The Mohammed bin Rashid Initiative For Global Prosperity Announces Winners Of The US$1 Million Global Maker Challenge四个赢家,排版和八个亚军etition, will be recipients of cash prizes, and will also receive access to mentors and global organizations worth up to US$1 million.

通过Aalia Mehreen Ahmed

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The Mohammed bin Rashid Initiative for Global Prosperityhas announced the four winners and eight runner-ups for the second cohort of the Global Maker Challenge, who will receive monetary prizes, mentorship, and access to global organizations, worth up to US$1 million.

Simbi Foundation,ColdHubs,POKET, andPlastics for Changewere announced as the four Global Maker Challenge winners. In addition to the Global Maker Challenge winners, the competition also recognized the work of four startups that could provide necessary disruption in trying to solve contemporary social and economic challenges:ID2020,Stixfresh,Agricycle Global, andAlgiKnit.

This year's Global Maker Challenge was focused on four themes: Innovation for Peace and Justice, Sustainable and Healthy Food for All, Innovation for Inclusive Trade, and Climate Change. The participants in the program were evaluated by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's SOLVE initiative (MIT SOLVE) and a panel of 47 judges that included subject matter and innovation experts. Over 6,800 people virtually watched the Global Maker Challenge finalists' pitches, expert discussions, and the award ceremony.

TheInnovation for Peace and Justicetheme was aimed at addressing the issues faced by refugees and displaced people in gaining access to affordable, good quality services that are vital for their safety. The winning solution wasSimbi Foundation, which provides solar-powered, centralized learning hubs that allow for access to digital education to youngsters especially in rural and poverty-stricken communities. The runner-up in this category was ID2020, a user-managed, digital ID platform that helps displaced people have more ownership of their health records, educational degrees, and professional identifications. The second runner-up,Aiyin, creates virtual reality (VR) learning spaces for areas that don't have financial capacity and physical location to build tangible ones.

The next theme,Sustainable and Healthy Food for All, addressed the issues faced by urban residents in accessing healthy and sustainable food.ColdHubs, a startup that provides solar-powered walk-in cold storage facilities for perishable foods that are produced by rural farmers in developing countries was the winner for this category. The runner-up wasStixfresh, which produces stickers that create a protective layer around fresh foods to help reduce spoilage time thereby offering economic benefit to small farmers and producers who don't have access to climate-controlled warehouses. The second runner-up wasNilus, a platform that offers a digital marketplace for affordable and healthy food.

The third theme,Innovation for Inclusive Trade, sought to address the problems of accessing new supply chains and markets in rural communities.POKET, a crowd-sourced registry of offline merchants that can help an entire network of suppliers across a region was announced the winner. The runner-up wasAgricycle Global, a zero-electricity post-harvest food dryer technology that helps rural farmers connect to new, international markets. The second runner-up wasFantine, a blockchain-enabled platfrom that enables coffee farmers deal with roasters and buyers directly.

The fourth and final theme,Climate Change, explored solutions that could help catalyse a low-carbon circular economy through efficient use of already exiting resources. The winner for this challenge wasPlastics for Change, an ethical sourcing platform that helps communities move towards a low-carbon, circular economy by eliminating waste. The runner-up wasAlgiKnit, a low-cost, sustainable fibre that is biodegradable which can be used in the fashion industry. The second runner-up wasAquacycl, a microbial fuel cell that can generate electricity from wastewater.

Related:For The Greater Good: Basma Altwejri's New Book, "From Society, For Society," Looks Into Social Entrepreneurship Across The MENA Region

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Aalia Mehreen Ahmed

Features Writer, Entrepreneur Middle East

Aalia Mehreen Ahmed is the Features Writer at Entrepreneur Middle East.

She is an MBA (Finance) graduate with past experience in the corporate sector, and was also co-founder of CyberSWIFTT- an anti-cyberbullying campaign that ran from 2017-2018 as part of thee7:DaughtersoftheEmiratesprogram.

Ahmed is keen on pursuing and writing stories on people-centric leadership, female-owned startups, and entrepreneurs who've beaten significant odds to realize their goals.

A self-proclaimed bibliophile, she can be often found animatedly discussing kdramas (and well, yes, BTS!), and has a penchant for chai, cricket, photography, and comic book films.

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