Submitted
Climate: Ecosystems + Housing

FarmerNet

Team Leader
Lucy Low
Solution Overview & Team Lead Details
Our Organization
FarmerNet
What is the name of your solution?
FarmerNet
Provide a one-line summary of your solution.
AI-Powered Carbon Credit Marketplace on the Blockchain
Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?
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By 2050, the world population will be 9.1 billion. According to the UN, farmers must increase food production by 70 percent compared to 2007 levels to meet the needs of the larger population. Climate change will reduce farm productivity by 17%. Climate change contributes to long-term environmental problems, such as groundwater depletion (70% of all fresh water) and soil degradation, which greatly affects food and agriculture production systems. With deforestation from agriculture leads to desertification, soil erosion, and fewer crops. Heat and water scarcity will have a direct impact on animal health and will also reduce the quality and supply of crops. Farmers are pressured to grow more with less water, fertilizers, and manual labour. Farmers who are the backbone of our society often live on the edge of poverty. Carbon emission information is siloed, non-verified and non-standardized. 

Climate change is one of the greatest challenges of our time and requires dramatic action from companies and governments on both mitigation and adaptation. Already, we have seen an increase in the frequency and intensity of fires, droughts, floods, storms, and other extreme events, and global food systems and ecosystems have come under threat. Compounding this problem, the most severe impacts of climate change are likely to be felt by the world’s most disadvantaged populations. Simultaneously, a zero-carbon world will require both new technologies and equitable approaches to deployment. As a result, it is critical that society take strong action within the next few decades to both reduce greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to the consequences of a changing climate with technology like computer vision precision agriculture. Challenge Overview The climate crisis requires dramatic action from companies and governments on both mitigation and adaptation. Simultaneously, a zero-carbon world will require both new technologies and equitable approaches to deployment. In response, MIT Solve will focus our ongoing Sustainability Challenges around innovation needs to enable equitable climate action at scale. For 2022, we are focusing on the following two areas: Protecting Ecosystem Carbon Natural ecosystems absorb and store huge amounts of carbon and provide many other benefits for both the biosphere and human communities. Stabilizing current carbon-rich ecosystems, such as peatlands or mangrove forests, and driving long-term absorption and storage of natural carbon is critical to mitigating the climate crisis. The world emits 36 gigaton of fossil fuels in 2019 36,000,000,000 tons. This is nearly 3x higher than 50 years ago. Some of the world’s largest economies have made commitments of net-zero carbon pledges. Social economic impacts of climate impact includes fires, flooding, droughts, heat waves, and severe storms, the cost of adapting costal areas to rising sea levels, loss of the capacity to work due to heat, more wars to gain access to limited resources, fresh water will be in short supply in some areas, relocation of whole towns, decreasing productivity of harvests, and diseases will spread due to higher temperatures. Yet it disproportionally affects places like Africa and South Asia. Those who contribute the least GHG – being the most impacted with 65% of people in poverty depending on agriculture for income. 


Innovations continue to occur in the area of carbon capture and storage. In 2019, researchers developed a process to reduce CO2 to solid carbon at room temperature, a result that has previously only been possible at high temperatures. The solid state is suitable for indefinite storage as it reduces the risk of accidental leaks into the environment. According to the researchers, this process is expected to be scalable for use in industry. Direct air capture is similar to carbon capture and storage. Rather than separating CO2 in the process of generating power, Direct Air Capture’s only purpose is to remove CO2 from the atmosphere using absorbent chemicals. 

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The problem we chose is the intensification of climate change effects on small-scale farmers in the developing world. We know from research that climate change threatens food security through its direct effects on crop production, as well as changes in markets and food prices. The risk to the livelihood and food security of many more smallholder farmers is set to increase. FarmerNet is a safety net to empower farmers in developing countries. It measures crops and livestock producers that optimizes the agriculture supply chain by improving yields, efficiency, and profitability. The end goal is to lift people out of poverty. Our current food system is fragile and unsustainable failing farmers, and people everywhere. As developers, we need to step in and provide farmers with a climate-resilient solution. Achieving this environmental goal means increasing the availability of nutritious food, making food more affordable and reducing inequities in access to food where natural ecosystems absorb and store huge amounts of carbon and provide many other benefits for both the biosphere and human communities. If we cannot quickly rid ourselves of dependence on fossil fuels, removing carbon from the atmosphere becomes a logical and critical innovative challenge. 

