NEWSBRIEF: Youth-Friendly Apps Visualise Carbon Footprint
WASHINGTON, Jul 02 (IPS) - Following what many regard as a disappointment at the recent Rio+20 Earth Summit, the World Bank and several groups have begun implementing new initiatives to “personalise” climate change, in hopes of revitalising the issue among the younger generation.
On Thursday, a World Bank-led programme here in Washington called “Apps for Climate” was held in a bid to bridge the gap between data and actionable results. Its organisers have fostered the creation of applications for mobile phones and the Internet, with the aim of allowing individuals to see their impact on the global environment.
“Rio+20 showed the vital need for sustainability,” Caroline Anstey, managing director at the World Bank, headquartered here in Washington, said at the event at the Newsuem. “It demonstrated that climate is too important to leave to negotiators.
“Data collected is just data. But data interpreted and visualised becomes something fundamentally more empowering.” According to a 2011 Yale University study that surveyed U.S. teenagers’ understanding of climate change on a letter grade scale (A-F), only 25 percent of teenagers received a grade of C or higher. Comparatively, 54 percent of the adolescents tested received a failing grade.
“Solving the problem of climate change requires behaviour change. People in all walks of life will need to make decisions based on the best available data,” Rachel Kyte, vice-president of Sustainable Development at the World Bank, said Thursday.
The Apps for Climate venture brings the systemic issues inherent in dealing with climate change to a younger population by using technology and social media to heighten awareness. On Thursday, the programme unveiled the results from a contest to help “crowdsource” the project, enlisting eco-activists and software and computer programmers. At stake was 55,000 dollars in prizes for applications that were successful in visualising relatively dry data.
Apps for Climate was originally announced by the World Bank last December at the United Nations COP-17 conference, an environmental symposium in South Africa. Of 14 finalists, the winner was a software application called Ecofacts, built by an Argentinean software programmer named Andres Martinez Quijano, who claimed a 15,000-dollar prize.
The 33-year-old Quijano, who studied computer science at university and has been programming for 17 years, said he believed his project could have an individualised impact. “It’s not about government, it’s about people,” he told IPS. Ecofacts, which Quijano built with open-application software, allows users to plug in data to visualise their own carbon footprint and effect on the environment, as well as that of their community.
The application is also open sourced, meaning that it allows users to customise its programming to their own specifications. “Anyone can access the source code for use in their own tools, or create improvements,” Quijano said. “I hope that Ecofacts will be useful to other developers and users.”
© Inter Press Service (2012) — All Rights Reserved. Original source: Inter Press Service
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