Student鈥檚 Business Plan is the Bee鈥檚 Knees
By
暗网爆料app

Four 暗网爆料app students are abuzz about the business project they hope will empower women and children in the developing world through sustainable beekeeping. , created by Jakob Colombo, Charlotte Cheek, Mikaela Harn and Timmy Rizk, won the 暗网爆料app鈥檚 27th business plan competition. This annual event encourages entries that could solve some of the deepest problems encountered by disadvantaged families in poverty-stricken areas.
In 2013, , director of 暗网爆料app鈥檚 Eaton Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation at 暗网爆料app, shifted the focus of the completion toward finding solutions to help the poorest of the poor around the world.
The students have been working closely with the Santa Barbara Bee Keeping Association and Empowerment and Care Organization (EACO) in the Mukono district of Uganda. They seek to implement a bee business in Uganda that will provide a source of revenue for the community.

鈥淔or years, the people in the rural villages of Mukono have been struggling to deal with many problems, primarily HIV/AIDS and access to clean water,鈥 Harn says. 鈥淭he EACO is scraping together funds to feed a seemingly never-ending number of mouths. However, by harnessing the power of the African honey bee and using its natural product, honey, the EACO can create a sustainable way to generate income.鈥
According to a former director of the Ugandan National Apiculture Development Organization, the country has the potential to produce roughly 500,000 metric tons of honey per year, more than China, the world鈥檚 top producer.
鈥淥ur goal is to make it as easy as possible for any community anywhere to start a beekeeping farm and generate enough revenue to become self-sustaining,鈥 Colombo says. 鈥淢aking this project replicable was at the core of our model. We have created a guide that allows others to duplicate this project in other areas around the world.鈥
Beecause is licensed under a creative commons license, allowing the students to grant permission to others to share and use their work without obtaining specific authorization for each use. 鈥淲e want to make it as easy as possible for others to share and build upon our work,鈥 Cheek says.
The team is focusing on its current project and delivering the needed equipment to Uganda. 鈥淲e have been contacted by another community in South Africa that loves our project and wants to implement it there,鈥 Rizk says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e also pursuing a possible collaboration with a U.S.-based organization that鈥檚 empowering women and children through micro-financing in Uganda. They want to see if our project could possibly be micro-financed instead of relying on fundraising.
鈥淲e鈥檙e passionate about helping people in the developing world and believe that the best way to alleviate poverty is to empower communities to become sustainable and self-dependent. Establishing this bee business in Uganda is the first step in perfecting a model than can be replicated to help other communities.鈥
The struggling global bee population benefits from the project as well. 鈥淭hese insects are directly responsible for pollinating 70 percent of crop species that feed 90 percent of the world,鈥 Cheek says. 鈥淪ince 2006, billions of bees worldwide have died, including more than three million colonies in America.鈥
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