The goal is to reduce environmental impacts and carbon footprint, and increase progress towards global and corporate carbon emission goals solving sustainability challenges:

  • Leverage digital technology artificial intelligence innovations with the potential applied in agriculture
  • Show potential to improve farmer incomes, productivity, and climate change resilience
  • Address barriers to scaled adoption of digital artificial intelligence services, such as access, affordability and language and digital literacy
  • Have the potential to be bundled with multiple farmer-facing services into an integrated solution enabled by robust digital and data technology platforms and services
  • Provide fit-for-purpose solutions using human-centered design for farming enterprises
  • Show potential to be scaled using a sustainable business model, affordable, and able to provide positive return on investment at a smallholder farm level through successful pilots, scaling partners, or higher volume production driving down prices

Carbon emission information is siloed, non-verified and non-standardized. The goal is to reduce environmental impacts and carbon footprint and increase progress towards global and corporate carbon emission goals. Fortune Global firms spend around $20 billion a year on CSR activities, more than 90% of the 250 largest companies in the world now producing an annual CSR report with North America has the highest regional sustainability reporting rate. Third-party assurance of sustainability information in corporate reporting is now a majority business practice worldwide with GRI remains the dominant global standard for sustainability reporting.

If no action is taken to combat climate change, the considerable physical damages would imply a lower path of economic growth. In terms of which investment asset class markets will be more at risk. FarmerNet believes tech and health care are likely to benefit the most from the green transition, whereas energy and utilities may lag. At the broad asset class level, the appeal of developed market equities brightens at the expense of high yield credit and emerging debt due to the higher concentration of carbon intensive sectors that comprise the benchmark indices for the latter. A green transition to a low-carbon economy, consistent with the Paris Agreement goals, will deliver an improved outlook for growth and risk assets relative to doing nothing. Such an outlook rejects the commonly held notion that tackling climate change has to come at a net cost to society.


Current problems/mistakes with cleantech solutions:

  • Carbon capture initiatives will lower the incentive to reduce fossil fuels, and slow our transition to alternative fuels.
  • Carbon capture is inherently too expensive to be practical.
  • There are few opportunities to innovate since the science of carbon capture is so straightforward.
  • There is no business model to sustain carbon capture as a viable for-profit business.
  • Carbon storage may be dangerous/hazardous to the environment 


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Climate change – Turning Investment Risk into Opportunity

The primary users of the FarmerNet’s marketplace are those who benefit from quality data. The application is designed for industrial-scale use in order to create a global supply chain of data for AI consumption. The main actors are data providers, data consumers, data marketplaces, service providers and network keepers. Increasing demand for cryptocurrencies and accelerating adoption of blockchain-based solutions have highlighted an important issue: the technology's growing energy consumption and its impact on our climate.

1. Consumers

Socially and environmentally responsible companies create positive brand recognition, increase customer loyalty, and attract employees. According to millennial consumer trends, 90% of millennials would switch brands to one associated with a good case. They are prepared to make personal sacrifices to make an impact on issues they care about. Changing consumer trends means that millennials are willing to pay more for a product, sharing products rather than buying, or taking a pay cut to work for a responsible company. These elements among the keys to achieving increased profitability and long-term financial success.  By making blockchain technology more environmentally responsible, the industry has an opportunity to grow its user base. 

 

2. Corporate

From Fortune 250 largest companies, the underlying trend for third-party assurance of sustainability data is 71 percent (KPMG Survey of Sustainability Reporting 2020). They are listed on regulated markets requires carbon accounting and audits (assurance) of reported information which introduces more detailed reporting requirements, and a requirement to report according to mandatory government sustainability reporting standards. Companies like PwC have set aside $1 billion further automate parts of its environmental auditing process planning to hire 100,000 employees over 5 years focused on ESGs. Our conviction is that businesses perform better when they are deliberate about their role in society and act in the interests of their employees, customers, shareholders, and communities. As ESG grows we believe our software service and support business will add to the enterprise value as well as help drive adoption of Chia globally. We believe that large institutions, corporations and other entities will be able to reap the efficiencies and benefits of using a digital blockchain currency like Chia.

