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Hasbro stars with Best Corporate Citizen award win

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Hasbro has been named the Best Corporate Citizen in the consumer items industry in the US, according to the 10 Best Corporate Citizens List by Industry for 2015, compiled by Corporate Responsibility Magazine. This is the third year in a row that Hasbro has ranked in the top 5.

The toy giant rose three spots this year, in recognition of its social values and performance in seven key areas: environment, climate change, employee relations, human rights, corporate governance, finance, and philanthropy.

“We are honoured to be recognized as the #1 consumer items company in recognition of our advancements in corporate social responsibility and sustainability,” said Brian Goldner, chairman, president and ceo.

“As we continue to reduce the environmental impact of our business, ensure the dignity of our workers, and ultimately pursue our mission of ‘Creating the World’s Best Play Experiences,’ we seek to maintain the highest possible levels of ethics and integrity for our consumers, customers, retailers, investors, and employees.”

The 10 Best Corporate Citizens List documents 303 data points of disclosure and performance measures from publicly available information in seven categories: environment, climate change, employee relations, human rights, corporate governance, finance, and philanthropy.

The full list can be found here.

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Google, LinkedIn Campus Layouts at Odds with Urban Living

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This story starts with a feel-good "bribe" of sorts -- $200 million in community benefits offered by Google to the city of Mountain View for exclusive access to a hot parcel of property on the waterfront, called North Bayshore. Unfortunately this incentive was sniffed at and ignored by the city council like a fiver passed to the Maitre’d at French Laundry.

The city elected to split the baby and offer Google and LinkedIn each about half the plot to fuel the rapid growth they desire. Google wasn't happy. “To have one building — it’s a significant blow,” David Radcliffe, vice president of real estate and workplace services for Google, told the council (as reported by Nathan Donato-Weinstein).“I’m not sure how I make any of this economically viable with one building.” LinkedIn, on the other hand, was thrilled with the decision: It got about 63 percent of the available allotment -- almost all it asked for.

When we started researching this story we had two key questions: Where is increased housing in this debate? And why are companies betting so much money on a scrap of land that used to be light industrial?

At the wrong time, a commute to the Googleplex can double due to traffic backup; a tent in Mountain View rents for $899 a month; and an entry-level engineer makes headlines for living happily in a moving truck at the edge of the property for months -- with Google's blessing. Everyone -- companies and citizens alike -- wants to be in this small parcel of land in the middle of Silicon Valley. Now that it is the valley, it makes sense. People want to be close to success, close to the action, and employees want to live near work. But this place hasn't historically been home to the most expensive real estate west of Manhattan. It used to just be a normal bedroom suburb. Until Google moved in.

The Googleplex has always been "college campusy," with features designed to amaze and delight employees and prospective employees. Bringing nature into the traditional office park was a very radical idea at the time.  But the focus on open space and natural grounds, mirrored by many other Bay Area tech companies, comes at an expense to urban-planning: density.

Explains Sharon Simonson, in a recent article: "For the urbanist, the Apple Inc. campus being built in Silicon Valley is a tragedy: a 176-acre tear in the community fabric delineated with security fencing and destined to last. For the architectural historian, it is that plus a reminder: The stark separations in land use that characterize most of modern America have had — and have — purposes of people separation too."

“[Apple, Google and Facebook] have created these closed enclaves where you have only badged access. It’s not exclusive in race or age or economics, or by intent to have a homogenous population, but it does create these prestigious enclaves where they control the access,” added Bryant Rice, a business and workplace-design consultant.

The campus layout creates a community of workers well-poised to release their creative juices for the corporate benefit. It does so at the expense of engaging with the community beyond the realm of payroll. This structure has a positive impact in terms of appealing to prospective employees, but it does limit companies' efforts to be true citizens of the communities they call home. However, some small efforts are under way to change the status quo.

For example, in Mountain View, Intuit has teamed up with neighbors from LinkedIn and Google to create the Mountain View Transportation Management Association (TMA), which, among other things, runs MVGo, a bus system to connect transportation hubs with tech campuses and downtown. It's open to the public.  Intuit's Chris Glennon, head of global real estate and workplace and current chair of TMA, explained the goals of this project: " The objective was to pool resources. All [tech companies] are bringing large groups from [regional transit system,] Caltrain and from all around the Bay Area. Transportation has to be regionalized, collaborative, and everyone has to get everyone to work. MVGo is one piece of the solution."

MVGo is a great step in the direction of opening up the campuses to the larger community and vice-versa, but in terms of urban planning, it is definitely playing catch-up. Which brings us to the latest, hotly contested, battle over North Bayshore.

North Bayshore Precise Plan

Mountain View's past city councils have not always supported increased housing. This issue came to a head in the fall of 2014, when a city council that had long put housing on the back burner was voted out of office -- and immediately, in the lame duck session that followed -- approved the North Bayshore Precise Plan, which included office space allotments for 20,000 new jobs and zero housing units.

These are big numbers given that the whole town's population is only 80,000 and Google's Mountain View staff is nearly 20,000. Oddly, two separate sources told me that the council wasn't opposed to new homes in Mountain View -- it was the pets they bring along with them and the damage they can do to wildlife in the undeveloped North Bayshore that were the real problem (I kid you not). The Audubon Society apparently has a strong foothold in the region. But I digress.

Shortly thereafter, the new city council had to vote on how to allocate the office allotments the lame duck council had approved. In the words of one of the new city councilmen, Ken Rosenberg, "We were fixing the plane while it was in the air."  

The council agreed to move forward with the scheduled allotment process despite a widely-held agreement that they would need to tackle housing at some point. The fated city council meeting, on Feb. 27, was tense with companies submitting plans for 7 million square feet of proposed building, and only 2.5 million square feet available to dole out in North Bayshore. The bids included very sweet offers including $200 million in community benefits from Google and $40 million from LinkedIn. "Google’s offering was amazing -- a complete redesign going back to natural habitats."

Rosenberg admitted this is an unusual situation with companies bending over backwards to placate the council: "Here they are battling with community benefit offers? What makes Mountain View so desirable and San Jose not? I don’t know. I haven’t figured it out." (TriplePundit reached out to Google and LinkedIn repeatedly to ask them about their interest in North Bayshore, but they did not respond.)

