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Harvesting the future: Gabriel Salazar at TEDxGuatemalaCity

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    (Aplause)
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    Good afternoon, thank you.
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    Thank you for that introducction.
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    As I was telling you, wee sell packaging
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    that are: disposable, organic and enviromentaly friendly.
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    I don´t know if you, during coffee break or lunch,
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    had the chance of using these cups.
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    Everyone. (applause) I´m going to hand the over to you
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    because I want to explain one of the characteristics of the material
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    so that you can touch it. If you didn´t know
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    that they were Green Pack cups.
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    If you would do me the favor of passing them around.
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    The disposable organic compounds that we sell
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    are plastic substitutes, though they are
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    equally capable.
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    If you would have had a coffe in a "styrofoam" cup
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    or in a plastic one, you would have ingested more than 23 toxic substances
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    which is not ideal for drinking coffee.
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    So, we are focused in developing new tecnologies
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    to make a product that is 100% organic
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    which is what we are made of.
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    We use a non eatable corn starch
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    which is not approved by the FDA
    -- in case you want to attack me
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    of making the prices go up--
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    That is not true. If we don´t use this rejected corn
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    to make these packages, the corn is burned.
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    So we are using a not eatable corn starch
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    and non eatable tuber starch.
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    How does this work?
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    So in reality, thanks to what we have developed in
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    packaging material, we have made a product that
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    has a porous texture, which is microscopic, which enables
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    microorganisms to degrade it
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    and that is what "biodegradable" really means
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    it is the ability for a raw material
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    or a finished product to be degraded
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    by microorganisms in a certain time span.
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    There are certain plastics with added substances such as "oxo", as an example.
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    which is what makes plastic degradable,
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    never the less
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    it is never consumed by microorganisms
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    so we are making it worse
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    by turning it to a hard to recollect object
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    and we are just talking about a small percentage of the total
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    of these products that are compatible with the "oxo" substance
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    in normal recycled plastic systems.
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    So, it is worse
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    and I don´t , actually,
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    I don´t want to talk to you about how harmful plastic is
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    because I think that we are all aware of how
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    harmful plastic is in our ecosystems
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    I, took the liberty of including some "slides"
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    So that you can see the things
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    that happen every day and we don't notice
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    these are really alarming pictures.
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    In this one, it is not that the bags are
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    so well coordinated. (laughter)
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    It is a "photoshop" that aludes to what animals eat
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    because there are animals that eat "jellyfish". There is a food chain
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    and it is sad to watch animals eat plastic
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    and end up dying.
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    2 million turtles die every year, solely due to the consumption of plastic
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    It is a truly alarming statistic
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    Can someone tell me what this is?
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    No, How about now?
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    60 000 plastic bags are eaten
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    every 5 seconds, this is impressive!
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    Personally, since I was a boy
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    I thought it was incredible to be given a disposable
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    which was the purpose of have a very short life span
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    and then that I have to throw it away in a garbige bin
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    and that this raw material takes some 600 to 800 years to degrade.
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    I think something doesn't add up, I don't know about you...
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    I don't know if you remember before the ipod came out
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    what we used? Walkman, discman..
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    The walkman was inmense
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    If you went jogging you would end up doing only Julio Martinez.
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    jogging... because you would have your shorts here
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    (laughter)
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    If you were mugged you could hit the theaf
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    with the walkman and knock him out.
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    Steve Jobs had a phrase that I really liked,
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    when he introduced the ipod he said:
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    "I like to think that in a small way
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    we are making the planet a better place", and that way of thinking
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    is what I´m so fond of.
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    This is the way we think every day at Green Pack.
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    We believe that we are making a change with the product we sell
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    and, actually, I don't know if you can tell
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    but I speak of this subject passionately
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    and I love my product.
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    I'm actually going to change the subject briefly
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    I think that the only time that I messed up an appointment ,
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    I remember this was a few years ago
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    we went to a poultry to develop a new egg package
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    and the manager tells me: Look your product is very good
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    but I need my egg to be exposed
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    (laughter)
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    we didn't have a good start right?
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    So, we obviously didn't fur-fill this requirement
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    because our packaging isn't transparent.
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    There's a statistic here in Guatemala, that one of every two kids
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    of less that 5 years of age suffers form chronic malnutrition
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    that's alarming!
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    If you think about it that's 50% of all kids
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    of less that 5 years of age suffers form chronic malnutrition.
