For the past three years, Adarsha Shivakumar
has worked nights and weekends to run a non-profit dedicated to helping
impoverished Indian farmers produce biofuels. He has formed an alliance
with an NGO and a biotech company to ensure that growers get a good
price for their product. And he has used personal funds to purchase
seedlings for villagers willing to try a sustainable crop.
Not a bad resume for a 16-year-old.
Brower winner Adarsha Shivakumar. Photo: Earth Island Institute
This week the Pleasant Hill native received the prestigious Brower Youth Award
for “environmental leadership,” at a ceremony in San Francisco. He is
being honored for mixing economics and environmentalism, in his efforts
to aid tobacco farmers in India’s Karnataka region.
Shivakumar, who acts as though founding a
non-profit is something most high school juniors do in their spare
time, grew up visiting the region annually with his family. While
there, he was taken aback by the hard life of the local tobacco
farmers. His Indian relatives told him that the workers were at the
mercy of the crop’s unstable price.
By the time he was twelve he had another
realization: the farmers' over-reliance on tobacco was leading to the
slow-motion demolition of a nearby national forest.
“When we went there each year, what we noticed
was that more and more sections of forest were just disappearing on the
outskirts,” the Oakland College Preparatory High School
student said. “This was due to tobacco growing, because what happens is
the farmers have to cure the tobacco that they grow, and that requires
firewood–a lot of firewood: two kilograms plus of firewood for one
kilogram of tobacco.”
“It’s having a huge impact on the wildlife there. Each year…the forest is just steadily being destroyed,” he said.
So the American pre-teen decided to do
something. Biofuels were big news in the United States at the time, but
corn-based ethanol was getting a bad rap for causing food shortages. So
he hunted around for a crop that could produce biofuel, but didn’t
double as dinner for families in the developing world. Eventually he
settled on Jotrapha curcas, a semi-poisonous plant that is hearty
enough to survive the occasional drought and produces seeds that
contain about 35% oil.
By encouraging villagers to plant Jotrapha, as
well as the tobacco they traditionally grow, Shivakumar would aim to
increase the farmers’ income and protect the ecologically sensitive
forests nearby (Shivakumar took mild offense at a recent report on NPR
about the harsh realities of Jatropha growing in Kenya. He says it's
important not to rely solely on Jatropha as a cash crop, and has
learned from his time in Karnataka that, like any plant, Jatropha must
be watered and cared for.)
At 13 he teamed up with his younger sister,
Apoorva Rangan, and the two of them scrounged together what money they
had to buy seedlings and get “Project Jatropha” off the ground. “When I
was in the seventh grade I’d won the California State Spelling Bee and
I got around $600 from that as a cash prize and I used that money to
jumpstart the project,” Shivakumar said. “Apoorva and I had some funds
that we had from baby sitting and all, and we used that as well,” he
added.
The two worked with the farmers for weeks,
trying to gain their trust and convince them to mix a little Jatropha
in with their tobacco. In a culture where respect comes with age,
Shivakumar said, this was no easy task.
But with the help of a local NGO called Parivarthana (Sanskrit for "change") and the biotech company Labland Biotechs,
he secured a deal that he hoped would make Jatropha planting
profitable. Parivarthana would help teach the farmers sustainable
agriculture, and Labland–which converts Jatropha into biofuel–would pay
the growers for every kilogram of the crop they produced.
Shivakumar said that two years on, Project
Jatropha is expanding and going strong. He still devotes hours of his
days to communicating with workers in India, but said that lately much
of his time has been swallowed up by media requests. He takes on these
interviews, he said, to remind others that they can make a difference.
“We have to take action now–that’s the main
thing,” he said. “And I hope Project Jatropha will show that it’s
possible to take action and affect people in greater ways, and we hope
to motivate and inspire others to take action as well.”
The Brower Youth award comes with a $3,000 prize,
and it’s not hard to guess how Shivakumar will spend his winnings.
“When I found out that we won, I was shocked yet very happy to say the
least, because the $3000 cash prize we got is being reinvested into the
project,” he said. |