The devil is in the details

These companies weren't just competing for land. They were competing for "Bonus FAR," or Floor Area Ratio. Floor Area Ratio is an urban planning term for density: The higher the ratio, the denser the property. The FAR calculation allows developers freedom to build within the listed constraints. For example, a one-story building that covers an entire lot has the same FAR as a two-story building on a half-lot or a 10-story building on a tenth of a lot. The companies were competing for the right to build at the maximum allotted density for the district, in areas that were designated for lower density. Sounds great, right? As usual the devil is in the details.

The original North Bayshore Precise Plan's goal was, according to reporter Nathan Donato-Weinstein, to "improve the district’s ecosystem while allowing it to redevelop in a more modern, less office-park-y way and improve traffic (or at least mitigate it). Bonus FAR is a way to get private development to pay for some of this stuff." As we saw above, companies offered benefits in spades -- the ability to build at highest allowed density was a very appealing carrot being dangled. But the maximum density being offered -- again, by a lame-duck city council -- isn't actually very dense. 

The maximum density in the most dense section of the North Bay Precise Plan is 2.35. To put that number in perspective, the "High Intensity Office" zones in Mountain View, the densest commercial sections of the city, are zoned for "0.35 FAR; intensities above 0.35 FAR and up to 1.0 FAR may be permitted with measures for highly sustainable development specified within zoning ordinance or precise plan standards."

So, the North Bay Precise Plan allows for considerably greater density than other sections of Mountain View, especially for companies that offer the community benefits required to qualify for FAR of 2.35.

Suddenly, the demand for North Bayshore starts to make a little bit more sense. A new area of development opens up in a highly-desireable area, with room for denser development than has ever been offered before. Just like with residential stock, we see a classic supply-and-demand problem making this area especially valuable simply because the city doesn't have the space to accommodate all the companies that want to be there.

But is it dense enough? 

To answer that, we need to look at nearby cities.

The densest parts of San Francisco's commercial district have a FAR of 9. The densest sections of Manhattan have a FAR of 15. While not every city can or should aim to be Manhattan, there's obviously a happy medium possible.

Given the massive demand for housing and commercial space throughout Silicon Valley and all of the San Francisco Bay Area, the easiest way to satisfy it in the medium-term is to increase density through increased FAR allocations. At least that's the point of view of this armchair urban planner.

Ultimately the city council has to balance the needs of corporations, community members and infrastructure upkeep. Challengingly, what's good for one might hurt another given limited resources.

As Ken Rosenberg put it to me when discussing the challenges and opportunities facing his fine city: "It’s not always clear who you are trying to protect. Today we are enjoying economic vitality thanks to the previous council. Housing is today's challenge."

Image credits: Hillel Steinberg and Ignacio Munguía

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The Slow Loss of Foods We Love

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Editor's Note: This is an excerpt from "Bread, Wine, Chocolate: The Slow Loss of Foods We Love." Copyright 2015 by Simran Sethi. Reprinted with permission by HarperOne, a division of HarperCollinsPublishers.

By Simran Sethi

According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), 95 percent of the world’s calories now come from 30 species. Of 30,000 edible plant species, we cultivate about 150. And of the more than 30 birds and mammals we’ve domesticated for food, only 14 animals provide 90 percent of the food we get from livestock. The loss is staggering: Three-fourths of the world’s food comes from just 12 plants and five animal species.

While these numbers are rough estimates, they speak to a startling trend: We rely on fewer species and varieties for food and drink — a treacherous way to sustain what we need in order to survive. It’s dangerous for the same reason investment experts tell us to diversify our financial holdings: Putting all our eggs in one basket (either figuratively or literally) increases risk.

A reduction in agrobiodiversity places us in an increasingly vulnerable position, where warming temperatures or a single pest or disease could severely compromise what we grow, raise and eat. This was, in part, the cause of the Irish potato famine of the 1840s, when a third of the population was dependent on potatoes for food and an eighth of the population (about 1 million people) died when a disease known as potato blight ravaged the crop. It also contributed to Southern corn leaf blight, which wiped out 25 percent of American corn in 1970. And now it exacerbates the proliferation of wheat rust, known as the “polio of agriculture,” which is threatening 90 percent of African wheat.

It’s why plant geneticists are working around the clock to develop a new type of banana to replace the Cavendish, a variety that was introduced when the soil fungus Fusarium oxysporum, in the 1950s, wiped out the Gros Michel — the banana that used to be the one on store shelves. Those Cavendishes are now succumbing to Tropical race 4, a strain of the same fungus that decimated the Gros Michel.

The depletion of agrobiodiversity also includes what scientists call “genetic erosion.” Stefano Padulosi, senior scientist at the conservation research institute Bioversity International, explained to me — in another 20-minute interview that stretched to two hours — that the erosion manifests in different ways; some of the changes we see and some we don’t.

Stefano is a plant explorer known for his work on finding and saving neglected species of foods, ranging from pomegranate to arugula (the latter of which has earned him the nickname “Rocket Man”). I met him to better understand how the industrialization of seeds has transformed what ends up on our plates. What I learned was that industrialization is just one of many reasons for our limited food choices and changing diets.

“When an entire set of traits that make a certain variety or breed distinct from another is lost altogether,” Stefano said, “then we talk of the loss of that variety or breed. From a scientific point of view, variety is defined as a good combination of traits — like adaptation, taste or yield — but variety is also an expression of terroir, food culture and identity of people.” In other words, erosion is both genetic and cultural. These losses — and, in some places, slight gains — are due to a wide range of social and environmental reasons: from how we manage our land and financial markets to changes in where we live and what we eat.

Take, for example, the pistachio. When Stefano told me about the tiny nut, I finally understood how invisible a lot of this genetic and cultural erosion is — and how dramatically our diets have changed for reasons that don’t immediately connect back to food. The transformation of the pistachio industry was the unintended consequence of political strife, part of a cascade effect of trade restrictions that were meant to punish the captors of hostages. It had nothing to do with food or farmers.