3. Investors

There is an increasing demand in MRV (Measurement, Reporting, and Verification) tools by people, businesses, and government to meet their ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) and SDG (Sustainability Development Goals). Research from investment fund Morningstar states ESG funds captured $51.1 billion of net new money from investors in 2020, a record and more than double the prior year. The number of sustainable funds available to U.S. investors grew to almost 400 last year with a 30% increase from 2019 and 4x increase over the past decade meeting Paris Agreement and SDG13 (Climate Action) goals for 2050.


We believe in empowering individuals and communities to create a Distributed Carbon Market Exchange that is low-cost, environmentally friendly, and owned by the people of the world. The financial future will be green money that will create a better world for future generations.


What is your solution?

Protecting Ecosystem Carbon by providing rewards for land-based carbon sequestration addressing climate crisis with regenerative agriculture to reverse soil degradation by preventing erosion, absorbing moisture, feeding biodiverse microbes, and increasing soil carbon levels. Blockchain marketplace for farmers to earn revenue when land-based carbon reductions get traded as carbon emission credits. Buyers can claim proof and immutability with non fungible tokens for claims of carbon reductions, sustainability, and renewable energy.Non fungible tokens: Dynamic and changes based on real world data metrics land-based carbon emission NFT on the Rinkeby Chain. Carbon monitoring is a key tool for tracking progress, but current approaches are either hard to verify or expensive to scale–particularly underwater or in soils. 


FarmerNet is an agricultural technology organization on a mission to empower farmers to sustainably feed the next billion people:

1.     Provide a safety net for small-scale farmers to be more autonomous.

2.     Scale incentives for higher resiliency against climate change.

3.     Improve agricultural supply chains to reduce food loss and make producer-market connections.



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High Level Solution: 

Reduces the average soil carbon verification cost from $400k/project to less than $400 with 18% greater profitability for farmers 

  • Changing the ways of old by disrupting the entire framework of how we manage our carbon emission information for sustainability challenges
  • Enables stakeholders to track, trace, match and manage their clean energy footprint while simplifying data-driven attestation of sustainability goals and mandates.
  • Proof and immutability for the real world impact of carbon emission generation and consumption - allows companies to stand behind their claims of carbon reductions, sustainability, and renewable energy to prevent greenwashing using the immutable ledger to track environmental assets and liabilities.
  • Farmernet’s smart contract’s logic and data trigger are viewable on the blockchain by all stakeholders, leading to transparency and independent verification of all outcomes.
  • Tamperproof execution and data delivery to carbon emission, resulting in producers and consumers being able to trust that they will get the land based on accurate data metrics.
  • Leverage digital technology artificial intelligence innovations with the potential applied in agriculture
  • Show potential to improve farmer incomes, productivity, and climate change resilience
  • Address barriers to scaled adoption of digital artificial intelligence services, such as access, affordability and language and digital literacy
  • Have the potential to be bundled with multiple farmer-facing services into an integrated solution enabled by robust digital and data technology platforms and services
  •  Equitable climate action at scale providing fit-for-purpose solutions using human-centered design for farming enterprises
  • Show potential to be scaled using a sustainable business model, affordable, and able to provide positive return on investment at a smallholder farm level through successful pilots, scaling partners, or higher volume production driving down prices

Low Level Solution

In the digital world, climate accounting involves all processes of recording climate-relevant information/data; from the physical state of the planet to the list of all climate actors, their broad set of climate actions and agreements in respect to the shared account of the climate challenge. Interoperability is important for climate action as stakeholders are implementing a policy, providing an incentive or providing information.

 

Standards can help making difficult comparisons using shared protocols and MRV tools for a truly globally integrated climate accounting system. We must work together to create a trustworthy decentralized climate accounting system. Digital technology tools that seamlessly integrate all elements in a transparent and participatory climate accounting system cannot be developed in a silo.

·      Can we trust the data that the company has provided?  Claims that a report has been prepared in accordance with the GRI Standards with principles for defining report quality addressing accuracy, comparability, and reliability?

