the
2007 (Supporting Entrepreneurs for Environment and Development)
SEED AWARDS arrived in Pretoria on Saturday, 13 October
for the Annual Partnership Forum and a two day workshop
(15-17 October, 2007).
The workshop provides a platform
for sharing experiences and strategies that have worked.
It will also look at how partnerships are being used
to implement the commitments from the Johannesburg World
Summit on Sustainable Development and the Millennium
Development Goals.
In his welcoming address, the Deputy Minister of Science
and Technology Derek Hanekom emphasized the importance
of bringing people and communities together, forging
friendships to tackle the twin challenges of poverty
and environmental degradation.
The SEED Awards recognize and reward five partnership-based
initiatives that combine innovation and entrepreneurship
in delivering effective social development and environmentally
sustainable programs in their countries. The partnerships
also serve as a model to inspire new local entrepreneurs,
communities, companies and others to join hands in advancing
sustainability.
During his keynote address, Mr Jay Naidoo, DBSA Chairman,
highlighted the need to work in partnership, rather
than unilaterally, so that all sectors of society benefit
from economic growth. Profit should not be the sole
motivation of entrepreneurial activity – reinvesting
profits into the community empowers them, helping them
to help themselves. The knowledge that communities have
should not be ignored – rather it should be embraced
and celebrated. Experts and leaders should be humble
enough to accept that they do not have all of the answers.
Communities usually know best what their priorities
are and what is needed to solve a problem but they are
often not given the tools or the platform to do so.
Organisations like SEED put the power in the hands of
the people at grassroots level, equipping them to make
their own choices and realize a better quality of life.
Helen Marquard, Executive Director of SEED, warmly welcomed
the generous invitation from DST to SEED, its partners
and its winners, to exchange ideas and experience with
each other and with organizations in South Africa. SEED,
in supporting young enterprises whose focus is to create
social benefits and to enhance environmental stewardship,
is keen to open up opportunities for its winners, and
to grow its activities. This Annual Partnership Forum
was a resounding success on all fronts.
The 2007 SEED Award Winners were selected following
a rigorous 6-month review process that examined more
than 230 applications from some 70 countries worldwide.
The partnership applicants represent nearly 1,100 organizations
drawn from the private sector, non-governmental organizations,
women’s groups, labor, public authorities, U.N.
agencies and others.
The five winning partnerships differ in that they address
a wide range of issues. They are alike, however, in
that each translates internationally agreed-upon environmental
and developmental goals—such as those put forth
in the U.N.’s Millennium Declaration and at the
2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development—into
community-based actions that respond to specific regional
priorities and needs.
The 2007 SEED Awards winners are:
In Vietnam, Bridging
the Gap uses sustainable cultivation of traditional
medicinal plants to develop high value-added products,
the manufacturing and proceeds of which improve the
livelihoods of ethnic minority communities
In Peru, T’ikapapa
links small-operation potato farmers in the Andes with
high-value niche markets in urban centers. T’ikapapa
promotes biodiversity conservation and environmentally
friendly potato production techniques while giving farmers
open access to technological assistance and innovation,
encouraging local farmer’s associations and propagating
the flow of market information;
In Ecuador, Cultivos
Ecuandinos has reintroduced native cereal and tuber
crops that diversify food production, improve local
food security and reduce soil degradation. The partnership
then sells surplus yield through a women’s organization
it has created in three communities;
In Brazil, Projeto
Bagagem, creates unique travel packages that give
visitors a first-hand look at local development initiatives
and nature reserves in a novel approach to community-based
ecotourism; and
In Sierra
Leone, a unique partnership between a traditional
healers’ association, an academic research institute
and local communities will help to protect biodiversity
and provide sustainable livelihoods for local communities
through the establishment of the Tiwai Island Health
and Fitness Center—a facility to provide health
services based on principles of West African ethno-medicine.
For more information on the event, click
here
or contact:
Helen Marquard
SEED Executive Director
+44 7785 706646
Or, in South Africa,
Nthabi Maoela
Cell: 082 944 0015
Return to top