Iran used to be the center of the world’s pistachio industry. Those little green nuts are actually seeds that Persians bred to split open, and they come from the same family of plants (Anacardiaceae) as mangoes, cashews and poison ivy. An integral part of Middle Eastern foods and celebrations, pistachios originated in Afghanistan and are one of Iran’s biggest exports after petroleum. Evidence of the nuts dating back to 6 B.C. has been found in both of these countries.

In 1929, botanist William E. Whitehouse traveled to Persia (now Iran) to collect pistachios in hopes of finding a variety that would be suitable for growing in America. Of the 20 pounds of nuts he gathered, only one variety flourished — in California’s San Joaquin Valley. To put this in perspective, a single nut weighs one-fortieth of one ounce. There are 320 ounces in 20 pounds. Out of everything he collected, one nut (seed) took root.

Food is bound to place. That small female nut was, at that time, the only one that could handle the climate and other environmental conditions of the United States. Whitehouse named the pistachio “Kerman,” after a famous carpet-making city near the birthplace of the nut. The tiny but mighty Kerman built a fledgling American pistachio industry that started to blossom in the 1960s and exploded decades later when, in 1980, President Jimmy Carter instituted a full trade embargo on Iran as a result of the 444-day hostage crisis. This included all agricultural products.

The ban devastated the Iranian pistachio market and empowered the United States to build its capacity for pistachio cultivation. Today, America is one of the world leaders in its production. The nearly 520 million pounds of pistachios that were grown domestically in 2014 all descended from that one Kerman, a variety that represents almost all of what is planted.

When Stefano and Luigi first told me about the reduction in agricultural biodiversity, I was incredulous. I had come to Rome to do research on seeds yet knew nothing of what they described. I had spent my life obsessed with food — and it was disappearing? Why hadn’t I heard about this? How was this possible?

The answer lies in the fact that many of these changes have happened slowly, over time. These losses in food are buried in the soil, tucked in beehives and hidden in cattle feedlots. They start with microorganisms invisible to the naked eye and echo through every link in our food chain — from soil to seed to pollinator, from plant to fish to animal — compromising the very ecosystems that make much of our food possible.

Click here to read more of "Bread, Wine, Chocolate: The Slow Loss of Foods We Love."

Image credit: Book cover, "Bread, Wine, Chocolate: The Slow Loss of Foods We Love"

Simran Sethi is a journalist and educator focused on food, sustainability and social change. Named the environmental “messenger” by Vanity Fair and a top 10 eco-hero of the planet by the U.K.’s Independent, Simran is the author of "Bread, Wine, Chocolate: The Slow Loss of Foods We Love," detailing the loss of biodiversity in food and agriculture. She is an associate at the University of Melbourne’s Sustainable Society Institute in Australia, a contributor for Orion Magazine and a recent visiting scholar at the Cocoa Research Centre in St. Augustine, Trinidad.

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How Platform Co-ops Can Beat Death Stars Like Uber to Create a Real Sharing Economy

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Editor's Note: This post originally appeared on Shareable

By Neal Gorenflo

We have an epic choice before us between platform co-ops and Death Star platforms, and the time to decide is now. It might be the most important economic decision we ever make, but most of us don't even know we have a choice.

And just what is a Death Star platform? Bill Johnson of StructureC3 referred to Uber and Airbnb as Death Star platforms in a recent chat. The label struck me as surprisingly apt: It reflects the raw ambition and focused power of these platforms, particularly Uber.

Uber’s big bet is global monopoly or bust. They’ve raised over $8 billion in venture capital, are on track to do over $10 billion in revenue this year, and have over 1 million drivers who are destroying the taxi industry in over 300 cities worldwide. They’ve done all this in just over five years. In fact, they reached a $51 billion valuation faster than Facebook, and plan to raise even more money. If they’re successful, they’ll become the most valuable startup in history. Airbnb is nearly as big and ambitious.

Platform co-ops are the alternative to Death Stars. As Lisa Gansky urged, these platforms share value with the people who make them valuable. Platform co-ops combine a cooperative business structure with an online platform to deliver a real-world service. What if Uber was owned and governed by its drivers? What if Airbnb was owned and governed by its hosts? That’s what an emerging movement is exploring for the entire sharing economy in an upcoming conference, Platform Cooperativism.

Shareable helped break the platform co-op story last year in a Nathan Schneider feature entitled, “Owning is the New Sharing” along with Trebor Scholz of the New School. These two thought leaders, also the conference organizers, identified a wave of platform co-ops forming, but we’re still in the early days.

What forces are driving the rise of Death Star platforms? And what’s at stake?


Uber signifies a new era in tech entrepreneurship. Its leaders express an explicit ideology of domination and limitless, global ambition. In fact, the global tech sector may be one of the most powerful stateless actors on the world stage today. And Death Star platforms are the tech sector’s avant garde.

Death Star platforms deftly exploit today’s growing economic insecurity and political vacuum. Their business model relies on precarious 1099 contractors. They mix technology, ideology, design, public relations, community organizing, and lobbying in a powerful new formulation that’s conquering cities and users around the world. They wrap themselves in the cloak of technological progress, free market inevitability, and even common good. As a result, cities allow them to break their laws with surprising frequency (Uber and Airbnb are simply illegal in most cities). Weak city governments either drink the Kool-Aid or struggle to contain them.

Millennials, who Pew Research described as detached from institutions and networked with friends, may be Death Star platform's most ardent users. 50% of millennials are political independents, a huge increase over prior generations. And while Millennials are detached from traditional institutions, they increasingly connect through Death Stars. Most use these services and implicitly accept their ideology as Death Stars mask the complexity of their services—and their politics—behind slickly designed apps. As a result, they along with many others unknowingly join a movement with totalitarian goals, all for the sake of often negligible income, savings and convenience. It’s scary but understandable. US Millennials suffer from the highest debt and lowest employment of any generation since the Great Depression. Not to mention that Death Stars often deliver a better service. I use them occasionally too.

Peter Thiel, founder of PayPal and leading sharing economy venture capitalist (VC), epitomized this ideology in a 2014 Wall Street Journal op-ed entitled, “Competition is for Losers," in which he encourages entrepreneurs to establish monopolies. Marc Andreessen, another leading sharing economy VC, wrote a similar op-ed in the same publication three years earlier titled, “Why Software is Eating the World,” in which he declared that there was no industry that couldn’t be disrupted by web technologies.

