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For immediate release
Paramaribo, Suriname, 10 October 2014
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MEDIA RELEASE
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Young Jamaican team wins AgriHack Talent Caribbean
contest at 13th Caribbean Week of Agriculture
And the winner is… Node420, from Jamaica. The team’s ICT application,
also called Node420, offers real-time weather analysis and automatic yield
forecasts for farmers. The AgriHack Talent Caribbean contest, organised by
CTA and partners, came to a close during the 13th Caribbean Week of
Agriculture, held this week in Paramaribo, Suriname. The winning teams
designed agricultural apps that can forecast crop yields, improve pest
management and put farmers in touch with market outlets.
Second prize went to CropGuard, from Barbados, an app that seeks to enhance
food security by helping farmers to protect their crops through pest diagnosis,
monitoring and control. Third prize was awarded to UNICODE, from Suriname,
with an application called Agri-Kari, designed to help farmers manage their land
and sell their products.
More than 150 young ICT specialists took part in the AgriHack Talent
Caribbean contest run by the Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural
Cooperation (CTA) and partners. The regional championship sought to develop
innovative ICT applications that address key Caribbean agricultural challenges
and drive agri-enterprise among young people. The ICT applications created by
the first three prize-winners will now be developed and incubated, to promote
their successful rollout in the region.
The eight regional finalists, drawn from the results of national contests in six
Caribbean countries – Barbados, Dominica, Jamaica, St. Kitts and Nevis,
Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago – spent the first four days of the 13th Caribbean
Week of Agriculture (CWA) fine-tuning their applications before the winners
were announced on Thursday October 9. The CWA has been held this week in in
Paramaribo, Suriname and ends today (October 10).
All the finalists were given the opportunity to pitch their products to participants
attending the CWA, before the regional winners were selected by an
international jury.
The contest was based on the idea of a hackathon – a gathering that brings
together computer programmers for a short period of time to develop an ICT
application or platform that offers solutions for a specific challenge.
Partners in the AgriHack Talent Caribbean contest included the Caribbean
Farmers’ Network (CaFAN), the Caribbean Agricultural Research and
Development Institute (CARDI), the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on
Agriculture (IICA), Connectimass, Suriname telecom operator Telesur, the Open
Caribbean Institute and eight ICT innovation hubs.
“ICTs can strongly enhance family farming and the AgriHack Talent Caribbean
initiative is supporting ICT innovations and entrepreneurship by youth in the
Caribbean,” said CTA Director Michael Hailu. “There is an undisputed need to
engage youth in agriculture. Encouraging young ICT innovators to develop
services for agriculture contributes to this. It also contributes to improving the
image of agriculture and offers opportunities to modernise the sector.”
A key ingredient in the mix has involved bringing together a broad range of
expertise from the ICT, agriculture and business sectors, to help take products to
the next level. In the run up to the regional finals, the ICT team members
received technical support to develop their applications, as well as advice on
how to draw up a business model, how to approach investors and how to pitch
their idea to the judges and audience.
During the next six months, incubation and mentoring will be offered to the
winning teams, who will be given technical and business support, including
contact with potential investors and opportunities to promote their applications.
“This contest is about helping young people to sustain agriculture, developing
exciting ICT applications that target key agricultural challenges in the
Caribbean,” said Ken Lohento, ICT Programme Coordinator for CTA. “The
agricultural sector offers substantial opportunities for young people, including
those who can offer ICT services to support it. We hope that the AgriHack
championship will also result in young people having more livelihood
opportunities.”
Winning Jamaican team Node420 said its product sought to provide solutions for
some of the most challenging difficulties faced by farmers. “Collecting the
information they need can be a real problem for farmers, so we decided to design
some hardware that could gather all sorts of data to help them with their
cultivation, including planting, sowing and harvesting,” said Jason Scott, who was
at the prize-giving with colleague Orane Edwards to collect first prize on behalf
of the Node420 team from Jamaica.
The other two team members were: Simantha Hong and Jonathon Cooper. The
young ICT developers, who won €5,000 euros plus six months of incubation, are
supported by Jamaican ICT Hub SlashRoots, which won €3,000.
“Think of it as a very compact weather station,” said Scott. “It helps farmers to
increase their yields, and to forecast how much they might be able to produce.”
[Ends]
For more information, please contact:
Adelle Roopchand
Media Relations
adelleroopchand@gmail.com
Stéphane Gambier
Senior Programme Coordinator for Communications (CTA)
gambier@cta.int
And visit:
http://hackathon.ict4ag.org
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