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    I think it´s incredible.
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    A few years ago, thanks to my wife,
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    I got involved in an activity called "Un techo para mi pais".
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    We went to Santa Rosa to help build
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    and then I continued to be involved,
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    As of that moment a social commitment was awoken in me.
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    There for I decided to continue to be involved in this initiative.
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    and I started to experience first hand
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    the malnutrition index, which is truly impressive.
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    It is staggering!
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    the kids are skinny not because they are form Zacapa
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    or because "Oh, how cute, they're skiny!" they are skinny
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    because they have a high malnutrition index
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    and that is truly alarming, really alarming.
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    So, what do I do after that
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    I go see my uncle
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    who has 40 years of social service
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    and I tell him I have to work with him and I have to meet with him
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    to, at leaste, brain storm
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    and see what comes out.
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    And I realized that there was a plant, and this plant
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    has 3 times the protein of an egg of every 100 grams
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    it has 4 times the calcium of milk
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    7 times the vitamin C of an orange,
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    3 times more potassium than a banana,
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    and 2 times more iron than spinach .
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    how?
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    this is amazing!
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    and besides this I'm told that it is
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    one of the fastest growing plants in the world
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    in grows 3.5 meters every 9 months
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    This is great!
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    Then he tells me:" pay attention to this, it is very interesting,
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    if the seeds are passed through a compression process in cold temperatures
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    -- in other words a simple manual compression process--
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    the seeds are compressed and oil is obtained
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    This oil has the same properties
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    as a vegetable oil. What does this mean?
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    I can cook with this oil. And what's so good about it?
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    that these nutrients will trans pass to the food
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    you're cooking with this oil
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    this... this can't be, well
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    another good property of this plant
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    then he say's: "but that is not all,
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    after you compress the seeds and obtain the oil
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    you'll have the peel left, in the middle
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    you have a very thin layer of a sticky substance
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    that brakes the skin when compressed
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    and this layer is exposed."
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    He tells me that I can take a bucket of waste water,
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    river water, lake water, what ever is close to the community
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    I can take the shell and put it in the bucket
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    then I stir it for about ten minutes
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    and this sticky substance makes the small particules
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    of impurities, 14% of the batteries and soil stick to it
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    and when I remove the peel it is glued to all these impurities
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    then I don't get a bucket with drinkable water,
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    but I do obtain a bucket with water suitable for washing
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    clothes, and may other uses
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    that have been developed by this community
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    all in one incredible plant, this can not be, and he tells me:" that is not all".
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    (laughter)
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    drooling,
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    and he tells me:" this plant is used in may countries
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    it comes form India, but it is used in may countries
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    for the seed exchange". What does this mean?
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    well,
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    If I'm for instance growing "chile pimiento",I can plant
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    "Moringa oleifera" trees in between the "chile pimientos"
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    and during the dry season the roots have such a capacity
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    to store water that it can feed
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    the crops during the dry season.
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    This means that this plant is not only good for eating
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    but it also helps to grow other crops.
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    impressive, I thought this was impressive.
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    With that starting point
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    we decided to start the project
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    I said "I've got to do something with this plant now!"
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    and so we implemented it in Green Pack.
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    And it's been a way to do social awareness marketing
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    why?
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    Because people are interested in showing our product
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    because it is very innovative, and low cost
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    and here I'll tell you the key word: It's sustainable
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    this plant has foliage during the whole year ,
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    It continues to grow and to produce seeds
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    and the results in the community have been outstanding!
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    Of the 3.5 meters that it grows for every 9 months, we managed
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    4 meters in 7 months. This is incredible!
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    Soil in Guatemala is very fertile
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    and it's obviously fit for growing this plant.
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    It was introduced with a very simple method, as I'm telling you.
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    I repeat: it's sustainable, low cost, and uses
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    a small amount of recurrences, though it's effective.
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    We take the plant....
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    We have more than 37 families enrolled
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    in the beta community in San Basilio Suchitepéquez.
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    And this is just the beginning of what we intend to cover
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    The whole region, it's a very simple system, very very simple
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    this is literally the first family
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    that we helped in San Basilio
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    and... well, the clip that you see is our film
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    it's biodegradable,
    So it's a social program
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    with no environmental impact, which is also very importaint
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    for us, and we're proud to be able to say it.
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    we also produce a home made fertilizer.