·      Can we trust judgement calls, made by either the company or a certifying entity, about which activities are not relevant and thus do not require data and auditing? How to document emissions factors used in an immutable ledger?

·      How do we know if the company is in fact working on its emissions reduction plan? Giving the auditors a digital identity by publish a hash value or certain metadata on public blockchain?

·      Can consumers and investors trust that the certifying entity is objective and standardized with a pricing distribution? How do consumers know that a "green product" is really better for the climate and that the offset buyers know that the offsets work? How do investors know that portfolio companies are achieving their climate goals? How do lenders know that green bonds and transition bonds are driving positive climate action? 

·      Can we trust the climate pledges made regularly by companies large and small? Are our cities really achieving their emissions targets? How secure is the data without cryptographic signing of any document provided or storing hash values of documents to blockchains?


Technology: Blockchain Carbon Credits

Distributed ledger technology solutions have the potential to provide trusted record-keeping processes, data consensus and rules automation crucially needed components in order to align actors, accelerate mitigation and adaptation action, and mobilize the trillions of dollars of climate finance required annually. Blockchain technologies are by design made for solving climate challenge issues:

Buyers question the validity of the offsets as consumers are concerned about greenwashing FarmerNet builds trust with scalable technology: Higher quality of data due to standardized non-financial reporting processes and internal controlling systems. More transparency: In response to established reporting standards, and future rules and regulations. Addressing risk of double counting carbon credits, where the same project is listed on different registries and the offsets are sold several times.  The ledger audits a certain amount of block confirmations to prove color coins were sent validly and not double counted where the carbon credits were received. Costly, time-consuming, paper-based processes could be streamlined. Save money CSR costs money to implement. Costs fall disproportionally on small businesses and lower risks in simplifing the reporting with FarmerNet’s MRV tool. Better access to finance when environmental, social, and governance considerations are incorporated into external reporting.

Create trust in CO2 emissions accounts as they are transacted across industrial and national boundaries, where no trusted central repository exists by maintaining a audit trail of immutable records, so that emissions calculations could be verified later without relying on one central repository. Audits could be simplified by granting access to standard-monitoring and regulation-enforcing entities. Compliance with voluntary standards could also be made more visible, accessible, and transparent for monitoring companies and those handing out certifications and consumers. Lack of transparency in pricing standards - Increase the interoperability/integration of CSR reports of different companies where we have A lot of different registries makes it difficult for buyers to track and a very heterogeneous market with different project types (forestry, renewables, etc.) and different regions. Different offsets trade vastly differently, from under $1 to nearly $50 per ton, even though they’re all denominated in tons of CO2 emissions. One $FNET token will be exchangeable for one Carbon Removal Certificate (CRC). With FarmerNet, suppliers can sell their certificates into the marketplace and get paid in tokens as soon as a buyer purchases their credits on a first-in, first-out (FIFO) basis.

1.     Carbon credit is listed for sale in the FarmerNet market queue in a first-in, first-out basis where once at the front of the queue, the next buyer purchases the carbon credit by sending  $FNET tokens to the smart contract acting as market operator for the CRC.

2.     Owner immediately changes to the sending address tokens causing the smart contract record status to become retired and no longer allows a change of ownership which is recorded on the immutable ledger.


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  • ERC721 tokens
  • Metadata provides descriptive information for a tokenId that is stored off-chain
    • This will create a land NFT with 4 attributes:
    • uint256 longitude coordinate;
    • uint256 latitude coordinate;
    • uint256 carbon sequestered per land;
    • string name of land NFT;
  • Each tokenId has a specific tokenURI that defines this API call, which returns a JSON object that looks something like this
  • Assign tokenIds to their tokenURI, NFT marketplaces will be able to display your token -Image is using a URL that points to IPFS InterPlanetary File System -Every time the image is updated, the on-chain hash/tokenURI also has to change, meaning that we can have a record of the history of the metadata
  • OpenSea NFT marketplace

Carbon Credit Standard Marketplace

 

Carbon credit standards reduce data silos and can be used for personal climate footprinting, product/service footprinting, entity accounting, regional accounting, and policy impact assessments. Climate change is a global problem and we are all planetary stakeholders who need to define shared protocols, standards, and platform tools for a globally integrated climate accounting system to be operationalized. Standards help people to understand each other. Standards also help people to made decisions with confidence and cooperate towards joint goals. Climate change necessitates urgent action at a global scale allowing greater interoperability between these standards.

