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Ho Ying Je

"Actually, I'm olive undertone skin so...

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A CUP OF CHANGE

In 2018, over 9 billion kilos of coffee were consumed worldwide. When people brew a cup of coffee, less than 1% of coffee's health-enhancing compounds are utilized. 99% has been mistakenly treated as waste for centuries.

 

For every tonne of coffee “waste” decomposed in a landfill, 340m3 of methane is released into the environment. The yearly environmental impact of coffee waste decomposition is equivalent to 10 million car emissions.

Based on the issues mentioned earlier, A Cup Of Change tries to propose an idea to help the local industries of Malaysia develop their own coffee product supply and recycling coffee grounds.

 

A Cup Of Change is a urban coffee grounds recycle center which serves the objective of providing sustainable consumption and sustainable alternative product from coffee grounds for community and reuses the coffee grounds through fungiculture.

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THOSE EXPERIENCE
CENTRE

Conflict, insecurity, weak institutions and limited access to justice remain a great threat to sustainable development.

 

Millions of people have been deprived of their security, human rights and access to justice. In 2018, the number of people fleeing war, persecution and conflict exceeded 70 million, the highest level recorded by UNHCR in almost 70 years.

 

The COVID-19 pandemic is potentially leading to an increase in social unrest and violence that would greatly undermine our ability to meet the targets of SDG 16.

THOSE aims to raise the awareness of the public about the importance of human rights in armed conflict. Inspire empathy among the general public due to inspiring them to fight for human rights for victims.

The opportunity of this project is to make people everywhere to be free of fear from all forms of violence and feel safe as they go about their lives whatever their ethnicity, faith, or sexual orientation.

This experience centre will bring visitors into the world of the victims. It only takes a little time and a little patience to listen and understand what they have lost because their human rights are not guaranteed in the armed conflict.

 

In addition to raising the importance of visitors to human rights, it also allows them to understand the idea that ‘we lost some, we gain some’ and bring out the message -‘human matter’.

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