The Social Innovation

Afforestt is a service provider for creating natural, wild, maintenance free, native forests using the Miyawaki Method since 2011.

So far, they have been involved in creating 20+ hectares of forests across 60+ cities in 12+ countries.

Magnitude of the Problem, and its Root Causes

Between 2010 and 2020, the net loss in forests globally was 4.7 million hectares per year. However, deforestation rates were much higher. The UN FAO estimates that 10 million hectares of forest are cut down each year.

During their participation in the Globalizer in 2020 co-created by Ashoka and HSBC, they outlined that the key factors driving the problem include:

  • deforestation for agriculture, mining and infrastructure development
  • conventional landscaping practices
  • lack of awareness and methodology for forest makers to create natural, wild, maintenance free, native forests

Based on their systems change analysis, Afforestt have made it their mission to improve the practices used by forest makers by building the field of authentic forest making.

It was the most effective program I have ever attended as nobody had the urgency to push knowledge down someone's throat.

I would say the Globalizer helped us articulate it so well that now we have one slide which we can use as the guiding stone for the next 10-15 years. Starting from a peer community and going up to the level of changing the policy the policy and there could be a day where we will say okay, why do we have to still run Afforestt because of everything that has already been achieved?

I love the way the strategy has grown organically so far just like a forest. But also, I feel to give it a structure helps you to sleep better, because you know what you're doing. Otherwise, it could be a huge burden on the shoulders of the founder or the core team that is running the show, when it's articulated well in a slide format, we can have each of those blocks a separate vertical and find the best people to run those verticals. So, somebody would be working on policy, only somebody would be working on creating this peer community or somebody would be working on formalizing the sector making the SOPs early. So, this is the set foundation that Globalizer has given us.

Now if I'm talking to Sunny (the CEO), we're talking about strategy and the bigger vision - all the stuff that's supposed to be done in the next three, four or five years; before the Globalizer our conversation was what's going on right now and what is the next firefighting that we have to do. Now that he is focusing more on strategy, a second line of leadership has evolved, and they are showing their strength.

Strategy to Catalyze a Network of Changemakers towards the Targeted Mission

The strategy involves orchestrating and training the reforestation efforts ecosystem to take a more authentic approach to create natural, wild, maintenance free and native forests.

Some of the tactics they deployed towards the mission as a part of the strategy include:

1) Involving and Inviting everyone to Create Forests Using their Methodology  

The Afforestt methodology was documented in a manual as well as shared in a book called Mini Forest Revolution by Hannah Lewis, but the Afforestt team realized that given the amount of laypeople who work on creating forests it needed to be documented in an implementable way that is accessible to laypeople and can be spread across the masses.
 
Their past engagements like the TED Talks and INK talks where Shubhendu shared about the Miyawaki methodology were a great call to action for “how anyone can build a forest in their backyard or community.” It gained great traction and reached more than 5,000,000 viewers, who in comments and via email started sharing their intent to create their own forests and asking for books and resources that could guide them.  
 
Thus, given the impact potential, and the risks of the methodology being replicated half-heartedly and not producing the results, Afforestt open sourced the methodology in a way that it is implementable.   
 
They did so by raising 10,000 USD through a Kickstarter campaign to develop video tutorials on YouTube. These have reached 16,000 views till date, and there is data of the methodology being used by 100+ organizations in 30+ countries. It is already accessible in English, Hindi and Punjabi and they are continuing to develop it in other languages like Spanish, Arabic and French.  

One of the outcomes of the program was that we could start spreading the methodology to laymen in a way that it could be implemented

Also, as they opened up their methodology, organizations started reaching out with questions and requests for consultations, which led to Afforestt's online training and consulting model which now makes up for 50% of their organization’s revenue. They have trained 500+ people with their methodology contractual projects, online and offline workshops and consulting projects.

2) Collaborating with Peers and Co-creating a Peer Community Network to share Know-hows, Information and Consulting Peers

Afforestt is collaborating with key organizations in the field using the hub and spoke model. Organizations like- Say Trees (India), Dharti Amrit (India), Eco Sikh (India), Natural Urban Forests (USA), Bosco (Chille), Miti Alliance (Kenya), Bretta Corp (Australia), IVN (The Netherlands), Green Yatra (India), Eco Satva (India), Urban Forest (Pakistan) and Mzanzi Organics (South Africa).

They are also working on creating an independent entity- Association of Authentic Forest Makers to give the stakeholders committed to working on bringing back native flora, integrating land, water, soil, fungi and microbiology and caring for the whole environment.

Right now, I would say that we are probably the best methodology as a compilation of all the mistakes that we have made in last 10 years. And we will know the solutions of some problems (that emerged while applying the methodology). And that's why our methodology is so robust. But we might not have encountered everything that can go wrong. We haven't made a forest in Kenya by ourselves, but somebody who's using our open-source methodology has. So, they would know what are the kinds of issues that you face in a city like Nairobi? Where are the suppliers of Nairobi? Where are the machine contractors or whatever you need, there are the nurseries in Nairobi. So, all that has to come to the open knowledge to make the system work smoothly and efficiently.  
And to create that kind of ecosystem, we need some authentic forest makers who are not afraid of sharing their knowledge, even if it is about the supply chain that is available.

If everyone works as a team, on different items, then the team as a large achieves a bigger vision, which is the global change that we are imagining. And to make that change realize we have to become that body that makes sure that we are getting authentic people on board who are not afraid of not fearful of sharing their knowledge openly.

It would create a platform for stakeholders like suppliers, nursery owners, allied academicians, etc. the recognition they deserve as well as to create a peer community network to share know how's so that the overall methodology improves and to enhance each other's quality of work.

It would include monthly gatherings, and an online directory would serve as a simple platform for people across the world to find authentic forest makers and their contact details. 

shubhendu
Date:
Author:
Akash Bhalerao
Reviewers:
Ina Bogdanova, Nadine Freeman, Varsha Gurjar, Odin Muehlenbein, Shubhendu Sharma
Story Structure & Design Contributors:
Maria Zapata Diana Wells Rohan Suseelan Olga Shirobokova Florentine Roth Mi Nguyen Odin Muehlenbein Madhavi Malgaonkar Jayalakshmi Jayanth Nadine Freeman Antonio Fernandez Michela Fenech Santiago Del Giuduce Ovidiu Hristu Condurache Pablo Carranza Tatiana Carey Ina Bogdanova Akash Bhalerao
Ashoka Strategy Facilitators during the Program:
Odin Muehlenbein