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Sustainable Resources 2003

Engineers Without Borders - USA

Engineers Without Borders - International

 

 

Information Technologies in Sustainable Development Charrette

28 - 30 August 2001, Aspen Club Lodge, Aspen, Colorado, USA


Executive Summary

This report is released in a world greatly changed from when the event that it records was held. The topics discussed have gained a new immediacy and weight. We hope that the ideas contained within can be applied in a number of settings.

The Information Technologies in Sustainable Development Charrette was held August 28 – 30 2001 with the hope of exploring a basic question about emerging technology — How will information technologies help us rethink the formation of sustainable settlements?

This event was intended to explore the interface of information technologies and the basic needs in the development of any community — Shelter, Water, Food, Energy, Healthcare, Education, Jobs, and Access to Capital. The group participants used the creation of a new town in the United States, and establishment of a new community for a displaced population in a Lesser Developed Country to bound the possibilities. Participants came from a range of organizations and backgrounds, for a process that asked everyone to think across boundaries and disciplines to create new solutions to address basic issues of all settlements.

Haymount, a new town for 9,000 people on the Rappahannock River in Virginia provided one set of parameters, while the Rwandan Refugee Camps in Ngara, Tanzania provided the other. The concepts developed by four working groups — Infrastructure, Economy, Wellbeing, Sustenance — focused largely on the application of information technologies to settlements for displaced persons. This was not because the new town was felt to be less important, but rather a reflection of Amulya Reddy, of the Bangalore Institute of Science, comment that “if you take care of the needs of the poorest, the rest will be brought along.”

A series of brief presentations were made to set the intellectual stage for the working groups. Amory Lovins, Rocky Mountain Institute, talked about Natural Capitalism and key principles of rethinking the design of economic activities. Mark Prutsalis, formerly with UNICEF, described the formation and operations of the refugee camps in Ngara, along with some of the information technologies already in use. William Browning, RMI Green Development Services, presented case studies of green communities. John Clark, John A Clark Company, described the thinking behind the design of Haymount. Townsend Anderson, Orton Family Foundation, demonstrated CommunityViz, a software system for visualizing physical, economic and environmental changes in a community resulting from new real estate projects. Michael Hawley, MIT Media Lab, showed remote information gathering systems used to monitor ecosystems in Hawaii, and the development of schools with computers and internet capabilities in Cambodian villages. Janine Benyus, author of Biomimicry, described innovations learned from looking to nature as a mentor. David Warner, MD, Syracuse University, presented tools for visualizing complex sets of data, and application of these information technologies in a remote environment.

Possibly the most powerful insight to come out of the group was that in some ways settlements for displaced persons are analogous to ecosystems after a disturbance. In the early stages the bare ground is colonized by annual species that tend to be opportunistic and highly competitive. This is called a Type 1 ecosystem, and it begins the stabilization of soil and prepares it for later assemblages of plants and animals. The Type 2 ecosystem is characterized by the introduction of perennial plants, and shrubs. The nitrogen fixing plants tend to enter the system at this stage, and there are cooperative/symbiotic relationships becoming evident in the Type 2 system. Later a Type 3 ecosystem may then emerge. This is where larger trees and other more ‘permanent’ flora appears. While competition still occurs between the individuals a high level cooperation is also evident. This process has been called ‘succession’, and earlier ecological views assumed that this series of stages lead to a stable ‘climax’ ecosystem. It now clear that a healthy system is a mosaic of all three stages, and many of the plants that form the basis of agriculture are found in Type 1 ecosystems. However, the Type 3 ecosystem does not emerge until the previous steps occur.

In the early stages of a new refugee settlement, the displaced persons pour into a site. There is some competition, water must be found quickly and all the food is typically brought in from overseas relief agencies by aircraft. The incoming population typically strips the local forests for fuel and building materials. This is described as the first stage of a camp. Later food is bought form a regional network, with a more stabilized distribution system in place in the settlement. Basic levels of governance and communication are established within the camp. This is the second stage, which may last months or in some cases years. The final goal is repatriation. The host country then is left with a devastated site and in the case of Ngara request $70M from the UN to help clean up and restore the location.