 

What is standardised in climate mitigation standards? First, there are technical standards like those of the W3C. How are carbon credit emissions calculated? We have Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) which is the standard analytical method for calculating the carbon emissions of a product through its carbon lifecycle supply chain. There is also Product Category Rules (PCR) with rules define how life cycle analysis should be performed based on the type of product and can be linked to other MRV tools like LCA, PCR, and EPD. We can call these calculation methodologies or data processing standards. Application of such standards produce indicators, metrics and indices with a well-defined meaning where such outputs can be tokenised. Second, there are accounting standards, including: Greenhouse Gas Protocol the standards used for compliance in different carbon sequestration jurisdictions, voluntary standards like the Verra's Verified Carbon Standard (VCS), the Gold Standard, American Carbon Registry (ACR), or Climate Action Reserve (CAR). Lastly, we have environmental performance standards like those of the IFC to accelerate Paris Accord climate goals and certifications based on accounting standards, such as the Greenhouse Gas Protocol. Accelerates the need for standardisation in the context of global climate action and reduced climate data silos. Application of these standards yield standards compliant reports. The contents of such report can also be tokenised in a Carbon Credit and Offset Ecosystem

  1. Developers invests in projects, such as renewable energy or forestry management
  2. Claims about the emissions reduction of the project is calculated under a methodology published by a verification body.  These methodologies are based on the CDM methodologies.
  3. The project is registered with a verification and validation body
  4. A Validation and Verification Bureau (VVB) validates the project. See for example Gold Standard’s approve auditors list
  5. VVB reviews the data and independently verifies aspects of the project, to certify the amount of emissions reduced.
  6. The verified emissions reductions are sold as carbon offsets, through brokers or directly to buyers. Major corporations such as Microsoft, Stripe, or CORSIA - eligibility criteria for airlines to purchase credits, ICROA, or IETA
  7. Pricing References for standardization with CME Global Emissions Offsets, futures  EcoSecurities Price Index , Gold Standard Marketplace or Forest Trends EcoSystem Marketplace 


Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?
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No Farms. No Food. No Future. In developing countries, 65% of working adults depend on agriculture for their income. FarmerNet can help end poverty, raise incomes, and improve food security building a better world for everyone.

The problem we chose is the intensification of climate change effects on small-scale farmers in the developing world. We know from research that climate change threatens food security through its direct effects on crop production, as well as changes in markets and food prices. The risk to the livelihood and food security of many more smallholder farmers is set to increase. FarmerNet is a safety net to empower farmers in developing countries. It measures crops and livestock producers that optimizes the agriculture supply chain by improving yields, efficiency, and profitability. The end goal is to lift people out of poverty.

Farmers are pressured to grow more with less water, fertilizers, and manual labour. Farmers who are the backbone of our society often live on the edge of poverty. Social implications includes a higher suicide rate among farmers which is 3.5 times higher than the general population. Our current food system is fragile and unsustainable failing farmers, and people everywhere. As developers, we need to step in and provide farmers with a climate-resilient solution. Achieving this environmental goal means increasing the availability of nutritious food, making food more affordable and reducing inequities in access to food. Farmers who are the backbone of our society often live on the edge of poverty. The average U.S. poultry grower takes out nearly $700,000 in loans, using their home and land as collateral for insurance, yet average net income is around $13,140. Social implications includes a higher suicide rate among US farmers which is 3.5 times higher than the general population. For both stabilization and measurement, enabling many separate communities to participate on their terms is critical. Our current food system is fragile and unsustainable failing farmers, and people everywhere. As developers, we need to step in and provide farmers with a climate-resilient solution. Achieving this environmental goal means increasing the availability of nutritious food, making food more affordable and reducing inequities in access to food. 


