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(Photo: TAL ROBERTS)
Sponsor Content: SAXX

The New Environmentalists

Meet three entrepreneurs tackling the world鈥檚 toughest problems with next-gen science and technology

Published: 
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(Photo: TAL ROBERTS)

Solving the world’s problems isn’t getting any easier. But not everyone is throwing up their hands. Look closely and you might notice pockets of motivated world-changers who are using surprising ideas and a little ingenuity to upend the status quo and get us back on the right track. Meet three innovators doing exactly that.

Giving the Rainforest Ears

Topher聽White, Founder, Rainforest Connection

The jungle is loud. So loud that in 2011, while volunteering at an ape sanctuary in Borneo, physicist and software engineer Topher White found that the constant din of calling birds, chirping insects, and jawing apes drowned out the sound of chainsaws. The same screaming chainsaws White saw in action a few minutes later when he and his girlfriend stumbled across illegal loggers felling trees just a five-minute walk from camp. What good were rangers, White wondered, if they couldn’t hear a chainsaw a hundred meters away?

White, though, is a tinkerer. Impressed by the cellular coverage in the forest, he dreamed up a network of cell phones鈥攔epurposed as listening devices鈥攈idden throughout the forest that could help catch poachers of trees and animals. That was the genesis of White鈥檚 nonprofit . Employing donated used Android phones outfitted with solar packs and running acoustical-analysis software that White developed, White鈥檚 team designed a forest warning system. When a cell phone detects a chainsaw or other mechanical noises, it texts the location to local rangers.

So far, Rainforest Connection has tested its system in the jungles of Cameroon, Sumatra, Ecuador, Peru, and Costa Rica. By the end of 2018, White hopes to triple the scope of the project. And it鈥檚 not solely about saving the trees anymore. White鈥檚 bio-acoustic software monitors other jungle sounds, helping ecologists track elusive species. A free app even lets the public eavesdrop on the deep jungle. 鈥淭he forest sounds like a frigging Star Wars laser battle, and it changes hour by hour,鈥 says White. 鈥淲e want people to build a strong connection with the forest so they鈥檒l help protect it.鈥

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Eat More Crickets

Dylan Jones, CEO, Coast Protein

鈥淔ive years ago, there wouldn’t have been a chance in hell I would have envisioned myself selling crickets,鈥 says Dylan Jones, CEO of , makers of cricket-based protein bars and powders. But then he realized that eating bugs could help save the world. With a master鈥檚 degree in sustainability, Jones used to work in the mining industry, but he couldn’t help thinking that one of the really big impacts on the environment is all the water and land used to feed livestock. The solution was hopping all around him: insects. Hive crickets, in particular, are easy to raise, and they use about 2,000 times less water than cattle. By weight, they鈥檙e 60 to 65 percent protein, whereas a chicken breast is 33 percent. Even more promising, five kilograms of cricket protein can be produced on one square meter of land per year, versus the 35 to 50 square meters needed for the same amount of beef.

So, in mid-2016, Jones and four co-founders launched Coast Protein in Vancouver, Canada. Slowly but surely, the sustainability and nutritional aspects of the product鈥攃rickets offer a full complement of amino acids, B12, and iron鈥攚on over hesitant consumers. Today the bars are showing up in mainstream outlets. 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing a lot of excitement from the kind of people who are attuned to the idea that the food you eat has a long-term impact upstream and downstream,鈥 says Jones.


You鈥檙e Gonna Need a聽Better Boat

Cesar Jung-Harada, Founder, Scoutbots & MakerBay

When inventor and engineer Cesar Jung-Harada saw the televised devastation of the 2010 BP oil spill, he rushed to New Orleans to help. What he found was an engineering challenge: fishermen dragging booms through the oil, trying to corral the slicks. Not only was the technique ineffective鈥攖he booms collected only about 3 percent of the oil鈥攂ut the oil fouled the boats and threatened the fishermen鈥檚 health. Jung-Harada鈥檚 first concept was for a boat with a moveable rudder that could tack quickly through the spills, collecting oil more efficiently. Then he scrapped that idea for a boat with one huge rudder, which in turn evolved into a boat with a shapeshifting hull to give it pinpoint control鈥攁 concept he calls Protei. But while Protei never saw action cleaning up oil spills, it spawned a cottage industry in the design of shapeshifting robotic boats intended for solving some of the ocean鈥檚 most difficult problems.

Seeing the potential to tap into a global base of knowledge, Protei transformed into an open-source engineering movement. Teams in Korea, New York, Mexico, and the Netherlands began improving on the design. Today the community hopes interested companies or researchers will use their Protei designs to build a fleet of 3-4 foot Scoutbots which could autonomously roam the ocean detecting oil spills, plastic pollution or radioactivity, map coral reefs, or do things the designers haven’t even yet聽imagined.

Helping to save the world鈥檚 oceans was the original conceit. But it just might be Jung-Harada鈥檚 experience promoting the free flow of ideas that ends up having the biggest impact. The open-source concept inspired him to co-found MakerBay, a space in Hong Kong where eco-minded hobbyists and inventors now share tools and insights. Instead of focusing on how much money one can make through tech, Jung-Harada argues that people need to put the environment, not profits, first. 鈥淲ithout the environment, you have nothing,鈥 he says. 鈥淥nce we understand this, it鈥檚 obvious why we need open-source environmental technology. We need to share information.鈥


revolutionized the underwear industry with the introduction of the BallPark Pouch鈩 – a patented technology featuring breathable mesh panels to prevent skin-against-skin friction and offer chafe-free support. Today, SAXX aims to support men (literally and figuratively) in pushing the world forward by challenging the status quo to create their own positive impact.

Lead Photo: TAL ROBERTS

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