In some ways this process is similar to an arrested progression of ecosystem types. The group participants wondered if it would be possible to introduce elements of local food production, energy and infrastructure measures, education programs and ecological restoration efforts by the settlement population. In effect, could the settlement begin to reflect the shift from a Type 2 ecosystem to a Type 3 ecosystem? Would this help the operation of the settlement? Would this help alleviate some of the boredom, suffering and social pathologies? Could this help prevent the host country from having to deal with a ‘moonscape’ after the camp is no longer occupied? In the case of some African locations, that have had multiple occupancies, could it make the site more resilient? And, could it give the displaced persons, new agricultural and ecological restoration skills to apply once repatriated?

Refugee camps also illustrate what happens when dedicated and capable organizations each address part of the problem in a dis-integrated way—optimizing their part but pessimizing the system. When one agency, for example, provides drinking water dispensed from holes bigger than those in the receiving distribution vessels, water spills, mud is combated with a cement slab and sump, and those coming to get water can also get malaria, this dis-integration makes good intentions into bad outcomes. This is a design problem. The charrette began to frame creative ways to turn that design problem into opportunities to make refugee camps cost less and work much better.

These questions informed the ideas that were generated in the four groups. While many of the outcomes focus on the settlement for a displaced population, many are also applicable to formation of a new community in a developed country.


Infrastructure

The work of this group was predicated on three concepts:

  • Create a mindset within agencies that perform crisis intervention that there is more than Stage 1.
  • Ecological design process that is embedded into the planning.
  • Anticipation of evolution of bio-infrastructure must be from the beginning, so that the successional stages are implicit in and emergent from everything that is built, thus avoiding backtracking, duplication, and remediation.

The group envisions three assemblages of information technology to reach these goals.

1. Create and apply a grid-based GIS framework for data. This framework will structure the inventory of the place (biome, soil, water, crops and uncultivated vegetation, fuel, fauna and etc.); social intelligence (culture, anthropology, census, skills, tools, and etc.); and physical infrastructure (communications, ports, roads, railroads, airports, and etc.) This framework and associated data forms the basis for planning and crisis response; land management; and monitoring. The unpopulated framework would serve as a basis for decision making in an emergency situation, and as the basis for systematic collection of data in anticipation of future crises.

2. Establish a methodology and process for developing self-organizing and self-sustaining economic and security systems in camps. The economic system forms the basis for prestige for individuals. One facilitating technology is the use of RFID tags as the basis for currency, economic tracking, food and water distribution, skills inventory, and compensation for work and products.

3. Create a global capability warehouse that consists of a knowledge library and a component warehouse. The knowledge library is a web accessible archive of information including resources, problem solutions, lessons learned and access to experts (e.g., the virtual barefoot botanist, or solar techniques expert). The component warehouse is a distributed collection of tools and capabilities that can be assembled into a scaleable kit-of-parts that is tailored for specific situations and delivered anywhere in the globe. The kit may contain such items as communications capabilities, testing kits, biome augmentation, soil augmentation, technology, designs, and etc.

4. Social/Nature Conservancies—Preemptively acquire potential refugee sites in unpopulated lands and ecologically restore them for subsequent habitation by refugees and displaced persons. Similarly design the process of maturation of refugee camps as vehicle for ecological restoration, adding value to both occupants and host populations. (Needs to be structured to avoid appearance of slavery or exploitation of refugees or displaced persons.)


Economy

This group would like to transform the settlement process into a restorative act, spelled out in a contract between the host locality and the new residents. When humans move into a landscape, the expectation among all parties should be that the act of meeting their needs should not only do no harm, but actually improve the area in better condition than it was found. Every decision should be made with the dual purpose of meeting immediate needs (for shelter or sustenance) while creating an enriched landscape, a landscape that will help future populations (of any species) support themselves in a sustainable way. This will entail policy and mandate changes, covenants between host localities and residents, new sets of advisors, new tools for assessing the opportunities and limits of the habitat, and new tools for community building and adaptive land management. A system that encourages economic self- sufficiency within the community is an important way to channel entrepreneurial instinct into community-enhancing endeavors. We believe that this new approach to human settlement would be equally useful for people moving into a new town or into a refugee camp.