Size of our target customer sub-segment: 1. Age,onlinedigitalservices,andnetworking 2. Whatdifficultiesfarmersfindintheirwork

Market Size

Entrepreneurs have a tendency to pick the largest market segment. However, FarmerNet wants to pick a market that is large enough to generate some cash, and small enough so FarmerNet can achieve a meaningful market share. The market segment FarmerNet are aiming for shouldn’t be smaller than 20M and shouldn’t be bigger than 200M. Our market share should not be less than 20%.

570 million small-scale farms

  • 90% of farmers

  • 75% of the world’s agricultural land

  • Only 56% of value production

    TAM/SAM/SOM

    Total Available Market (TAM): $1,500M, 125,000 Farms, Regional Market

    Serviceable Available Market (SAM): $450M, 37,500 Farms, Crops and Livestock

    Serviceable Obtainable Market (SOM) : ($20M) $50M, 4160 Farms, Commercial Cash Crops Beachhead Market

    Beachhead Market

    TGDIYCMN: Total Global Domination In Our Chosen Market Niche

    A market segment is defined by four aspects: a. customers buying similar products; b. with similar sales cycles; c. with similar expectations of providing value in similar ways d. there is word of mouth between customers in the market

    These four elements guarantee a scalable sales process for our small start-up team. Customers communicate with each other. They read  trade journals, meet at conferences, communicate via LinkedIn

    groups, and have the occasional coffee with one another. Customers can serve as compelling and high-value references for each other in that market building a “net” for FarmerNet. 


5 Main Market Segmentation

An overview of possible addressable markets grouped into market segments. (potential buyers and not potential applications of our product ) 

1. RegenerativeFarms 

2. Geography74%China/India 

3. DairyFarms$ 

4. YoungFarmersEarlyAdopters 

5. Fortune500companies 

Customer Archetype: Customer Archetype is a detailed description of one of your interviewees, or it may be a composite of several people you have interviewed. In our example, we are using a 25 year white male small size farm farmer who’s father passed his farm down to him and who depends on farming for his income. He is not alone as worldwide, there are over 570 million farms. 90% are run by an individual or a family and rely primarily on family labour. He knows that climate change will reduce farm productivity by 17%. Climate change contributes to long-term environmental problems, such as groundwater depletion and soil degradation, which greatly affects food and agriculture production systems. Currently, agriculture accounts for 70 percent of all freshwater withdrawals globally and an even higher share of “consumptive water use” due to the evapotranspiration of crops. With deforestation from agriculture leads to desertification, soil erosion, and fewer crops. Heat and water scarcity will have a direct impact on animal health and will also reduce the quality and supply of crops. He is worried about environmental concerns on affecting his farm yields, profitability, and efficiency. He is pressured to grow more with less water, fertilizers, and manual labour. As a farmer, he is the backbone of our society but he is struggling financially and living on the edge of poverty. As a U.S. poultry grower takes out nearly $700,000 in loans, he has taken out a loan on his home and land as collateral for insurance, yet his average net income is around $13,140. He has mental health issues like depression and anxiety and is evident by the higher suicide rate among US farmers which is 3.5 times higher than the general population. Our current food system is fragile and unsustainable failing farmers, and people everywhere. As developers, we need to step in and provide farmers with a climate-resilient solution. Achieving this environmental goal means increasing the availability of nutritious food, making food more affordable and reducing inequities in access to food.

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In Beachhead Market FarmerNet can demonstrate that we can deliver, while building a name for we which is currently a nobody in the agtech space. It should give us the opportunity to prove ourselves as a tech company by dominating that market. Because our customers are connected in some form, FarmerNet can build the reputation and credibility we need to enter other market segments. That’s why we want FarmerNet to aim for a market share of at least 20%. In a market of 20M that is a company with a revenue of 4M per year. If the case of a market segment of 200M, our 20% market share will give the company a revenue of 40M. That would truly be an amazing achievement. Once FarmerNet have grown to a 20% or higher market share in our Beachhead Market, FarmerNet are ready to go into the next market segment. 

