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Students to Develop Solutions to Global Water Crisis in First Annual "Aspen Design Challenge"

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Corporate Social Responsibility Press Release

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8.18.2008 - 08:00am ET

News from: Circle of Blue

Students to Develop Solutions to Global Water Crisis in First Annual "Aspen Design Challenge"

AIGA, Circle of Blue and INDEX launch "Designing Water's Future,"

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Designing Water's Future challenges cross-disciplinary student teams to develop design solutions that explore new ways of understanding, communicating and responding to the global water crisis.

(CSRwire) NEW YORK,NY. - August 18, 2008 - AIGA, the professional association for design, today issued an ambitious call to the next generation of creative thinkers in its first annual Aspen Design 's Future." In association with INDEX and Circle of Blue, the international contest challenges cross-disciplinary student teams to develop design solutions that explore new ways of understanding, communicating and responding to the global water crisis.

The Aspen Design Challenge is a joint project developed by AIGA and INDEX:, a global nonprofit design network, to engage the millennial generation in solving global issues. The challenge is issued as part of the Aspen Design Summit, an international conference organized for leaders from business, the public sector and nonprofit organizations.

"Designing Water's Future" grew out of discussions at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, led by Brian Collins, chairman of Collins:, a New York-based transformation design firm, and journalist J. Carl Ganter, co-founder of Circle of Blue, the international network of leading journalists, scientists and communications designers connecting humanity to the global water crisis.

The rules and guidelines for the challenge were distributed to thousands of faculty and students at more than 250 universities from Beijing to Boston, and are available to all with the launch of the Aspen Design Challenge website. Winners will have the opportunity to refine and develop their concepts with world leaders and policy makers at the Aspen Environment Forum, and their solutions will be discussed at the , the , and the .

Water crisis
More than five million people die each year due to a lack of safe drinking water, and the UN estimates that 5.5 billion people will lack adequate access to freshwater in the next 20 years. Water scarcity has emerged as a serious threat to peoples across the world. Called "the new oil" for the 21st century, .

"The global water crisis is a universally threatening and immensely complex problem," said J. Carl Ganter, director and co-founder of . "The causes are many —climate change, population growth, over-use — and the ramifications are felt in all areas from environment to security to economic development. This is where we need design students to step in. Design is the intermediary between information and understanding. Young people have the fresh perspective we need, and it is their future which is most at stake."

"We cannot continue to take water for granted," said Richard Grefé, executive director of . "The idea behind the Aspen Design Challenge is that creative design can change the way people think and behave. We have every confidence that these students will devise the types of solutions we need to reframe how we think about water, how we manage it and how we save it—inventive solutions that are simple, powerful and actionable."

About the Challenge
Students and faculty from around the world will develop ideas this fall and submit proposals by December 2008. Already there are commitments from schools in Australia, China, Denmark, Qatar and the United States. An international jury of accomplished leaders in the design and environmental fields will select contest finalists in February 2009.

Students behind the finalist proposals will have the opportunity to workshop their ideas in Aspen, improving their concepts with feedback from top designers, scientists, journalists and business and NGO leaders. Further, their ideas will be presented at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland (January 28– February 1, 2009); the Aspen Environment Forum (March 25–28, 2009) and to participants of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen (November 30–December 11, 2009. The most promising project will receive The INDEX:|AIGA Aspen Design Challenge Prize in August in Copenhagen.

There are no restrictions on the type of solutions that students may submit. Print design, web applications, environment design, physical devices, data presentation tools and other approaches are all encouraged, as are proposals for the conceptual framework or method of dissemination that may propel these designs into public consciousness. Design students are encouraged to lead cross-disciplinary teams of engineers, artists, ethnographers, anthropologists and scientists, and to consider the social, cultural and scientific significance of water.

"The water crisis needs creativity, attention and care—and it needs it now," said Brian Collins. "Designers can inspire audiences to take action and inform people who may be separated by geography, education or immediate need. So our goal is to enlist a new generation of design thinkers to find better ways to communicate this problem, and drive local action and solutions."

For more information on the initiative and its developments throughout the fall, visit: .


"Designing Water's Future" Partners

, the professional association for design, is the oldest and largest membership organization for design. Its mission is to advance designing as a professional craft, strategic tool and vital cultural force. Founded in 1914, AIGA now represents more than 22,000 design professionals, educators and students through national activities and local programs developed by 62 chapters and 240 student groups. AIGA stimulates thinking about design through journals, conferences, competitions and exhibitions; demonstrates the value of design to business, the public and government officials; and empowers the success of designers at each stage of their careers by providing invaluable educational and social resources. For more information, visit: .

is the international network of leading journalists, scientists and communications designers that reports and presents the information necessary to respond to the global freshwater crisis. Circle of Blue is a member of the Clinton Global Initiative and is a nonprofit affiliate of the internationally recognized water, climate and policy think tank, the Pacific Institute. Circle of Blue also publishes WaterNews, the daily go-to source for global water news and data. For more information about Circle of Blue, visit and .