This group outlined a number of initiatives, the most important being:

  • Establish a contract with the host country and relief agencies. This is a medium term item and would involve the creation of a contract form, establishment of a database of treaties, agreements, MOUs, covenants. Then the development of a template, that includes guidelines and best practices.
  • Assess the carrying capacity to establish the best land use. A long term project that involves the use of GPS, assessment tools similar to those developed by the Center for Maximum Potential Building Systems, information on ecological carrying capacity, SimCity, the use of PDAs for onsite data collection, GIS imaging, and establishing a team of host ecological experts.
  • Build the capacity of residents and agencies to adapt their community for evolving ecological/social/economic benefit whether or not they will remain there. A long term project using information and design tools like virtual neural networks, games and simulations like SimCity or CommunityViz for three dimensional visualization of the settlement patterns, and active environmental sensing systems for adaptive management of the location.
  • Build capacity for economic self sufficiency of the residents (and the relief agencies). This longer term project would have a number of elements: the community centers – similar to the Cambodian schools that Mike Hawley and Sandy Choi described including job training via multimedia/ internet/ distance learning/apprenticeship. Other elements would be establishment of micro-credit lending, a local currency and the use of smart cards to enable the system. Additionally this economic system would use low tech inputs of locally grown food, and human muscles as fuel.


Well Being

The group conceived a “Phase Zero Network” as an infrastructure to promote well being in a community from its “Phase One” inception. At the same time, the Phase Zero Network would provide a framework for support, information flow and education that can help communities in their evolution to a more stable “Phase Three” state.

The Phase Zero Network would allow access to a global network of information useful to the community to be integrated immediately and continuously into the community’s development, instead of following the more conventional approach of collecting information from the community first and reacting to it. This frequently creates a time lag to addressing problems and can limit the flow and usefulness of information back into the community. In an abruptly established community like a refugee camp with immediate and basic needs, a Phase Zero network could provide proactive support and an interactive flow of information.


The Phase Zero Network would provide:

  • Education and information flow into the community from a global information network, which supplies geographically appropriate expertise and advice to the community; quickly and interactively, via information technology;
  • Infrastructure for rapidly assessing and understanding the needs of the community, as well as local resources and skills of the community, cultural intelligence, and potential problems;
  • An informational support system for “training the trainers” within a community that would allow an interactive flow of information, aiding education and support initiatives that informs and educates community members, a global information network, and outside providers serving the community;
  • A framework that allows information from the community to provide information and expertise back to the global database, improving the database as a whole as well as the support it can offer back to the specific community in question.

Sustenance

A key aspect of the development of any settlement is meeting the important sustenance needs for food and water. Even more important is meeting these needs in ways that contribute to the sustainability of the communities involved, both within and outside of the settlements themselves. The goal of our charrette team has been to ask the question of how information technologies can give us new options and alternatives for ensuring sustenance in ways that contribute to community sustainability. We did this by focusing our analysis on two extremes of the spectrum of communities – one a planned community that is being established in a new area in a developed country, and the other a community of refugees or displaced people in a developing country.

To achieve this goal, we developed the following recommendations:

  • Develop information technologies that rapidly assess the cultural and ecological resources and opportunities for sustainable settlements in a given locality, as well as serve as a baseline for later impact assessment.
  • Build a system that meets sustenance needs while simultaneously creating a “demand pull” that promotes sustainable food systems and links communities of consumers more directly to producer communities.
  • Promote means that settlements can use to move from being purely food consumers to being food producers, using sustainable practices and integrating more agencies and organizations as early as possible in the development process.
  • Develop a telecommunication infrastructure that is freely available for promoting communication between providers and consumers, especially in developing regions where host countries can be restrictive of such services, so that food can be sourced, procured, transported, and distributed by more sustainable means.


What Is Next?

Our early concern was that maybe that none of this could be accomplished in practice. But we have powerful examples to the contrary. The Rishi Valley, near Bangalore in India, is one. Rishi's common cycle of poverty, degradation, and decline was arrested through uncommon attention to husbanding local resources, restoring local hydrology, and educating the local community on the strengths and possibilities of the environment. The consequent transformation was remarkable and is serving as a model for restoration throughout southern India. We also have the successes from Curitiba, Brazil (as detailed in Natural Capitalism) and Las Gaviotas in Colombia (as detailed by Alan Weissman in Gaviotas).

