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Hackathon sets its sights on climate change solutions in Asia and the Pacific

Following the for the consequences of a global increase in temperatures of more than 1.5 degrees Celsius, a group of 130 open source activists and students bunkered down to develop mobile apps around UNESCO鈥檚 soon to-be-published climate handbook for journalists in Asia and the Pacific.
Aided by 18 facilitators and a steady supply of healthy snacks, the 22 teams made up of students from computer science, environment activists and journalism studies, worked throughout the weekend to build mobile phone apps using open source code that could aid journalists in reporting climate change stories.
Hosted by Officience and supported by the Government of Malaysia through UNESCO鈥檚 , and and the community of open-source software advocates in Asia, the promoted the development of innovative apps which were gender sensitive, and with an easy-to-use interface for busy journalists reporting on sustainable development and climate change.
鈥 - Reporting on Climate Change and Sustainable Development in Asia and the Pacific: A Handbook for Journalists鈥, will be published in December 2018 as part of the International Programme for the Development of Communication鈥檚 . The handbook has been developed with the support of the Government of Malaysia and joins its sister publication, , in aiding journalists and media workers in promoting stories that find local solutions to the global issue of climate change.
The three winning apps included 鈥淜limakage鈥, a platform that shares the content of UNESCO鈥檚 handbook with data visualization and access to updated news; 鈥淐limap鈥, an intelligent climate data monitoring system for journalists; and 鈥淏ird鈥檚 eye鈥, a game linked with real data and a map to follow the reality of environmental changes from an animal鈥檚 point of view, aimed at inspiring journalists to report on the importance of ecosystems in the region for humanity鈥檚 survival.
Environment Management student at Ho Chi Minh City University, Ms Hoang Thi Nhu Quynh, was grateful for the hackathon, saying it 鈥済ave me the opportunity to present my ideas and understand climate change as an alarming issue in Vietnam.鈥 She further reiterated that UNESCO should organise more events such as hackathons, so that young people could team together to learn about climate change through creative activities rather than 鈥渂oring data and reports鈥.
Other suggestions coming out of the hackathon included a blockchain app for journalists to check if their information is reliable; an app that encouraged members of the public to report environment problems to local journalists and an app that connects farmers in remote communities to journalists, ensuring rural communities have a voice.
Mr Pham Truong An, a computer science student from Can Tho University who had travelled a vast distance to Ho Chi Minh city from the Mekong Delta said, 鈥淭hanks to the hackathon, I realise I've got a lot more to learn about the concepts of climate change and sustainable development. I think each of us should take a responsibility in creating awareness about these issues to our closest friends and family, and then gradually we can spread the impacts in the community鈥.
The project, Post COP 21: Strengthening media capacity to monitor and report on climate change in Asia Pacific, promotes South-South cooperation by fostering media capacity and action on climate change mitigation and adaptation in selected Small Island Developing States (SIDS) and South-East Asian countries. It aims to find local solutions to the global issue of climate change through building the capacity of journalism schools and media practitioners in developing countries to provide timely and reliable access to information and knowledge on climate change and the 2030 Agenda. A second phase of the project, also supported by the Government of Malaysia, will commence in 2019, which will strengthen the South-South networking to include Africa and the development of a MOOC to accompany the guidebook.
To find out more about the projects supported by the IPDC, .
This activity is also part of UNESCO鈥檚 initiative to build the coding skills of young people.
You may also like to read UNESCO鈥檚 new publication, Journalism, 鈥楩ake News鈥 and Disinformation, which touches on verifying news and information, a theme for one of the apps at the hackathon. .