The Bee Team win UC international challenge
The Bee Team win UC international challenge
A project to cultivate native bee hives for
organic honey has been named the winner of the UC 21 Day
International Challenge.
“The Bee Team”, were named
the winners after the top three finalists presented their
solutions to the judging panel, which included Christchurch
Mayor Lianne Dalziel, on Friday night.
The challenge gave
six teams 21 days to develop a practical and unique solution
to help improve the socio-economic well-being of the people
of Barangay Tarong in Carles, Iloilo, a Filipino community
hard-hit by typhoon Haiyan in November 2013.
Each team
comprised five students and five business mentors.
The winning team will visit the community in Barangay Tarong to help the local community implement their concept in the middle of the year. The business leaders in the winning team will have the option to participate in the trip at their own expense.
At the final event, UC Vice-Chancellor Dr Rod Carr announced that he will personally donate $5,000 towards each of the top three projects virtually doubling the winning team’s budget and enabling the two runner-up projects to also be implemented in the Philippines.
These include a collaborative community project to grow and dehydrate mangos and an agricultural initiative that combines protective cropping and nutritional education. Some business mentors have also pledged to cover the travel costs of at least one runner up.
The winning team’s solution
will establish a beekeeping cooperative for honey and
by-product production including pollen, propolis and
cosmetic ingredients using the stingless native honeybee
species Tetragonula biroi.
The cooperative will be held in partnership with The University of the Philippines Los Baños (UPLB) Bee Programme and would introduce hives for honey production, educational purposes and propolis.
They will also set up an ornamental feature garden, designed to promote recycling, sustainability, awareness of the ecosystem, combined with an educational workshop with children at the local school, open for the whole village to attend.
Team member Callum Clark says the winning idea has the potential to provide a complementary, sustainable income for members of the Tarong community.
“We envision that the project will help those directly in the cooperative as well as the wider community through indirect means such as education, environmental awareness and increased crop yield in other agricultural areas,” he says.
“It was a real privilege just to be part of this competition, but to see all the hard work implemented and be a success will be the most satisfying thing.”
Challenge manager Associate Professor Sussie Morrish says all the teams worked extremely hard and dedicated their valuable time into putting a business plan together.
“This has been an exciting challenge that brought together students from across all UC faculties. What these teams have put together is amazing. The collective knowledge, skills and insights of the teams prove that when we work cooperatively rather than competitively, the outcome is far superior,” she says
ENDS