Since there are no currently active contests, we have switched Climate CoLab to read-only mode.
Learn more at https://climatecolab.org/page/readonly.
Skip navigation

Please find below the judging results for your proposal.

Finalist Evaluation

Judges'' comments


SUBJECT: Climate CoLab Judging Results

Proposal: Base Zero


Thank you for participating in the 2015 Climate CoLab Industry contest, and for the time you spent in creating and revising your entry.

The Judges have strongly considered your proposal in this second round of evaluation, and have chosen to not advance it as a Finalist for this contest.

We, the Judges and contest Fellows, are truly grateful for your contribution to the Climate CoLab and for your commitment to address climate change.

We encourage you to keep developing your work. Transfer it to the Proposal Workspace to re-open it, make edits, add collaborators, and even submit it into a future contest. You can do so by logging into your account, opening your proposal, selecting the Admin tab, and clicking “Move proposal”.

We hope you will stay involved in the Climate CoLab community. Please support and comment on proposals that have been named Finalists and vote for which proposal you would like to be nominated as the contest’s Popular Choice Winner.

If you have questions, please contact the Climate CoLab staff at admin@climatecolab.org

Keep up the great work. And thank you again for being a part of this mission to harness the world’s collective efforts to develop and share innovative climate change solutions.



2015 Climate CoLab Judges

This proposal is well written. The proposed idea looks challenging and difficult to implement.

How broad and complex would the data base become? It could quickly be overwhelmed by the amount of information (Infinite in size/materials).

It would be useful to make a pilot in a test phase. This is a big idea, but needs to be undertaken in very small steps.

Industry use of the database might be small & information might be less of a decision making criteria for industry than the proposal anticipates.

Semi-Finalist Evaluation

Judges'' ratings


Novelty:
Feasibility:
Impact:
Presentation:

Judges'' comments


SUBJECT: Your proposal has been selected as a Semi-Finalist!

Congratulations! Your proposal, Base Zero in the Industry contest, has been selected to advance to the Semi-Finalists round.

You will be able to revise your proposal and add new collaborators if you wish, from July 1st until July 14, 2015 at 23:59pm Eastern Time.

Judges' feedback are posted under the "Evaluation" tab of your proposal. Please incorporate this feedback in your revisions, or your proposal may not be advanced to the Finalists round. We ask you to also summarize the changes that you made in the comment section of the Evaluation tab.

At the revision deadline listed below, your proposal will be locked and considered in final form. The Judges will undergo another round of evaluation to ensure that Semi-Finalist proposals have addressed the feedback given, and select which proposals will continue to the Finalists round. Finalists are eligible for the contest’s Judges Choice award, as well as for public voting to select the contest’s Popular Choice award.

Thank you for your great work and again, congratulations!


2015 Climate CoLab Judges



An interesting concept. Unfortunately the challenge of making this work is in the details of how it is designed and implemented.

The proposal says "Base Zero is first and foremost an interactive international database for alternative materials, resources, processes, technologies, and idea exchange between various stakeholders and industries." It also says: "This would allow for greater transparency and provide end users with exact information on how much/little they are contributing to GHG emissions when buying a product or service; putting a bit more responsibility back on the general public, while also initiating competition amongst industry players, encouraging businesses to aim towards a Zero rating." (Not sure how "services" come into this. What types of services?)

This latter statement seems aspirational and is a lot to accomplish. A simple start would be to achieve a basic database for one product line or even industry. To promote this, pick an example industry and explain what types of technologies, processes and alternative materials would be included in the database. Explain how the 1-20 rating scale would be developed? Is it based on actual GHG performance data for a characteristic and then tied to percentile performance within say a product class? If so, this is tremendously costly to study and evaluate. Will $1 million dollars really cover the work needed?

How extensive is this database? How many inputs to industries would it cover? Which industries? In chemical production, for example, there are so many inputs that could be supplied through sustainable and lower GHG means that it is difficult to imagine this database coming together easily. The entire green chemistry field here is the US would be a good example to model to show how Base Zero would work. What other sectors would this database enhance? How would Base Zero be kept simple and easy to use?

The researcher has done a great job with this proposal. The proposal is clear and appealing. The effort described in this proposal would be very challenging. Implementation of this idea would be very difficult.

2comments
Share conversation: Share via:

Mairead Ahern

Jul 14, 2015
11:47

Member


1 |
Share via:
Proposal
creator
Thank you for your feedback and suggestions. The green chemistry field is indeed quite interesting and comprehensive, and something that Base Zero could consider in the future with further resources and assistance - this is an an area of research onto itself. While it has to be noted that the chemical industry is indeed of huge relevance to a wide range of inputs into materials across most industries, Base Zero is first and foremost a materials database - primarily aimed at materials development and manufacturing in the built/physical environment - covering industries such as product/appliance manufacture/design, construction/architecture, textile/apparel production, engineering (manufacturing/civil/electrical), to begin with, a full and comprehensive investigation could/probably should be carried out in the chemical industry at some point, and as specifie Base Zero would be open to this in the future. There is another segment of Base Zero which could not fit into the space of the main description - 'The Loop' - a system where various industrial stakeholder can recycle outputs and waste that could be of use or value to another industry - closing the loop on certain materials.