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    What does it include? it has: onions, garlic,
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    detergent for washing dishes, cigar tobacco.
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    A good use for tobacco, right?
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    It is something, as I tell you, very low cost
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    and it works. This is the first harvest
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    We are already growing the plant here
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    and this was the first harvest, that we managed to get.
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    It is after two months approximately
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    and, therefore, we decided to implement a barrier...
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    One of the problems we had was
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    that the grasshopper plague eats.
    Like any project,
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    When one begins, there is always a failure.
    But you have to correct them.
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    So we decided to implement one of these biodegradable cups,
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    we cut it here, we put it in the stem,
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    We put fertilizer in them,
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    It means that we are optimizing the use of fertilizer
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    because it only goes around the stem.
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    We are optimizing the water for irrigation is a specific measure.
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    We use 8 ounce cups, it is sprinkled with 8 ounces of water.
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    It is a really wonderful plant.
    This is the plant,
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    Maybe that I commented les that in 6 months
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    already reached a height
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    greater than expected; It is to say that the project works.
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    Then, how is it consumed?
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    We teach workshops to the community for consumption
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    Moringa and, well, the truth is that they ended up giving me a workshop
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    on how to harvest it because, obviously,
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    I'm not going to go and teach them how to harvest crops
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    When they have been doing this for their entire lives. Then,
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    It is a very simple process and everything is manual:
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    I cut the plant, we put it to dry 4 days,
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    then spent it 4 exact days, manual strain
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    and strain it with a spoon. Simple.
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    And that is what is called
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    Moringa flour or flour of moringa.
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    This moringa flour is what contains all the nutrients
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    that I talked about just a moment ago
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    and this moringa flour is implemented in typical meals of the community, such as
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    tortillas, chicken soup,
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    and I'd like to comment that, it makes me very proud
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    to have reached the community, and the community
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    greeted me with tamales de chipilín with moringa.
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    That is, they consume it and recipes are invented
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    and it has been impressive, impressive.
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    And, finally, the dosage of moringa.
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    Why do we ration it?
    Because we have strategic partners
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    and I take this opportunity to give thanks to the New Guatemala,
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    through these partner foundations
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    We want to bring the moringa to communities
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    in where you cannot grow this plant, because
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    chronic malnutrition is a problem that not only is
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    in places where this plant is grown
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    but it's across the country.
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    Then we ration it, always with biodegradable packaging.
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    (Laughter)
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    And, as that is the purpose.
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    It makes sad, it makes me very sad.
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    When I got to St. Basil, I saw that the Health Center looks like this
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    and it was desolate and abandoned, I don't know since when
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    But, what happens with these health centers?
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    There's enough budget to buy Incaparina
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    for 3 months, to buy protein
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    to buy vitamin A and vitamin C
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    But what happens after those 3 months?
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    That there is no budget. This has not been given follow-up.
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    So, in my opinion is a solution, despite the redundancy,
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    sustainable and low cost that can continue
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    the community of St. Basil.
    And not only that,
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    It generates revenue for the community of St. Basil.
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    San Basilio is a community, only to enter the road
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    to the community is between one hour and hour and a half dirt.
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    Extreme dirt, for certainly not any path of Earth.
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    And, then, no matter how much they harvest
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    It is to feed themselves.
    They don't sell anything,
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    because there's no one who goes there and buys thinghs
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    And is that our work,
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    to generate income in the community
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    and take this moringa to other malnourished communities.
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    And, then, I hope this is only the beginning
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    a project that will include many region in Guatemala,
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    because the project is ambitious.
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    It's my pleasure to bring this opportunity to the community of San Basilio.
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    You have to know this people of San Basilio.
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    I urge companies and individuals today here present
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    to get attention to the Department
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    Corporate Social responsibility
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    because if all the companies do something as well,
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    Guatemala would be different.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Harvesting the future: Gabriel Salazar at TEDxGuatemalaCity
Description:

Gabriel Salazar presents the multiple benefits of the Moringa olifeira plant, which comes form India and has remarkable sustainability characteristics. Moringa flour, which is extracted form this plant has some interesting nutritional that can be a powerful tool to fight malnutrition in communities around Guatemala. the testing phase of the project took place in San Basilio Suchitepequez and it has had very good results. This ambitious project seeks to attract the attention of businesses and individuals so that they to take action to fight social problems. This social program is carried out with no environmental impact.

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Video Language:
Spanish
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
19:43
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