Difference between revisions of "Team:Tec-Monterrey/Integrated Practices"

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<p><strong>Beginnings: conversations with stakeholders and the general community.</strong></p>
 
<p><strong>Beginnings: conversations with stakeholders and the general community.</strong></p>
 
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<li><a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Tec-Monterrey/CarlosLara" target="_blank">Conversation with B.E. Carlos Lara Valenzuela, Manager of Grupo Peñoles.</a></li>
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<li><a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Tec-Monterrey/CarlosLara">Conversation with B.E. Carlos Lara Valenzuela, Manager of Grupo Peñoles.</a></li>
 
<li><a href="#">Counseling with the Geomicrobiology Laboratory of the UASLP.</a></li>
 
<li><a href="#">Counseling with the Geomicrobiology Laboratory of the UASLP.</a></li>
 
<li><a href="#">Meeting with CVR, one of the few certified e-waste recycling companies in Mexico.</a></li>
 
<li><a href="#">Meeting with CVR, one of the few certified e-waste recycling companies in Mexico.</a></li>

Revision as of 18:58, 19 October 2016

iGEM 2016 - Tec de Monterrey

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Human Practices

iGEM Tec-Monterrey 2016 is based in the most heavily polluted city in Latin America. Amidst rampant consumerism and a dearth of civic action, we’re trying to light the spark to ignite the fire of environmental consciousness.


Imagine a future where the well being of our planet is not taken seriously, where unawareness and indifference lead to contaminating millions of liters of water and our soils, producing lasting effects in human health and the environment. A world where economic interests shape our moral decisions and where the striking consequences of our actions are relentlessly ignored.


You don’t have to imagine anymore, that future is now. We are living in critical times, where the decisions we make now, will crucially affect the way of living of future generations. It is said that if you don’t do something about it, you are part of the problem too. We chose to be part of the solution instead.


General Outline

When deciding what our project would be, a key element stood out from the others. We wanted to solve a real and pressing issue that our community faces nowadays.


It wasn’t hard to come up with something: we just had to look at our cell phones, laptops, and tablets. We just had to look at the rivers of our city, polluted with TVs and toxic materials. We just had to look at the landfills competing with the mountains for the landscape of our city. We just had to look around, and the answer was right there all along.


The electronic industry is the fastest growing manufacturing industry nowadays, producing massive amounts of waste every year. The lifespan of electronics, such as computers and cellphones, is deliberately dropping and new devices keep appearing to replace the old ones. Consumerism and the unconsciousness of people cause the production of millions of tons of e-waste every year. Most of these residues meet their fate in landfills, where the hazardous substances within the waste end up being released, harming not only the environment, but also the health of people in surrounding communities.


After discussing and carefully pondering the effects that all of these issues have in our community, we, as a team, were deeply concerned about the current situation; we realized that we actually wanted to provide solution outside the lab as well as inside it. In fact, we realized that our community needed needed someone and we were placed in the perfect position to do it.


In order to achieve this, we organized our Human Practice in an integrated feedback system: we approached stakeholders and the general community with the purpose of obtaining and analyzing data to assess the severity of the problem. Then, we involved our community in different events aimed to create consciousness about e-waste pollution and the dreadful consequences of the incorrect e-waste disposal. We also wanted to inform them about the different ways in which they could participate and come up with solutions to help us improve our current situation. Throughout this process, our experience allowed us to evaluate and reshape our project according to our society’s needs.


The following is a general outline of the different events and activities we carried out as part of our Human Practices:


Beginnings: conversations with stakeholders and the general community.

  1. Conversation with B.E. Carlos Lara Valenzuela, Manager of Grupo Peñoles.
  2. Counseling with the Geomicrobiology Laboratory of the UASLP.
  3. Meeting with CVR, one of the few certified e-waste recycling companies in Mexico.
  4. Visits and interaction in our lab with the general public.

Core events: events for creating consciousness, involving our community and coming up with solutions.

  1. San Pedro de Pinta & Callejero
  2. LOL tournament
  3. E-week
  4. Radio spots and Panorama Newspaper
  5. E-waste art contest
  6. Environmental forum