Last month 麻豆果冻传媒 CA hosted #RiseLocal, celebrating inspiring examples of local innovation. Over the course of the summer, we will share blog posts from speakers starting with of Litterati, who is “crowdsource-cleaning” the planet.听
It started with a cigarette butt. 听And my 4 year old daughter. 听
I was hiking through the woods in Oakland, California when my little girl noticed a plastic tub of cat litter in a creek. 鈥淒addeeeeee,鈥 she said, 鈥渢hat doesn鈥檛 go there.鈥 That was the eye-opening moment.
I was reminded of a lesson I learned as a kid at summer camp. On visiting day, we鈥檇 each have to pick up five pieces of litter. 听When five hundred kids each pick up five pieces of litter, it doesn鈥檛 take long before you鈥檝e got a spotless camp. So I thought, why not apply that same 鈥渃rowdsource-cleaning鈥 model to the entire planet? And leverage technology to do it.
听That鈥檚 when was born. It began when I took the first photograph — of that cigarette butt — using Instagram.
听Fifty photos later I realized two things:
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Litter had become artistic and approachable.
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I was keeping a record of the positive impact I was having on the planet. (I threw out and/or recycled each piece I shot)
听Word began to spread and before long, Instagram photos from around the world started appearing with 鈥#Litterati鈥. 听That鈥檚 when I realized Litterati was more than just a collection of pretty pictures. We were becoming a community. And we were generating data. From there, it wasn鈥檛 long before we launched a Litterati iOS and Android application. 听
听Each photo tells a story. It tells us who, what, where, and when. Hashtags identify brands and products (ie: #McDonalds, #Plastic). Geotags map problem areas. Timestamps indicate seasonal trends. 听
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So I put together a Google Map, plotting the individual points where I鈥檇 picked up litter. Suddenly I could visualize the problem. And as the community grew, the data grew.
Litter blends into the background of our lives, but what if we brought it to the forefront? 听Imagine how that data could be used to make a difference? 听Here are three ways Litterati is doing just that.
听Litterati has worked with several cities including San Francisco where we鈥檝e provided data that measured the percentage of litter that came from cigarettes. The city used that data to help pass a tax on cigarette sales, generating a multi-million dollar revenue stream. But we see an even bigger opportunity; creating 鈥淐ity Litter Fingerprints鈥.
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San Francisco, CA:
Oakland, CA:
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Central Park, NY:
Those data fingerprints provide the root cause of the problem, which can lead to the path for a solution.
听We鈥檝e also started working with brands. How might this information lead to brands becoming more environmentally mindful? It could lead to product innovation, sustainable packaging, and educating their customers. Instead of being seen as the villain, they can become the hero.
听Schools are using Litterati as a citizen-science tool. And they鈥檙e already making a difference. One group of 5th graders picked up 1247 pieces of litter. More importantly, they were able to identify their school鈥檚 most common type of litter鈥娾斺妏lastic straw wrappers from the cafeteria.
Armed with this information, they approached the principal and asked why the school was still buying individually wrapped straws.
So they made a change. They stopped using straws and started using reusable water bottles. Simple and effective.
That first cigarette has now become a community in 114 countries. And recently, Litterati was . Word is spreading.
Our world鈥檚 most complex problems require long-term thinking and even a change in consciousness. But it starts with one simple act. For anyone who believes this problem is too big, that your contribution won鈥檛 matter, you鈥檙e wrong. You can make a difference. And together, we create an impact.听