Dear All,

Is anyone interested in sparking dialogues with Chinese urban ag,
aquaponics, water stewarding, and "makers" activists?

David Li combines urban ag through aquaponics (
http://blog.shanghaiaquaponics.com/) with his founding role in a Shanghai
"Makers" project(http://hackerspaces.org/wiki/Xinchejian). The "Wall Street
Journal" covered his Makers story(
http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303722604579111253495145952).
He is very interested in sharing innovations in small scale urban farming
and small scale urban manufacturing, including desk top production of
aquaponics system components.

Here are a couple of concepts from a recent David Li essay to inspire this
dialogue vision.

http://www.milwaukeerenaissance.com/EarthRenaissance/HomePage

*Chinese Mayors Mandated To Guarantee 70% of Daily Veggies Grown In City
Limit*

*From the perspective of Shanghai, food security isn't much an issue,
especially when it comes to the fresh vegetables. There is a national
policy called "vegetables basket" mandating every mayor in China has to
guarantee 70% of the daily vegetables to be produced with in the city
limit. The city track these sagas and published daily wholesales price of
over 200 vegetables. This makes interesting urban planning and let us have
access to plenty of farmlands at very affordable price with in 30 miles of
the city center. In the city, wet markets are in all neighborhoods
providing access to fresh vegetables among other at very affordable price.*

*"Farm Together" Experiment:  Urbanites Pay Farmers In Terms of Square
Meters, Not Kilograms*

*Farm Together is one of our answers to this. We are connecting urbanites
to the farms and farmers around the city and have the concept of "Buying
safe and healthy food by square meter." *

*Basically, urbanites will pay farmers to farm for them but pay in term of
square meters instead of kilogram. This frees up the farmers' risks in
ensuring enough production to sustain their income and shift the risks to
the much better off urbanites who can actually get vegetables for less then
their yearly Starbucks spending. It also remove the incentives of using
chemical fertilizers. And in the same time, we can double farmers' income. *

*Any feedback and comments are welcome! Farm Together is still work in
progress and we are launching the pilot in March this year. *

Wall Street Journal re David Li's Xinchejian, i.e  "new workshop."

Lone inventors have long tinkered in garages. But today, inventors can use
software to design objects to be produced by desktop machines like 3-D
printers. They can get funded on Kickstarter. And thanks to the Internet,
DIY is thoroughly collaborative. Rather than work on projects in secret,
people freely share their ideas and designs online. Chris Anderson, former
editor in chief of Wired, describes makers as "the Web generation creating
physical things rather than just pixels on screens."

David Li at Xinchejian

Xinchejian, founded in 2010, means "new workshop." It occupies a rented
room in a Shanghai warehouse. Members pay around $16 a month to use the
space and tools, and on Wednesday nights it is open to the public. The
Taiwan-born David Li, a 40-year-old programmer and a co-founder of
Xinchejian, wants to lower the barriers for experimentation and play. "It's
not about getting together a group of geeks doing something. It's a conduit
for people to say, 'This interactive stuff is not that scary, not that
difficult.'"

The Chinese government has taken an interest in the maker movement. Not
long after Xinchejian opened its doors, Shanghai officials announced a plan
to build 100 government-supported innovation houses. Last November,
according to Mr. Li, the Communist Youth League of Shanghai helped to
attract over 50,000 visitors to a Maker Carnival, where makers exhibited
their creations to the public.

Officials have also visited Xinchejian, and for now, Mr. Li sees their
involvement as a positive development. He notes that the lack of
accountability in the Chinese political system sometimes encourages
innovation and risk-taking. "The policy makers we meet here are genuinely
very curious. They have the resources. They are not afraid to try," he
says. "They could build bridges to nowhere, and they will still have a job."

James J. Godsil, ABD,  co-founder Sweet Water Organics, Sweet Water
Foundation,
Indo American Aquaponics Institute
*http://www.milwaukeerenaissance.com/Godsil/JamesGodsil
<http://www.milwaukeerenaissance.com/Godsil/JamesGodsil>*
*
<http://www.milwaukeerenaissance.com/SweetWaterOrganicsSweetWaterFoundation>*



-- 
James J. Godsil, ABD,  co-founder Sweet Water Organics, Sweet Water
Foundation,
Indo American Aquaponics Institute
*http://www.milwaukeerenaissance.com/Godsil/JamesGodsil
<http://www.milwaukeerenaissance.com/Godsil/JamesGodsil>*
*
<http://www.milwaukeerenaissance.com/SweetWaterOrganicsSweetWaterFoundation>*
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