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Dear <<First Name>>,

Thanks for reading the Island Innovation newsletter! If you were forwarded this email or accessed it through a link, don't forget to subscribe here and stay up to date on the latest sustainability news from islands and remote regions around the world.

Can blockchain really benefit island communities?
 
What do you think of when you hear about “blockchain”? To put it simply blockchain is a list of records that securely stores information. It uses virtual technology to decentralize information by documenting it across a network of computers - no central entity runs the system, but many people can use it.

Blockchain uses a form of data logging to ensure that the information cannot be changed or corrupted by anyone else. There is a lot of hype and hot air around blockchain, but then there was too around the dot-com boom - which today is central to many areas of our lives. 




Proponents argue blockchain is revolutionary by getting rid of fees and reducing friction to allow money to flow more freely internationally - for better or for worse. It can improve accountability, provide transparency and reduce the potential of fraud. It could even improve the way we vote

ReadThe Green New Deal Must Benefit Black And Hispanic Americans

Blockchain often gets conflated with cryptocurrency - which is its best-known use, but not necessarily the most important. Cryptocurrency can be seen as a tool or resource on a blockchain network and Bitcoin is the best-known but there are many others such as Solar Coin, KWHCoin and Dogecoin.

But how does this impact island communities? The blockchain is a technology that could revolutionize global communications and benefit many people. Island communities have been some of the early adopters, quick to see opportunities to earn money. Island jurisdictions can often move quickly to adopt new technologies and smaller governments have the agility needed to legislate for rapidly changing technology.

  • Malta was called the “World’s Blockchain Island” after attracting interest from thousands of crypto-investors.
  • The Marshall Islands became the first country in the world to launch a digital legal tender
  • After Hurricane Maria, Puerto Rico attracted many blockchain enthusiasts in a bid to attract much-needed capital.
  • Already a European financial centre, Jersey has launched some of the most advanced regulations for blockchain.
  • The autonomous Jeju Island has proposed being “a special zone for blockchain and cryptocurrency” despite a blanket ban in South Korea.
There are many other exciting examples of blockchain use in the clean energy sector that could be replicated in islands communities - proliferating access to renewables and improving energy efficiency.

In rural Eastern North Carolina, communities may pay huge portions of their income to electric cooperatives that have monopoly on electricity supply. KWHCoin - a project using blockchain - is looking to change that and increase access to renewable energy. The token model rewards energy efficiency, sustainable behaviors, renewable energy generation, demand-response data entries and tracks energy usage of electric cooperative members. This could help the region recover after the devasting hurricanes last year and improve access to investment.

ReadRethinking Our Oceans: Investing In The Blue Economy

In Long Island, New York, Brooklyn Microgrid is developing a community-powered microgrid. Participants can engage in a sustainable energy network and choose their preferred energy sources. Residents with solar panels can sell excess energy back to their neighbours, in a peer-to-peer transaction which takes advantage of blockchain.

In Australia, a company called Power Ledger is using peer-to-peer lending is allowing electricity consumers to receive and trade energy with power companies, and each other. This allows for the democratisation of energy and fundamentally changes people's relationship with their utility. Opportunities include new business models for utility companies and shared ownership of renewable energy systems for people living in apartment buildings.

Blockchain is providing a new level of sophistication to our energy supplies which have previously been reliant on highly centralized systems. For island communities, the opportunities are potentially endless, and could inject new life into cash-poor areas. With increased efficiency, blockchain could allow for a substantial reduction of carbon emissions. (Although a word of caution is needed: energy-intensive cryptocurrency mining has contributed to increasing emissions, emitting almost as much carbon dioxide as the whole of Peru last year).

ReadThese Islands Are Leading The Drive For Hydrogen Energy
  
So if your eyes glaze over when you see blockchain… don’t discount it… it could be the next internet!

Please take advantage of discussing today's topics further in the members-only Island Innovation Facebook Group. The next newsletter will be out in two weeks and focus on refugees in island and rural communities.

Thank you for reading,
James Ellsmoor

P.S. Did you enjoy the content so far and want to hear more? Then please pledge a few dollars to help cover the hosting expenses to continue sending you the latest information and resources. See the Patreon page for more details.

Thank you to my top tier patrons: James Stockan, Nathalie Mezza-Garcia, Robert Stewart and Task Ninja (Jamaica).

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Energy Stories

Interesting stories about energy from around the world: 

  • A new study shows that black and Hispanic Americans lack access to solar power - and the reasons go beyond economics.
  • Dominica plans to power 23,000 homes with geothermal energy, which represents approximately 90% of the entire population.
  • The Puerto Rico solar map is a new collaborative effort to provide a tool and data on renewable energy uptake.
  • The remote Japanese island of Hahajima in the Ogasawara chain is using solar energy in a government-supported trial to expand renewables.
  • The Prime Minister of the Cook Islands says renewables are their best option.
  • Bonaire is adding a 6MW energy storage system to balance its solar and wind assets with backup diesel generators.

Pioneering efforts for marine and hydrogen energy in Orkney

Tucked away in Scotland’s far north is an archipelago steeped in history, its’ sandstone cliffs holding the secrets of Neolithic settlements, Viking raids and… renewable energy?

Orkney has Europe's most advanced energy research. Read here.

 

A New Caribbean Podcast

The Journal of Caribbean Environmental Sciences and Renewable Energy (CESaRE) is an open-access academic project to share research on the environmental sciences and make it readily available for the general public. Far too often, inaccessible Journals hinder the public and the private sector from engaging with major scientific findings and discourse - but CESaRE is changing that!

Other stories worth sharing

A selection of stories relevant to innovation and sustainable development from around the world:

  • The “blue economy” is a radical approach to rethinking the way we interact with our oceans. - featuring projects in Palau and Seychelles.
  • Chain hotel Sandals has announced its withdrawal from a proposed resort in Tobago.
  • A young generation of British-Caribbean chefs are reclaiming their culinary heritage and bringing it to a new audience
  • Jamaica has the world's best-performing stock market.
  • A new academic article discusses the implications of religion for climate change adaptation in the South Pacific.
  • Vanuatu uses drones to deliver vaccines to remote island.
  • Tumeric is providing new economic opportunities in Belize.
  • Barbados will on April 1 begin a phased ban on plastics entering the country.
  • Shetland Wool Week is hailed as the worldwide mecca of knitting festivals.

Saint Helena is facing serious problems as tourism fails to materialise

The Atlantic island recently had £285 million spent on its first airport - which replaced a week-long boat journey to Cape Town. However, the tourism boom which islanders hope would save the economy has not been anywhere near the numbers predicted. Read here.

Thank you to everyone who has read, shared, supported and donated to help make this newsletter happen. I cannot thank you enough for your help and encouragement and look forward to seeing where this project will go!

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Previous newsletters are available here.

Please feel free to contact me, connect on LinkedinTwitter, or my website.

Feedback is always welcome!

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Island Innovation · Woore · Crewe, Cheshire CW3 · United Kingdom