Behind the bombastic rhetoric are powerful real-world drivers. There are sound, if not self-serving, reasons for these VC’s bold calls to action. A technology gold rush dramatically larger than any before has only begun to unfold, and Thiel and his ilk have the most to gain. Jeremiah Owyang's Collaborative Economy Honeycomb infographic shows a large and growing universe of companies challenging dozens of major industries. Indeed, a recent IBM survey identified corporate executives' top fear as the Uberization of everything. Zipcar founder Robin Chase believes that everything that can become a platform, will become a platform. If so, then the sharing economy is just the tip of the spear. Silicon Valley could become the power center of the world, with its leaders joining the small-but-growing ranks of stateless, above-the-law plutocrats.

That’s a big claim, but not out of the realm of possibility.  There are some compelling leading indicators.

There's a surface explanation, but much more below that. Technology startups are building platforms to compete in nearly every brick and mortar service sector, and on a global basis. These platforms coordinate economic activity, but do not need to own the key physical assets or employ any of the end-service providers to profit. Uber owns no cars and employs no drivers, but has decimated the taxi business in San Francisco.

With incredibly low costs, global reach, scientifically developed user interfaces, and massive funding, Death Star platforms have a shot at duplicating this kind of success in every major city and service sector around the world. This has VCs salivating. The multitude of incumbents spread across many industries and geographies that play by the rules face steep odds against the lawlessness, network effects, and focused power of Death Stars.

At a deeper level, fundamental changes in the startup world are underway. Tech startups have to venture into the brick and mortar world as the low hanging fruit in information-intensive industries has been picked. Google, Facebook, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, and more have established their global monopolies. Tech must leave the nest, and its newest startups can because it’s significantly faster, cheaper, and less risky to start companies than before.

Shock-and-awe entrepreneurship


The assembly line creation of technology startups has been largely perfected. Silicon Valley’s VC-driven ecosystem has significantly reduced the considerable cost and risk of starting a venture. Funding is at record levels. There’s large corps of professionals who specialize in building startups. The technology is also cheap, meaning that startups need significantly less funding than before…unless they want to “disrupt” a brick and mortar industry.

These new dynamics explain Uber. Uber didn’t raise record amounts of venture capital to develop a new technology. Their technology is pedestrian. Most of it was developed by taxpayer-funded US government programs decades ago. They have combined old technology in a new way, but that’s relatively cheap to do. The $8 billion they’ve raised is to establish a global monopoly—in the real, physical world—in as short a time as possible. That takes a lot of marketing and lobbying muscle, and that’s really expensive.

What are indicators of the Death Star platform’s rising political power? Uber’s David Plouffe, formerly President Obama’s campaign manager, literally besieged Portland’s mayor, ultimately forcing him to create a favorable policy. Bloomberg’s “This is How Uber Takes Over a City” gives an eye opening account Uber's strong arm tactics. As of this writing this, Airbnb is running an $8.3 million campaign to defeat a San Francisco voter proposition (Prop F) designed to limit Airbnb’s negative impact on the city's skyrocketing housing costs. This lobbying activity is just the tip of the iceberg. Uber and Airbnb are using a good bit of their $10 billion+ collective war chest to hire a global army of lobbyists. In their language, they’ve put “boots on the ground” in hundreds of cities.

This is a big departure from the past. Tech investors used to avoid startups with significant regulatory risk because there were plenty of better, less risky opportunities. That’s not the case anymore. Now tech investors must and can take on the physical world.

Moreover, the huge investment raises and regulatory friction add up to much more than the sum of their parts. It’s like 1+1=10. The more money Death Star platforms raise, the more press and customers they get. The more they break the rules, the more press and customers the get, which enables them to raise even more money. Taxi drivers strike? Jackpot! And the cycle repeats. It’s a blitzkrieg. It’s shock and awe entrepreneurship. It’s the sound of a new hegemonic bloc coming to power.

Here’s what’s at stake. As Detroit shaped the world in the image of the car in the 20th century through an alienating and resource intensive system of highways and suburbs, so might Silicon Valley shape the world in the image of Death Star platforms in the 21st.

If you’re outraged by the power of tech giants now, just wait until tech dominates the majority of services you depend on to live. If you’re worried about how tech companies use your personal information now, just wait until they can track you 24/7 online and off. If you’re frustrated by how tech companies wield power over you as user now, just wait until you’re algorithmically fired by a Death Star because of one random bad rating. If you think incumbents like taxi companies suck, just wait until a win-at-all-cost tech titan like Uber’s Travis Kalanick rules the roost. If the diversity of your city’s locally-owned businesses is already suffering, just wait until sterile, centralizing Silicon Valley apps create an even more boring and unresilient monoculture. If you’re worried about housing costs, just wait until every city's housing market is like San Francisco’s, where one bedroom apartments rent for an average of $3,500 a month, the highest in the US. If you’re pissed by today’s unprecedented inequality, just wait until Death Star platforms destroy millions of jobs (Uber can’t wait for driverless cars, yippee!) while shifting more risk and cost onto providers.

Bottom line, what seems like a bad situation for the 99% today could become much, much worse tomorrow.

Platform co-ops, you’re our only hope


If platform co-ops are our only hope, then we’re in big trouble. The movement is in its infancy. There are several fundamental, interrelated legal, financial, and organizational challenges to the process of forming platform co-ops. New organizational forms need to be worked out, which will take years. Meanwhile, Death Star platforms will conquer more territory at a new, faster version of Internet time. Their global blitzkrieg will continue apace.

The aforementioned conference, Platform Cooperativism, hopes to address this through what organizers are calling a coming out party for the cooperative internet. Over 1,000 people have registered. Activists, entrepreneurs, lawyers, union officials, financiers, and academics are gathering to conceptualize the movement and begin to work out the key challenges of creating a democratic alternative to Death Star platforms. Its organizers hope to catalyze a movement of provider-owned sharing economy platforms, where the drivers or hosts wield the power, not VCs. The conference is a direct response to rise of Death Stars and their treatment of providers.