COLLINS: is a transformation design firm based in New York. The company's team of strategists, designers, technologists, writers and architects work with some of the most iconic organizations in the world. Through a process rooted in storytelling, COLLINS: creates communications, environments, interactions and products that transform how companies and brands connect with people in contemporary culture.

: is a nonprofit network organization based in Copenhagen that focuses on design to improve life worldwide. INDEX: works through a global network to ensure access to the best knowledge on design and the cutting edge of contemporary thinking. The network consists of designers, businesses, organizations and design institutions who collaborate in disseminating and applying the latest knowledge in the field of "Design to Improve Life."

Video interviews of Mr. Grefe, Mr. Collins and Mr. Ganter are online
with high-resolution available to the media.


At a glance


THE PROBLEM
Water is the axis issue that intersects the world's challenges. From health, poverty and security to climate, energy, immigration and environment—even financial and commodities markets are affected. We're just beginning to grasp the scope of the challenges and their intersection points. Many solutions exist, yet policy makers and the public must first be aware of the complexities and then be called to act, from implementing water management measures in Las Vegas to bringing safe water to rural Africa.

The water saga is complex and requires a 360-degree, multidimensional design approach that includes powerful, fact-based, relevant narratives, accessible information and coordinated channels for action.

Globally, the United Nations estimates that two-thirds of the world's population will live in areas of water stress within the next 20 years, and that five million people—mostly children—die each year due to contaminated drinking water.

In the developing world, solutions may mean drilling wells for children in a Ghanaian village or applying new or traditional filtering technologies for families in Bangladesh. In the developed world, drought, climate, pollution, agricultural misuse and failing infrastructures beleaguer even the most advanced civilizations.

BACKGROUND
The Aspen Design Challenge grew out of discussions held during the January 2007 World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. At the World Economic Forum, a group of global thought leaders noted:

  • The global water crisis presents a communications design challenge of urgent immensity.

  • Current public understanding about the use and management of water (especially in developed countries) is narrowly defined by outmoded experiences and assumptions.

  • Powerful, fact-based narratives are needed to engage and inform diverse, international audiences of varying demographics and geographies.

  • The water crisis needs a visual identity, a mantra, new mythologies and stories carried by innovative vehicles to inform and inspire audiences that may be separated by demographics, education and immediate need.

  • We currently lack the full scope of raw field data and the presentation tools needed to make it understandable and actionable for policy makers and solutions.

  • The crisis may be complex in its global implications, but the solutions are "local, local, local."

The Challenge

WHO IS ELIGIBLE TO PARTICIPATE
Teams of students, working collaboratively with others of different disciplines, are eligible to participate. It is expected, but not required, that teams will be led by a faculty member or tutor.

SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS
  • An online entry system will be available October 1

  • Statement of creative strategy providing an explanation of your idea and overall thinking (maximum of 500 words)

  • Up to 10 images depicting the actual project or explaining the thought process behind your concept

  • A comprehensive detailed description of the proposed project and any accompanying research

  • Optional: 2–4 minute video introducing your project and describing your idea as well as your background(s)
SCHEDULE
  • October 1: Projects may be submitted online

  • December 15, 2008: Deadline for entries

  • February 2009: Finalists announced

  • February–April 2009: Finalists develop polished presentations

  • Late March 2009: Finalists attend the Aspen Environmental Forum and pitch to designers, scientists, journalists, business and NGO leaders

  • August 2009: Finalists will be invited to Copenhagen for a collaborative workshop in connection with the INDEX: Award 2009

  • October 2009: Selected projects will be published

  • November–December 2009: A select number of projects will be presented to participants of the World Summit on Climate Change in Copenhagen

CSRwire

For more information please contact:

J. Carl Ganter, director
Circle of Blue
202-351-6870
www.circleofblue.org

Kristen Titus
Resnicow-Schroeder for AIGA
212.671-5173
212.671-5169
www.aiga.org

Steve Rogenstein
www.aiga.org
+1.212.710-3121

Brian Collins
Collins
+1.212.763-4680

www.circleofblue.org

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dantheman

I saw this artitcle on the CNN web site and it represents a simple and relatively inexpensive way to apply old technologies in new ways to help reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions.

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