Upstream: For start-ups, at least 90% of environmental footprint comes from their suppliers. This is what we expect with FarmerNet – where existing or anticpated suppliers will have some kind of environmental footprint. Suppliers 

• Supplier guidelines include performing a chemical feedstocks inventory and exploring chemical alternatives 

• Extended producer responsibility programs 

• Regulatory vs voluntary carbon markets 

• FarmerNet ask your suppliers for their energy/water/waste data. 

• Suppliers track (and report) their energy/water/waste data Supplier selection & values: 

•Labor practices 

Clean manufacturing capabilities 

•Shipping and distribution options 

Downstream: Logistics and distribution decisions have impacts on land, air, water, energy, biodiversity, etc FarmerNet will distribute products and products’ end of life.


Once FarmerNet has become an important niche player, with a good reputation, we can expand into other markets. As FarmerNet keep working on our market research in the coming months, we will keep iterating as we gain new input and insights. The technical plan to scale our solution from the beachhead market has been split into milestones following the software engineering development life cycle. This will ensure the software goes from research to development of a MVP. The help of NVIDIA This includes researching algorithms, customizations to the dashboard, implementing the low level code, linking to NVIDIA GPU CPU hardware, setting up a revenue payment system, cloud implementation, debugging the software, and ensuring the software is sustainable and maintainable. 


Climate change is one of the greatest challenges of our time, with widespread implications for society. Already, we have seen an increase in the frequency and intensity of fires, droughts, floods, storms, and other extreme events, and global food systems and ecosystems have come under threat. Compounding this problem, the most severe impacts of climate change are likely to be felt by the world’s most disadvantaged populations. As a result, it is critical that society take strong action within the next few decades to both reduce greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to the consequences of a changing climate with technology like computer vision precision agriculture. The world emits 36 gigaton of fossil fuels in 2019 36,000,000,000 tons. This is nearly 3x higher than 50 years ago. Some of the world’s largest economies have made commitments of net-zero carbon pledges. Social economic impacts of climate impact includes fires, flooding, droughts, heat waves, and severe storms, the cost of adapting costal areas to rising sea levels, loss of the capacity to work due to heat, more wars to gain access to limited resources, fresh water will be in short supply in some areas, relocation of whole towns, decreasing productivity of harvests, and diseases will spread due to higher temperatures. Yet it disproportionally affects places like Africa and South Asia. Those who contribute the least GHG – being the most impacted with 65% of people in poverty depending on agriculture for income. 


The first step in building any network that supports innovation should be the development of a "strategic intent" statement. This can be done in many ways, but in general, it focuses on defining the growth path of innovation, whether it is the following innovations or all of the following innovations: new areas, markets, channels, business models. Use strategic and technical goals to identify ideas that match your interests. From outside and outside, look for specific groups, individuals and organizations that focus on innovation and technology development in these fields. Establish early relationships with informal exchange events and forums. The focus of these early work can be just to share best practices in the group. As informal activities continue, it will become important for a more formal approach to manage the process more effectively and ensure that the network is focused on solving the problem statement in the original charter.  The problem we chose is the intensification of climate change effects on small-scale farmers in the developing world. We know from research that climate change threatens food security through its direct effects on crop production, as well as changes in markets and food prices. The risk to the livelihood and food security of many more smallholder farmers is set to increase. FarmerNet is a safety net to empower farmers in developing countries. It measures crops and livestock producers that optimizes the agriculture supply chain by improving yields, efficiency, and profitability. The end goal is to lift people out of poverty. Carbon monitoring is a key tool for tracking progress, but current approaches are either hard to verify or expensive to scale–particularly underwater or in soils. 

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Independent factors including populations who experience systematic, economic, or geographic barriers in terms of access to software and tech solutions for climate change. As the software scales through farmernet.org and it's network, it is important to make diversity, equity, and inclusion considerations with groups research design, implementation, and outcomes. This includes the following:

-       Launch funding programs that will increase the availability of financing and participation of under-represented actors in agribusiness, with particular focus on women and rural populations

-       Develop and manage a call review committee, made up of multi-disciplinary experts and with 50/50 ratio of men and women

-       Youth STEM outreach programs to encourage young people from underrepresented communities to be interested in artificial intelligence and support development of a young class of future farmers through training and financing