The central premise of platform cooperativism is that those who create the most value for the platforms— providers like drivers and hosts—should own and control the platforms. Current arrangements tend toward exploitation of providers as Death Stars shift the cost and risk of providing a service to providers. Unlike most incumbent service providers, such as taxi companies or hotels, Death Stars providers are 1099 contractors who do not enjoy the benefits and protections of employees. Death Stars rely on this arrangement to avoid the costs of managing a workforce and grow quickly. It’s true that Death Stars often provide superior service by leveraging technology, but they probably wouldn't be viable if they did not exploit this huge labor-related cost advantage.

The rise of the Rebel Alliance


Examples of platform co-ops abound. A wave is forming, but most examples are brave experiments at best. Shareable’s “Owning is the New Sharing,” lists many examples. There’s Loconomics, the cooperative version of task marketplace TaskRabbit. One of the most successful experiments is Enspiral Network, a New Zealand-based coworking community plus digital collective that allows hundreds of freelancers and social enterprises to work together for mutual benefit. Lazooz is the blockchain version of Uber where drivers mine digital currency by giving rides, while Swarm is the blockchain version of Kickstarter.

These examples represent three common developmental patterns for platform co-ops. First, there are legally-defined cooperative versions of sharing economy platforms like Loconomics. Second are hybrids like Enspiral Network, which aren’t legally cooperatives but operate on similar principles leveraging digital technology. Then there’s the most scalable option: blockchain-based platform co-ops like Lazooz. They leverage the same technology Bitcoin uses —a distributed digital ledger—to coordinate, govern, and compensate platform work on a democratic basis.

All of these paths are worth pursuing. As we do this, we must take care not to duplicate the organizational monoculture of Silicon Valley. However, it’s important to acknowledge that this movement will not produce viable competitors quickly. It took Silicon Valley decades to perfect the assembly line manufacture of startups. It shouldn’t take this movement that long, since Silicon Valley has paved much of the way. The movement can artfully adapt Silicon Valley startup methodology, business models, design, and its innovation ecosystem to launch a wave of platform co-ops.

While much of the path has been paved, plenty of work remains. Below are five things platform co-ops must do to beat Death Stars platforms. What else would you add to this list?

1. Incubate the templates


It will take focused, well-resourced, and consistent effort to work out the interrelated legal, financial, and organizational challenges of forming platform co-ops. Platform co-ops aren’t an incremental step up from typical startups, they’re a transformational leap. The path is currently uncertain, expensive, and time consuming. For instance, Loconomics has been working on their structure for going on two years, and aren’t even in beta yet. A better way is needed. Platform co-ops need to face this challenge together with long-term support of a stable anchor institution, like a university. This high barrier to forming platform co-ops must be lowered or this new movement will die in its crib.

Part of the magic of tech startups is that there’s a well understood organizational structure, financing method, and developmental path for entrepreneurs to use. In other words, there's a template. Platform co-ops need templates too, but ones which support a diversity of organizational patterns. What’s needed is a small number of incubators in different global cities working together to give birth to the first wave of platform co-ops. The trick is to get the first few platform co-ops off the ground, and then develop a global ecosystem that encourages replication of working models across industry verticals and geographies.

2. Offer a better service at a competitive price


Let's not forget business fundamentals. Platform co-ops must offer a better service at a competitive price to beat Death Stars. A lot hinges on simply executing better day in and day out, but strategy plays a big role too. The key strategic challenge is figuring out how to leverage platform co-ops’ social mission, democratic structure to help them compete. User ownership and control offers inherent advantages that stem from a more engaging and empowering relationship to other users and the enterprise itself. For instance, platform co-ops could attract more loyal users at a lower cost than Death Stars by offering user-ownership. All else being equal, user-owners will likely deliver better service than 1099 contractors. Platform co-ops may be able to create a deeper community experience than Death Stars, which routinely feign community ethos for profit. The social mission of platform co-ops could help them access less expensive labor and capital like traditional cooperatives. They could also gain a cost advantage by developing a common software infrastructure or using open source platforms by ShareTribeand GNUsocial.

3. Take cooperation to the next level


It goes without saying that platform co-ops should cooperate, as that is standard operating procedure in the cooperative world. In fact, it's number six of the sector’s widely embraced Rochdale Principles. However, platform co-ops should take cooperation to the next level to exploit a potentially decisive competitive advantage over Death Stars. Death Stars’ closed nature which make it nearly impossible for them to engage in the deep collaboration between cooperatives seen in regions like Quebec, Canada, Emilia-Romagna, Italy, and Basque Country, Spain. Clusters of small to medium-sized cooperatives in these regions often compete successfully against large multinationals through networking, formal collaborations, and shared infrastructure such as market research centers, banks, and universities. These cooperatives collaborate in a much deeper way than tech companies. In fact, they act almost as if they’re one organism.

Platform co-ops must act similarly. For examble, the replacement for Airbnb shouldn't be another centralizing global platform even if it's a cooperative. It should be a federation of locally-owned cooperatives that are interconnected technologically (Fairbnb!). GNUsocial's microblogging platform is an example. Each node is on a different server, but users can interact across nodes. The advantage is a much more resilient, user-controlled, distributed infrastructure. At Somero 2015 last month, GNUsocial took a big leap by unveiling the alpha version of a hospitality module called GNUbnb.

Platform co-ops can share much more than software including data, digital reputation, knowledge, marketing, public relations, legal, lobbying, and physical space. And share all of this on a global basis -- as Michel Bauwens’ open coop proposal advises -- and across industries. Cities should get in on the action too. They should cooperate with each other and with platform co-ops to mold the sharing economy in the public interest as Janelle Orsi of the Sustainable Economies Law Center recently suggested.

4. Create an ecosystem to distribute wealth


Silicon Valley arguably creates and concentrates more wealth than any place on earth. Behind this phenomenon is a powerful ecosystem that includes Stanford University, the biggest venture capital firms in the world, an enterprising culture, top notch professional services, and more. This ecosystem birthed the Death Stars, and they’ve benefited greatly from it. Platform co-ops need a similarly powerful ecosystem to compete, but one that distributes wealth instead of concentrating it. That’s a tall order, but platform co-ops may have natural allies in creating such an ecosystem including city governments, unions, nonprofits, universities, the free and open source software movement, and social investors like credit unions, social venture funds, and foundations. It took many decades for the Silicon Valley “miracle” to unfold. Similarly, it'll take an ecosystem to raise this movement.

