The Wendy Schmidt Ocean Health XPRIZE is a global competition that challenges teams of engineers, scientists and innovators from all over the world to create pH sensor technology that will affordably, accurately and efficiently measure ocean chemistry from its shallowest waters... to its deepest depths.
These break-through sensors are urgently needed for scientists, managers and industry to turn the tide on ocean acidification and begin healing our oceans.
These break-through sensors are urgently needed for scientists, managers and industry to turn the tide on ocean acidification and begin healing our oceans.
From National Geographic
On October 22, the XPRIZE launched an Ocean Initiative, which aims to give three new global prizes to teams that develop technologies by 2020 that protect ocean health.
In September, the nonprofit group had launched the $2 Million Wendy Schmidt Ocean Health XPRIZE, which challenges teams to create affordable pH sensor technology that will help scientists measure ocean acidification.
The XPRIZE was founded in 1995 as a nonprofit prize program (formerly called the X Prize Foundation) to spur innovation around pressing global problems.
Past XPRIZE efforts have focused on private
efforts in suborbital commercial spaceflight, efficient cars, and moon rovers.
In 2004, Burt Rutan’s SpaceShipOne was awarded the $10
million Ansari X-Prize for spaceflight for soaring more than 100
kilometers (62 miles).
National Geographic spoke with Paul Bunje, senior director for oceans at XPRIZE.
What will the new ocean prizes specifically address?
I wish I could tell you but that’s the exciting part about
what we’re doing here.
We believe that if we’re going to live by our
mantra that anyone can solve a grand challenge, then anyone can also
help us identify what the challenge should be.
So we’re opening up the
XPRIZE program, and asking the public to help us identify what those
next three prizes should be.
It’s a little bit scary as you might
imagine.
We know the issues facing the oceans, with pollution,
overfishing, acidification, and so on.
But it would be folly for us not
to involve as much of the globe as possible in figuring out the
solutions.
How will the process work?
[On October 22] we announce three more ocean XPRIZES,
making five total over 10 years.
[The Wendy Schmidt Oil Cleanup
XCHALLENGE had granted $1.4 million in 2011 for efforts to improve
remediation technologies.]
Anyone can submit their idea for the new prizes, but that’s
not really sufficient for identifying a grand challenge.
Through our Ocean Ambassador program we want people to join us.
When they sign up they will go through learning, and connect with experts like Sylvia Earle.
We want Ocean Ambassadors who will really commit and join
us in the ideation process.
It’s more involved than just tossing up a
quick idea on Facebook, we want people who are really going to put some
work into this.
Any idea how many Ocean Ambassadors you are looking for?
We’re looking for thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands.
I’d be over the moon if we had 10,000 people who were working a few
hours a month on this.
Some conventional wisdom says it’s difficult to get
people to contribute a significant amount of work for free.
People are
keen to submit a photo or take another quick action, but ask them for
something more involved and you tend to get a much lower response rate.
Are you concerned about that?
We’re trying to design the program so it’s like a funnel:
in the first instance lots of people will want to give us ideas and
maybe some will follow those ideas.
Over time we’ll bring people closer
and closer into the funnel, so a smaller and smaller group will become
very active.
It’s not enough to simply submit an idea and have people
vote on them because there’s a lot more that goes into it for an XPRIZE.
The important thing for us is there are people out there
with great ideas that we don’t know of, who are outside the established
system of university professors, explorers in residence, and so on.
What
we need to figure out is launching the program and letting it be
designed by the crowd.
The Wendy Schmidt Ocean Health XPrize aims at combating ocean acidification
Are the new ocean XPRIZES also supported by Wendy
Schmidt [who is president of the Schmidt Family Foundation and is
married to Google chair Eric Schmidt]?
Wendy has graciously helped seed our ocean initiative but
it is intended to grow with other philanthropists and individual donors.
We’ll have to identify new sponsors.
You have said this is the most ambitious XPRIZE
program to date, suggesting it tops the race of private efforts to space
supported by the Ansari XPRIZE in 2004. Why?
The oceans are completely underexplored and underfinanced.
We don’t want to give up on space, clearly, but there has been a real
abdication in funding ocean exploration by governments, it’s fleetingly
small now and getting smaller.
So what the XPRIZE recognizes is that we
just haven’t explored them.
It’s our belief that discovery creates great
things.
The other side of it is the oceans are the lungs of our
planet, so it’s planetary health we’re talking about.
If we’re not
willing to address what is happening in our oceans then it’s putting
humanity at risk.
The XPRIZEs are about radical breakthroughs for the
betterment of humanity.
They will have exponential impact on industries
and protect our oceans, so if we want to better humanity there’s no
better place to start.
Links :
Links :
- Xprize : press release
- The Guardian : XPRIZE dives into Earth's final frontier – our oceans and their future health
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