-       Strengthen farmer institutions, including cooperatives and unions

-       Sub-grant to successful research teams to become members of the network and implement their innovation research projects (ensuring equity and participation of different researchers in projects)

-       Promotion climate-resilient food chains among farmers

-       Scale up and replicate successful programs to raise access to quality nutrition and end hunger, including community-based nutrition programs like school meal programs; and advocacy for greater government allocation to nutrition interventions

-       Support increased production of nutrient-rich foods

-       Create safe spaces for minority groups         

-       Prioritize a DEI workforce which strives for equity, and respects, accepts and values difference by requiring all incoming employees to participate in DEI training session

-       Breaking down financial obstacles faced by low-income farmers by offering free software

-       Monitor surveys that include demographic information about users •

-       Scaling the software and how farming is different in different countries  due to social, political, or economic factors.

-       Support spiritual diversity by providing a multi-faith space

-       Mentor and teach historically underrepresented groups with inclusive lesson plans The project team also works with Indigenous education leaders to deliver proactive community-based outreach. There are barriers to entry for imaging software for Indigenous communities and we want to reduce the barriers.

-       Research how climate change will affect researching inequalities and/or underserved populations


How are you and your team well-positioned to deliver this solution?

Team is representative of technical, business, and agricultural experience allowing us to meaningfully be guided by a diverse array of input, ideas, and agendas when it comes to the design and implementation of FarmerNet’s cleantech solution. 

FarmerNet’s organizational company culture I aspire to create a better world. FarmerNet's competitive advantage includes highly scalable and modular technology, blockchain white papers, low cost installation/operations/maintenance, and being environmentally friendly.

• Make a difference (e.g.social impact)

• “Cleaning” a dirty industry

• Money-making cleantech potential

• Disrupt the agriculture industry

• Collaborative culture is the type of environment that would work well for the key types of people FarmerNet wants to hire - makes team feel supported and most productive

• Laying the groundwork for a successful culture

• Solidify collaborative culture as well as agile innovative process

• Create a dynamic process for learning and continued improvement

• Find and create benchmarks for accountability

• Collaboration with others to improve the process 


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•Suppliers: FarmerNet select suppliers that reflect core values

•Employees: FarmerNet attract and retain the talent FarmerNet need

•Customers: Communicating motivational values to stakeholders to help position brand and product/service

•Investors: Thoughtful positioning help FarmerNet appeal to potential funders

• FarmerNet engage them in a way that helps build your business. 


Advisors Example of SME we will reach out to:

Sarah Ebe, Environmental Grants Associate Patagonia • Lisa Myers, Environmental Grants Program O ffi cer • Lisa Pike Sheehy, Vice President of Environmental Activism • Alex Kremer, Tinshed Ventures • Elissa Foster, Senior Manager of Product Responsibility Patagonia • Steph Karba, Environmental Researcher, Product Responsibility Patagonia • Elena Egorova, Environmental Researcher, Product Responsibility Patagonia • Sarah Hayes, Director of Materials Development Patagonia • Birgit Cameron, Patagonia Provisions • Kai Hinson, Patagonia Provisions • Anna Meyer, Patagonia Provisions • Christie Biddle, Patagonia Provisions 

• Cara Chacon, Vice President of Social & Environmental Responsibility at Patagonia • Wendy Savage, Director of Social Responsibility & Tracing at Patagonia • Rachel Kepnes, Manager of Supply Chain Social Responsibility, Farms & Special Programs Patagonia

• Alison Huyett, Manager of Environmental Campaigns and Advocacy Patagonia • Avi Garbow, Environmental Advocate, Patagonia 


Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Provide scalable, high-quality monitoring of carbon stocks in soil, peat, and marine environments, including at depth.
Where our solution team is headquartered or located:
Toronto, ON, Canada
Our solution's stage of development:
  • Growth
How many people does your solution currently serve?
5
Why are you applying to Solve?

MIT Solve is a marketplace for social impact innovation with a mission to drive innovation to solve world challenges which matches FarmerNet's goals.

In which of the following areas do you most need partners or support?
  • Business model (e.g. product-market fit, strategy & development)
Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
Lucy Low
More About Your Solution
Your Team
Your Business Model & Funding
Solution Team:
Lucy Low
Lucy Low