5. Build a mass movement


Platform cooperatives have the opportunity to channel the huge amount of negative sentiment around Death Star platforms to power their movement. They can also move into the slipstream of awareness Death Stars are creating about the sharing economy to surge forward. However, the movement must be reframed in at least three ways to take advantage of these powerful forces.

First, platform cooperativism must become a populist, trans-partisan movement. If Platform Cooperativism is the coming out party for the cooperative Internet, then it’s a lopsided one. The guest list reads like the line up for New York City’s liberal all star team. That said, I give them credit for a long list of partners including Shareable. That’s a good start at building a movement; they only need to reach across the aisle more going forward.

Second, it must shift emphasis from moral arguments for platform co-ops to practical ones which convince ordinary folks that the vision is feasible. Hope is essential! Like traditional cooperatives, platform co-ops could offer inherent competitive advantages, including superior cost structure, better working conditions, higher pay, better reputations, resilience, and alignment between value creators and rewards. In fact, sharing ownership and control with users may become a necessity, as Brad Burnham of Union Square Ventures has argued, for platforms to compete for customers as other advantages are leveled by the market.

Lastly, the emphasis must shift from platform co-ops formed by providers to a multi-stakeholder model that could include providers, customers, founders, investors, geographic communities, and nature. Provider-driven platform co-ops are a good start, but they will eventually run into the same problems that arise in any organization when one stakeholder group calls the shots. Investors are a normal part of the mix in traditional co-ops, so no reason they shouldn’t be here, especially with their power in check as one of many stakeholders.

So an epic choice is before us. Do we accept Death Star platforms’ boring, unresilient, monocultural domination? A domination that will be difficult to shake off once established. A domination that puts the world at each of our individual fingertips while disempowering us collectively. A domination that could permanently damage the richness, resilience, and capacities of our local communities, as Douglas Rushkoff suggests.

Or do we work together to build, as Charles Eisenstein would put it, the more beautiful world our hearts know is possible? A world where platform co-ops manifest the values of the commons in every community. Where our capacity to manage our resources together is deeply respected. Where polycentric control is a given. Where local laws, customs and cultures are honored. Where self-interest and common good are aligned. Where we are truly alive.

The odds against this more beautiful world are the same odds Luke Skywalker faced against the Death Star in the original Star Wars. The key to victory is the same too. We must use the force, but the force in this case isn’t some mystical energy, the force is us.

Image credit: Flickr/Serious Cat

Neal Gorenflo is the co-founder of Shareable, an award-winning news, action, connection hub for the sharing transformation. An epiphany in 2004 inspired Neal to leave the corporate world to help people share through Internet startups, publishing, grassroots organizing, and a circle of friends committed to the common good.

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How Electricity Storage Will Help Drive South Australia's Transition

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Editor's Note: This post originally appeared on the IEEFA blog

By Tim King

South Australia stands at the forefront of the renewable energy transition, as we reported a few weeks ago and that we’re back with an update on today.

For evidence of the change, look no further than how the state’s installed capacity of renewable generation consistently exceeds electricity demand. Residential rooftop solar will soon reach 28 percent penetration, which is to say that more than a quarter of all households will have it. And South Australia already has the most installed wind generation in the country, with 1,473 megawatts of onshore capacity representing 25 percent of the state’s total generation capacity (an additional 2,963 megawatts in wind projects are planned).

The state’s coal industry in the meantime is shrinking fast. In June, Alinta Energy announced that its sub-critical brown coal Flinders Operations (the Northern 554-megawatts and Playford B 240-megawatt power stations) and its Leigh Creek coal mine would cease operations beyond March 2018. And then just this month Alinta moved the date up, saying Leigh Creek would close this November and that it would shutter Flinders by the end of March 2016.

South Australia will transition abruptly at that moment from sub-critical brown coal making up 13 percent of its coal-generation capacity to zero. While gas remains the dominant electricity-generation fuel source in the state (despite recent announcements that 719 megawatts of gas-fired generation are being withdrawn from the market), the state’s combined share of wind and solar photovoltaic energy will increase from 35 percent of generation capacity to 48 percent by April.

Given that solar and wind generation are expected to continue to grow significantly in South Australia (residential plus commercial solar installations in the state are forecast to almost triple over the next 10 years), there may soon come a time when synchronous generators will not operate during certain period of the year, or will be mothballed or even permanently decommissioned. That’s when South Australia’s electricity will be supplied primarily by renewable energy sources.

The Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) has concluded that it can work — that South Australia’s power system can operate securely and reliably with a high percentage
 of wind and solar photovoltaic (PV) generation as long as either the Heywood Interconnector to the state of Victoria is operational, and/or sufficient synchronous generation is connected and operating on the South Australian power system.

The advent of storage technology will further ease reliability and security concerns that have been raised. Indeed, such technology is already developing apace along three fronts in Australia:

Integrated Solar Plus Battery Storage Systems (IPSS)


Demand for IPSS will increase, driven by the retrofitting of existing solar PV installations and by the explosive growth of new installations.

SA Power Networks (operator of a distribution network across South Australia) is already experiencing a “duck-curve” pattern in which midday power demand drops significantly because of all the electricity generated by rooftop solar and by material annual declines in demand. IPSS will help flatten the duck curve, moderating spikes in peak demand, and potentially eliminating many of them altogether.

Large-scale battery storage


Network owner Powercor announced in August that next year it will install the largest battery in Australia — a 2-megawatt lithium-ion unit to be deployed on its regional grid near Ballarat in the state of Victoria. The battery will be used to reduce stress on the network on peak days, improve reliability, and reduce capital expenditures.

We see this as the first of many large-scale battery storage installations that will be deployed across the grid.

Utility-scale solar power projects


U.S. company SolarReserve, which has considerable experience building solar facilities to scale, has shown interest in building a facility in South Australia.

SolarReserve has a track record of note: It is about to complete construction of the world’s largest solar tower and storage plant, the110-megawatt Crescent Dunes solar tower power project in Tonopah, Nevada. And this past August the company received environmental approval from the Chilean government to develop the 260-megawatt Copiapó Solar Project. The project scheduled to begin commercial operation in 2019, is designed for “firm baseload power,” according to SolarReserve, and will operate “at a capacity factor and availability percentage equal to that of a coal-fired power plant.”