Mairead Ahern

Jul 15, 2015
07:48

Member


2 |
Share via:
Proposal
creator
One of the main potential challenges in attempting to keep this venture realistic and feasible is the scale of the operation. If all of the main elements, features and claims of the database were attempted by a singular entity/organisation working alone it would indeed take some time. However, linking in with other organisations who are already researching/working in high-priority sectors across several industries can cut costs and time-lines considerably - such as the Clean Technology Centre, CIT, Cork., NUIG Galway, Trinity College Dublin, Queens University Belfast, and the University of Limerick, to name a few local opportunities (there are various other EPA funded collaborators identified further a field - U.K., Denmark, Belgium). Initial target industry/company - Irish CRH PLC - ranked second in the world as a leading building material manufacturer - producing stone, clay, glass, and concrete products. The partnering entities/institutes will be carrying out/supplying most of the primary research - we will be designing the tool to integrate this research into industry (a suitable development/design team has been identified). Base Zero is not attempting to re-invent the wheel just helping it to run more efficiently on a smoother path. One of the downfalls in some large-scale sustainable/renewable research and 'impact' projects may be the fact that there are a lot of organisations and research initiatives in various regions doing great work, towards similar goals, but there seems to be a gap in effective knowledge sharing and integration - increased collaboration and unity between departments, entities, and industry players could help in over-all industrial emission reduction. Aside from some of the more commercial profit-focused materials databases/catalogues, a lot of the more 'industrial' technical materials databases are not that clear, flexible, interesting, interactive, easy to read, or navigate; with very few images/visuals, if any. The data inputs can vary quite a bit too, and of course GHG emission data/embedded energy stats are not commonplace at all yet. This would be the main task of Base Zero - work with industry/multiple end-users to come up with a database which employs a set of stats and properties general enough to cover materials in most industries - but flexible enough to allow further categories, sub-categories, images, and notes to be added easily by users in any industry/region, if needed; without having to set-up an entirely new database for each industry/field/company (this would be monitored by Base Zero). Going back to the chemical industry again, the EPA have recently revealed their Chem-view database - providing analysis of a range of different chemical inputs mainly related to chemical health and safety. While they are still in the process of inputting data they are also openly inviting feedback and suggestions to the system - which is a very positive indicator of more human/user-led design-thinking approach. This also indicates a gap in the market for a system which works well and efficiently from the start. Base Zero could also link-in/partner with the EPA’s Chem-view database and form some sort of mutually-beneficial working/learning alliance. Just to clarify further on Base Zero's 0-20 rating system, as I did not have enough space to elaborate on this in the main descriptor section: In terms of how exactly this rating system will be implemented, it could work in two ways: (a) Materials would be bench-marked against other materials with the highest embedded energies in their particular sector - for example Nylon has an embedded energy at approx. 250MJ per KG - if this was to be examined in the context of the apparel industry alone, it would be the '20' top rating material in this category. Polyester (at 125MJ/KG), would be somewhere in the middle with a '10' rating. More natural materials such as cotton and wool at 55/63MJ/KG would reside somewhere around '5', while hemp and flax fibers would be closer to '1'. This may be easier to set up initially, particularly if the database is beginning with researching one industry sector at a time. (b) Calculate the highest possible embedded energy rating of a material, use this as the top standard and work backwards in specific increments of MJ/KG - similar to how diamond was used as the industry standard for toughness. This might take more time to work out initially but could be equally as effective. Either of the above approaches will only count for one section of the over-all 0-20 rating, the embedded energy in the raw material (which is fine if that is the only information that is required by the user), however, the materials/products will also be analysed analysed under the following separate categories: -energy used on additional varying manufacturing/plant processes (again bench-marked against the most/least energy intensive production facilities). -transport (to try and encourage users of the system to purchase as close to source as possible). -rating on re-cycling/up-cycling/degradable capabilities. An average of these combined ratings will then be calculated to produce a more accurate final 0-20 product rating. In terms of what is actually measured – standard physical and chemical properties, processing options, usage properties, as well as sustainable indicators (embedded energies, GHG emissions, cradle-to-grave), availability (list of companies & relevant contact information), as well as a section to indicate how/if material properties of a given material can be altered in different environmental/climatic conditions. Additional feature 1 - 'The Loop' - ultra sustainable material selection section - a section of the site where users can upload information of their waste/unused materials - this is particularly relevant in the construction sector, considering more than 30% of all waste produced in the U.S. is currently from demolition/renovation activities. Additional feature 2 - 'E-mission calculator' - emission and energy calculator - data can be input by individual users at any stage, or if they are a regular user of the site, performing most of their material-related activities through Base Zero, then their energy/emission saving figures are continually updated as they go, and available at any time - a useful tool going forward for bigger industry players. Additional feature 3 - 'Exchange Base' - moving further into the future of Base Zero, similar to systems such as the EEN (Enterprise Europe Network) there will be a section for information, innovation, and technology requests and offerings - primarily relating to industrial material, process, technology, or product based ventures and collaborations of a sustainable or resource-efficient nature (for example a project to re-design/re-engineer a more efficient technology/process to recover waste-water heat energy in aluminium production). All users - manufacturers, suppliers, producers, designers, engineers etc., indeed individuals from any background or corner of the globe can engage with this service - helping good ideas/suggestions, or industry needs/requests, gain visibility, recognition, and assistance from the global Base Zero community. Additional feature 4 - Macro / Micro Base Zero sub-sections: As the system builds and progresses it will separate into two divisions - Macro - geared towards large-scale industrial data transactions, and bulk ordering volumes; including a 'Macro' Loop system. Micro - geared towards users with smaller data needs/material quantities, including a 'Micro' Loop system - which would include smaller volume translations, but a larger number of options/input waste material varieties. This might also be a good way of attracting a broader, more varied, member base - including much younger members - in encouraging them to observe, learn, interact and engage with the features and benefits of the system - as these are the up-and-coming problem solvers and climate 'tool-makers' of tomorrow... Again, thank you to all of the Co-lab members and judges for your assistance and attention!