Within "Upsizing" by Gunter Pauli, we find ZERI, the Zero Emissions Research Initiative, demonstrating a superior method for efficient, sustainable, and profitable business practices in a dozen places around the world. The Rocky Mountain Institute can show successes optimized for the people in each location. Michael Hawley at MIT established schools in Cambodia that have stimulated even the youngest pupils to teach. John Todd's Living Systems produce fresh water from sewage. Janine Benyus, in "Biomimicry," helps us understand what solutions nature has found for succeeding in a harsh and unforgiving environment. Importantly, there is a technological, informational requirement in each idea she explains. Some "thing" we don't yet know, but we'll someday need to communicate to others effectively.

The key is a "whole systems" approach to development, even within something as austere and forbidding as a refugee settlement. ZERI's concept of "concentric rings of utility," where each process uses the waste products of a previous industry until there is no final waste at all, may be exactly the solution required when resources are scarce, the population is fragile, and the initial environment is unforgiving.

Now, acutely, much is at stake in the plight of a newly-displaced Afghan population. The refugee camps needed on the Pakistani, Iranian, Tajik, and Turkmen borders are an ideal opportunity to establish sustainable settlements, providing tools and techniques to support and educate the refugee population in ways that encourage their safe and productive return home as soon as possible. With their new knowledge of appropriate solutions, the refugees could return with a sense of hope and capability in stark contrast to the conditions of their departure. If we can design a sustainable and reproducible way to meet the human needs of both new arrivals and the local population, within the austere conditions of an ad-hoc refugee camp, the way we do it should also help billions of other people trying to create sustainable settlements where they already live.

To be blunt, most stopgap measures used by relief agencies during an emergency response don't incorporate a future, though they certainly may save those closest to the brink. Most of the resources expended by relief agencies to establish new camps usually vanish and take local resources with them with more loss to follow, if there is no effort to design a sustainable community within the morass. Given the stakes, we should be working closely now with current experts in disaster relief to incorporate whole-systems design concepts from the very beginning.

With a successful model of both agency cooperation and sustainable settlement in the real world, host nations may be less reluctant to offer refuge, and the pain suffered by all participants could be reduced. Improving resource use and outcomes would also ease the ongoing burden and expense on the countries and agencies taking responsibility for the displaced.

To our knowledge, no one has tried to implement such a comprehensive design within refugee camps forming in a crisis setting. The relief agencies have done extremely well in relieving urgent needs in the face of dwindling donor support, but their time and resources are limited. We can, I think, bring to those agencies, and to the donor governments, some hope for a system that will become self-sustaining, providing the tools for creative growth needed by any community. We can help them with solar-powered water provisioning and purification, novel and nutritious food crops, power production, cooking fuel, disease surveillance and response, effective sanitation from biological systems, educational models that work in remote environments, employment within the camps, better food production techniques, non-violent communication skills, and longer-term job opportunities and business development largely independent of infrastructure.

Critically, many of the solutions, by design, use the people in the camp and the environment that surrounds them, decreasing their sense of helplessness, frustration, and despair.

The attacks in the US were an agonizing blow, but we have arisen stronger and more serious and more thoughtful. Pushed by the images of waste and loss, we should turn our energy toward the development of a more just, equitable and sustainable society in a corner of the world that badly needs that opportunity. Martin Luther King said "If you want peace, work for justice;" there are few more stark examples of unjust inequality than the need for a refugee camp. Afghan refugees were told that America wanted to ruin them. A camp designed, built, and explained as a sustainable system from the ground up could begin their broader world-education in a powerful way. If propagated, the ripples would benefit a large pool of the dispossessed throughout the world.

The key is information. We need to know what the refugees know, and what the host nation knows, and what the relief organizations know, and then couple it all with what we know. We need to discover what an affected population is comfortable adopting, what the local geography is like, the weather, the ecology, the culture and the languages. We need to know what the requirements are for food, shelter, and health, and then design how best to meet those requirements. We then need to move that information through an intelligent circle that is constantly learning from the events of the days and weeks before.

The information technologies required only exist in part, but more can be developed, and some can be adapted, if the desire is there. It's a difficult task, but we're lucky; we have the urgent need, and we've never had the tools to address it effectively before. We should not lose the opportunity. The risk for global violence is too great.

By Cameron M. Burns
©2001 Rocky Mountain Institute

 

 
 
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