Change is coming fast to South Australia, a real-time laboratory for the transformation from a fossil fuel-dominated electricity supply system to one based on renewables.

There is much to be seen — and much to learn — in this remarkably rapid transition.

Image credit: Flickr/Ian Sutton

Tim King is IEEFA’s director of energy policy, Australasia.

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5 Steps for Expanding Your Expertise to Become a Better Leader

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By Patti Johnson

It’s not enough to be a great expert. Expertise only matters when you impact the world around you.

Many professionals aspire to become thought leaders or industry gurus, and we need such experts in our organizations. But becoming a respected thinker requires more than vast knowledge. You need to communicate your ideas effectively and influence others in a positive way. Without those components, the work of even the most brilliant minds goes to waste.

The empathetic expert


Being an expert means having deep intelligence in your field. But it also involves having a keen intuition for how your experience translates into good business counsel. True experts know when to share and when to listen. Those who have the biggest impact understand others’ concerns and adapt in a way that resonates. This ability to translate and listen is the key to an expert affecting the world around her. That’s why empathetic experts are so valuable — they help build a motivated, productive environment.

The best leaders and thinkers know how to mine their internal databases to achieve a specific goal. They don’t talk endlessly about what they know and what they’ve done. Instead, they use what they’ve learned to bolster the team’s efforts.

Here’s how you can expand your expertise to be a more effective leader:

1. Listen like a beginner


An expert is only as good as her ability to put her hard-won knowledge to use. Take time to understand what your community needs, and consider how best to apply your skills to the situation. Valuable experts focus on how they can be most helpful rather than showcase all of their wisdom regardless of relevance.

2. Simplify complex issues


The best experts distill tough topics into terms that everyone can grasp. They can cut through the noise to identify what’s most important for the business and provide unique insights on how to solve problems. Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg has been lauded for communicating confidently and translating in a way people outside Silicon Valley can understand.

3. Keep learning


Expert status isn’t a lifetime designation. Educate yourself regularly on how your field is evolving, and contribute to conversations about what those changes mean. Experts are constant learners, especially in the tech-driven business climate. Thought leaders lose significance if they don’t actively pursue new experiences and ideas.

4. Check your ego


View your expertise as a way to contribute to a goal, not to be the smartest person in the room. While it’s true that experts know more than most regarding their discipline, it’s easy to become overconfident or self-important. And that attitude prevents partnerships and effective collaboration. Be humble about what you know — and what you don’t know — and look for opportunities to serve others using your knowledge.

5. Cultivate communication skills


Your ability to communicate is your vehicle for sharing your insights. Richard Branson has often stated that he considers communication to be “an art.” He’s also emphasized that becoming a great communicator takes practice and work, comparing it to learning how to type or ride a bike. To grow as a communicator, you must routinely work to strengthen those skills. Practice giving compelling presentations, leading productive discussions, and thinking on your feet. If you struggle to make interpersonal connections, hire a coach to help you improve your abilities.

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Experts must evolve constantly if they don’t want to become yesterday’s gurus. You maintain your relevance by practicing empathy and using your expertise to benefit others. Always keep in mind that great messages are amplified when experts listen before they preach.

Image credit: Flickr/Shinsuke Ikegame

Patti Johnson is a career and workplace expert and the CEO of PeopleResults, a change and organizational development consultancy that she founded in 2004. She’s also the author of “MakeWaves: Be the One to Start Change at Work and in Life.” She and her team advise clients, including PepsiCo, Microsoft, 7-Eleven, Accenture, and Frito-Lay, on creating positive change in their leaders and organizations. Follow Patti on Twitter!

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Expectations high for business to take lead post-COP21

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Experts predict that business will be key to the success of climate change action post-COP21 Summit in Paris next month, according to the findings from a new study exploring leadership on climate change.

Whilst a significant majority (92%) of experts are confident that the UN conference on Climate Change will result in a global agreement, only 32% believe that it will have binding powers.

Confidence in the ability of governments to agree on a framework in Paris that would reduce emissions in line with the 2C target is virtually non-existent (4%) and the removal of subsidies for fossil fuels (82%) was rated the most effective economic instrument to contain global warming.

The GlobeScan/SustainAbility Survey is one the longest-running expert surveys on sustainability-related topics of its kind. For the 2015 Climate Survey, expert stakeholders representing business, governments, NGOs, and academia shared their expectations for the COP21 meeting in Paris and provided insights about the role of various actors and climate change strategies post-2015.

Scientific institutions and civil society are seen making the largest contribution to advancing climate change with more than half of all respondents viewing their record positively.

The future contribution of national governments and business will be key to the implementation of the post-Paris framework. Eighty six percent (86%) of experts predict that the private sector will play an “important” or “very important” role, and 90% of respondents believe the same to be true for national governments. However, gaps between recent performance and future expectation mean that both institutions will have to step up their efforts.

Eric Whan, sustainability director at GlobeScan, commented: “The convening parties, the UN and its national members, are not expected to deliver a result that the science says we need at Paris. Meanwhile, expectations are high that solutions will flow from the private sector almost as much as from national governments post-Paris, whatever the outcome. The pressure is on, and the companies that get this right will be the ones thriving 20 years from now.”

Access the full report here
 

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Highland Spring tops ethical bottled water ranking

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Ethical shopping comparison website, thegoodshoppingguide.com, has released ethical comparison research on all the main bottled water companies and brands.

Highland Spring is the highest ranked company featured in the research - notably, its water is drawn from organic land. Highland Spring has gained Ethical Accreditation, which allows them to display the Ethical Accreditation logos - a public display of their ethical credentials.

The lowest ranking brands are from Nestlé, which include: Buxton; Perrier; Pure Life; San Pellegrino and Vittel. The Swiss food and beverage company has been criticised over its use of water from drought-stricken regions, such as in California. 

To see the full Ethical Bottled Water Ranking table click here.

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Ethical Performance journalist wins State Street Press Award

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Ethical Performance's SRI editor, Roger Aitken, has been recognised at the 2015 State Street Institutional Press Awards, which recognise “outstanding performance” in institutional financial services reporting.

