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Students send in bees to solve elephant stampedes

Alex Chance
A proposal to use bees to prevent elephant stampedes through a refugee camp in Bangladesh has won the Warren Centre’s Humanitarian Hackathon on Sunday.

By stationing beehives to form a Bee Shield around Cox’s Bazaar, the elephants can be redirected away from the population centre, helping to prevent a repeat of the 13 fatalities that have already occurred.

“I just entered the challenge to help solve a problem,” said Fransiska Bekti, a Queensland University of Technology student, and member of the winning team.

“To have won is unbelievable.”

Cox's Bazaar is located within Asian elephants’ traditional migration routes through Myanmar to Bangladesh, which triggers conflict between 100,000 refugees and the endangered species.

The elephants migrate to socialise, feed, and find shelter.

Bekti explained the solution to Innovation Intelligence, which involved placing the beehives on the northern boundary of the camp, making the elephants take an alternate route. 

The Bee Shield comprises a series of bamboo support structures, each of which contains a beehive on a wood log. The shield would stretch for 3.5km and cost only $5500.

As a bonus, the Bee Shield can produce honey, allowing the camp to turn a profit from the solution.

The Hackathon invited finalists to the University of Sydney to pitch cutting-edge solutions to one of four humanitarian issues facing the refugee camp, as identified by the humanitarian disaster organisation, RedR, which mentored teams. 

Some of the issue’s facing Cox’s Bazaar centre on gender-based violence, shelter, nature, and climate - all of which require innovative solutions.

Kelsey Stevenson, who helped promote the Humanitarian Innovation Awards’ student Hackathon, explains, “Its purpose isn’t to implement solutions, but to help students think with a humanitarian mindset, and recognise the costs and challenges of potential solutions.” 

This may be a springboard for Bakti, who says, “I’d really like to get a bit of experience in humanitarian work and solving those problems.”

The team will share $5000 in prize money and be invited to collaborate with experts to help address the problems, with RedR and the Warren Centre now set to evaluate the possibility of implementing the Bee Shield in Cox’s Bazaar.

The Warren Centre is located within The University of Sydney, and seeks to “foster excellence and innovation of all fields of Australian engineering,” according to its website.

The hackathon was the first of its kind and will run annually for the next five years.

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