Today, I am proud to announce that the sixth-annual Cisco Global Problem Solver Challenge is now accepting applications.
One of Cisco’s signature Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programs, the Challenge will award $1 million in cash prizes to early-stage tech entrepreneurs who are addressing some of our toughest social and environmental problems.
We launched the Cisco Global Problem Solver Challenge in 2016 to jumpstart innovative ideas that benefit society, catalyze economic growth, and create jobs. Since then, we’ve awarded $2.25 million USD to 63 start-ups in 20 countries.
This year, in response to the growing urgency to reverse climate change, we are introducing five new prizes:
- $100,000 USD Climate Impact and Regeneration Prize
- $50,000 USD Climate Impact and Regeneration Prize Runners-Up (x4)
These prizes will go to teams with solutions that can reduce or remove greenhouse gas (GHG) from the environment or regenerate depleted ecosystems.
The concept of “regenerative sustainability” is becoming increasingly important to stopping the progression of climate change. These solutions focus on improving social and ecological systems, which will in turn help to restore the planet. Composting is one familiar example of regeneration, because the organic materials used in compost pull carbon out of the atmosphere, versus emitting methane if they were simply thrown away into a landfill.
Playing a role in addressing climate change is a priority for Cisco, reflected in our recent commitment to reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2040. We are excited about this opportunity to recognize five teams that share this commitment and are doing the important work of reducing emissions and regenerating ecosystems.
In addition to the five Climate Impact and Regeneration prizes, the following prizes will round out our $1M USD prize pool:
- $250,000 USD Grand Prize
- $75,000 USD Regional First Runners-Up (x3)
- $50,000 USD Second Runners-Up (x3)
- $50,000 USD Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) Start-Up Prize
- $10,000 USD People’s Choice Award
- $15,000 USD Cisco Employees’ Choice Award
We will accept applications until 5 p.m. PT on Friday, February 11, 2022 and winners will be announced in August 2022.
The importance of prize challenges
Cash prizes provide a significant funding source that start-ups can use right away, where they need it most. They also give teams the opportunity to refine their business plans and hone their messaging. The Cisco Global Problem Solver Challenge, for example, offers free pitch coaching webinars and other resources to applicants.
In the past five years, we have seen many of our winners grow, scale, and make a significant impact. For example, Oorja won our Grand Prize in 2019 for its pay-as-you-go community solar-powered water pumps. Their solution gives smallholder farmers (who produce a third of the world’s food) access to year-round affordable irrigation without relying on expensive and polluting diesel fuel.
Oorja has been able to expand its services to include milling and cooling over the past two years and since winning the prize, they have also been recognized with other noteworthy awards such as the Keeling Curve Prize, which honors projects with the potential to reduce GHG emissions or promote carbon uptake.
“We applied for the Cisco Global Problem Solver Challenge to reach the level of impact that we wanted to have,” says Oorja co-founder Clementine Chambon. “We have used the prize funding to get more projects on the ground, to validate our technological offering, and [to] make sure that it was really important to the farmers.”
Other past winning solutions are making progress on a wide range of social and environmental issues – from eradicating malaria to improving child literacy to providing internet connectivity in rural communities and more.
Do you know about a start-up with a purpose that could benefit people, communities or the planet? Encourage them to apply to the Cisco Global Problem Solver Challenge 2022!
Learn more and apply.
Global Warming is a gradual increase in the overall temperature of the earth’s atmosphere generally attributed to the greenhouse effect caused by increased levels of carbon dioxide, chlorofluorocarbons, and other pollutants.. When a bird dies an untimely death, it’s always a sad event. But what’s the difference between a Robin killed by a chestnut falling on its head, and an Albatross killed by a fishing hook? For each bird individually, it doesn’t really make a difference. But for bird conservation, it changes everything. There are many causes:
Cause #1: Greenhouse Gases created by both human and natural events.
Cause #2: Changes in the Sun’s Intensity.
Cause #3: Human-based Industrial Activities.
To stop climate change, we need to stop the amount of greenhouse gases, like carbon dioxide, from increasing. For the past 150 years, burning fossil fuels and cutting down forests, which naturally pull carbon dioxide out of the air, has caused greenhouse gas levels to increase. There are two main ways to stop the amount of greenhouse gases from increasing: we can stop adding them to the air, and we can increase the Earth’s ability to pull them out of the air.
This is called climate mitigation. There is not one single way to mitigate climate change. Instead, we will have to piece together many different solutions to stop the climate from warming. Below are descriptions of the main methods that we can use.
Many of these solutions are already being implemented in places around the world. Some can be tackled by individuals, such as using less energy, riding a bike instead of driving, driving an electric car, and switching to renewable energy. Other actions to mitigate climate change involve communities, regions, or nations working together to make changes, such as switching power plants from burning coal or gas to renewable energy and growing public transit.
Cause #4: Human-based Agricultural Activities.
Cause #5: Deforestation by mostly human but also nature at work.
Like we stated above …
It has become quite clear, by both observation, and by scientific studies that ever-increasing rising temperatures are worsening many types of natural disasters, like storms, heat waves, floods, and droughts.
A warmer climate also creates an unstable atmosphere that can gather, retain, and shed more water, thus changing, for the more dramatic, weather patterns in such a way that rainy areas become rainier and the drier areas drier. The natural balance of the earth’s swing patterns is becoming wider and wider to the point now where many locations are nearly out of control.
Yes. Your saying really touched my heart samyug sir.
Very good saying.
Good for you brother.