Aitken, a former FT journalist who writes the monthly SRI column for Ethical Performance, scooped the journalist of the year award in the ‘Regulatory Issues’ category for his articles on regulation of the foreign exchange (FX) market and the rate fixing scandal. 

State Street Corporation, which is one of the world’s leading providers of financial services to institutional investors and operates in over 100 countries, had $27.3 trillion in assets under custody and administration as of September 30, 2015. 

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Ecuador Braces for El Niño

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The El Niño phenomenon of 2015-2016 is expected to be rival that of 1997-1998, which caused losses equal to 14.5 percent of Ecaudor's GDP. El Niño causes a weakening of the trade winds, allowing heat to accumulate. The phenomenon shifts global weather, causing flooding in some areas and droughts in others.

Ecuador and Peru are the countries that are most directly affected by El Niño. If predictions are correct, the months ahead could cause debilitating floods, outbreaks of mosquito-borne illnesses, and catastrophic crop and infrastructure damage.

I write from coastal Manabi Province in Ecuador, which experienced the most fatalities in the country during the 1997-1998 event, totaling 104. There is awareness of severe El Niño predictions, but most people I've spoken with in the southern coastal town of Puerto Lopez think it will not be as severe as forecasts.

There have been warnings in past years that haven't come to fruition, leaving many to think the coming months will be uneventful as well. Others are hopeful that an El Niño event could bring rains, ending a severe drought in the region. The current president, Rafael Correa, has significantly augmented the infrastructure in this South American country, leaving some to wonder how it would weather El Niño event.

Preparation


"I do not think we're ready [for El Niño]," says Roque Mendoza, the former coordinator for the Secretariat of Risk Management for Manabi Province. "Lack of training, and people not knowing what to do in an emergency, is what causes tragedies to be magnified."

Although one Puerto Lopez hotel owner I spoke with constructed a flood wall behind his property after El Niño flooding in 2002 and another homeowner is adding fill to raise the elevation of their property, I see few other people taking preventative actions. Recent governmental infrastructure improvements may help the situation, if planned and executed with natural disasters in mind.

In Puerto Lopez, a major beachfront construction project is building bridges over rivers and burying beachfront power lines under a new road, which could help prepare the town for strong storms. Residents, however, are concerned by the fact that the beachfront road is now at a higher elevation than some of the surrounding homes, potentially contributing to flooding. There is also a sense among many residents that this project doesn't address more urgent needs, such as waste water treatment and access to potable water.

The Chamber of Agriculture of Zone II (along Ecuador's southern coast) is urging the government to declare a state of emergency before the arrival of El Niño. They believe the government has not adequately prepared for the phenomenon, by clearing canals and dredging rivers, giving a path for the removal of flood waters.

In contrast, the Peruvian government has already declared a state of emergency in over half of the country's regions. There, the government has been cleaning out coastal riverbeds, building flood walls, and distributing mobile bridges to avoid communities getting cut off if existing bridges fail.

Fisheries


Fishing is one of the primary industries in coastal Ecuador, and an El Niño event could have major consequences.

As many fish species migrate to colder waters and others lose weight from lack of food, the industry could be heavily impacted, resulting in lower yields. This is difficult to prepare for, other than seeking out fish species that are less impacted by a change in ocean temperatures.

There is also concern about 500 square miles of shrimp pools at risk of flooding, causing fear in the shrimp sector.

Agriculture

Drought has plagued many farmers in Ecuador in recent years, disproportionately impacting farmers without access to irrigation or wells. The predicted storms and floods could cause crop damage and landslides.

In other cases, the damage is more indirect. The predicted El Niño flooding could kill snakes, causing a spike in rodent populations that could damage sugarcane, for example. Infrastructure damage could make roads impassible, making it impossible to sell crops and causing income loss.

In Ecuador, many of the farms cultivate a monoculture of just one agricultural product, with thousands of seasonal labors used for the harvest. In the Ecuadorian lowlands, this is most commonly bananas or sugarcane. Large plantations are often less resistant to natural disasters because crop diversity can help mitigate the risk of crop failure. In addition, large plantations may waste a viable harvest because farm workers cannot be brought in for the harvest during a natural disaster.

El Niño rains, however, could break the drought and offer relief along the southern coast of Ecuador. Some of the cropland in Manabi Province is now fallow due to drought, forcing inhabitants to seek out other forms of employment. It does, however, put more pressure on income from fishing and tourism, which would be at risk if the El Niño event does materialize as predicted.

Increased health risk


Increased precipitation can lead to a spike in mosquito-borne illnesses in Ecuador, including malaria, chikungunya and dengue. Damage to sanitation infrastructure combined with an interruption in health services and lack of access to safe drinking water could lead to illness, especially among more vulnerable populations.

There have been public health campaigns in Ecuador to prevent mosquito-borne illnesses. Health professionals have walked around town, hanging posters and talking to business owners. Public service announcements on the topic are also relatively common, but unfortunately so are practices that encourage the breeding of mosquitoes.

At-risk populations


Natural disasters often disproportionately affect certain groups of people more than others. Having savings can serve as a buffer against loss of income and increases the means to evacuate during natural disaster. Owning medical supplies allows people to treat themselves for minor injuries and prevents the development of more major health ailments. Living in durable homes that are not constructed in floodplains mitigates the risk and damage of flooding. Overcrowding of housing and lack of access to safe drinking water that plague developing countries increase illness and the spread of infectious disease.

Environmental degradation


Massive and rapid deforestation has occurred in Ecuador's coastal forests in since the 1950s, where 70 percent of the coastal mangroves have been removed by the commercial shrimp industry.

Deforestation compounds the impact of El Niño. Loss of vegetation increases the occurrence of mudslides, which caused the most fatalities in Ecuador during El Niño event of 1997-1998. Deforestation also contributes to soil erosion, which clogs waterways and causes floods.

"Disasters are not only caused by nature, but also by human hands and lack of prevention," says Roque Mendoza.

Image Credit: 1) Flickr/Sol Robayo 2) Le Minh Vu 3) Flikr/Edward Slipszenko 4) Flickr/CDC Global

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