New Expert Judges Join International Student Design Competition for Sustainable Solutions, Wege Prize

Judges with diverse expertise enhance the experience of dozens of student teams
and help them advance their game-changing solutions.

Grand Rapids, Mich., January 17, 2023 – Wege Prize has announced the addition of two experts of diverse backgrounds to join the international panel of judges for the worldwide student competition for sustainable and circular innovation. The new judges include sustainability journalist Deonna Anderson, formerly of GreenBiz, as well as the renowned former professor and consultant in agriculture and natural resources, Braj Singh.

 Kendall College of Art and Design of Ferris State University (KCAD), which organizes Wege Prize, has announced the added judges as it expands its acclaimed competition. For more than a decade, Wege Prize has attracted and inspired talented college students around the globe to collaboratively design innovative solutions that combat the world’s “wicked problems” — everything from hunger and pollution to poverty and climate change — by creating innovative, real-world concepts that can support the future circular economy.

 For the 2023 cycle of Wege Prize, which has drawn a record number of competing teams, the new judges bring diverse perspectives and complementary expertise to Wege Prize’s full complement of 10 core judges — more than ever before — to reflect the growth of the student competition. Joining the distinguished roster of core judges from around the world for 2023 is B. K. (Braj) Singh who advises on solutions to global challenges in agriculture production, natural resource management, and human capacity enhancement and is a former professor in soil science and plant nutrition at EARTH University in Costa Rica. Joining Singh and the other judges is Deonna Anderson, who recently joined Next City as editorial director after working as senior editor at GreenBiz focused on the circular economy. Previously she contributed to YES! Magazine and NPR affiliate station KLCC. Deonna has previously worked with the Wege Prize team to interview the finalist presenters in 2021 and 2022, which are on the Wege Prize YouTube channel.

 Other recently added judges for the preliminary phase include the two leaders from the acclaimed Grand Rapids Public Museum in Michigan: Stephanie Ogren, vice president of science and education, and Jannan Cotto, who is Anishinaabe curator for the museum’s collections department. In late 2021, Wege Prize also added design pioneer Tom Newhouse and sustainable business expert Bill Stough to their core judging roster. (More details follow below, and all the judges and their bios may be found at www.wegeprize.org/judges.)

“We are pleased to welcome Deonna Anderson and Dr. Braj Singh to our judging process, bringing their varied talents to Wege Prize and its student teams,” says Gayle DeBruyn, KCAD professor and Wege Prize organizer. “The students gain invaluable insight from our jurors, helping bring to life the student teams’ original, collaborative solutions to how products are made and consumed.”

 With an international pool of judges representing a vast array of subject matter areas and unique experiences in the circular economy, sustainable business, clean energy, industrial design, STEM education, and other fields, the student teams find valuable guidance and enrichment, adds DeBruyn. “It is all about learning, learning, learning – each student comes away with new insights to distinguish their real-world solutions through the competition process,” she says.

 To date, Wege Prize has awarded more than $300,000 in cash prizes to the competition’s winning teams, helping advance collaborative innovation among disciplinary, cultural, and institutional participants, all helping spark a more sustainable and circular economy. With the assured guidance of the competition’s expert judges, the resulting solutions — including many that go on to join incubators and earn startup funding — address climate and environmental impacts, social and economic disparities, and cycles of waste, hunger, and poverty.

 Details on the new judges for 2023 follow, below.

Deonna Anderson

Deonna Anderson is the editorial director of Next City, a nonprofit newsroom that covers solutions to social issues in cities. Prior to this role, she served as a senior editor at GreenBiz, where her beat was the circular economy. She has also conducted interviews of Wege Prize team members for the Finalist Team Conversation Series. Anderson has reported for YES! magazine, NPR affiliate station KLCC, The Lily, Atmos and others. She is an alumna of the University of California, Davis and the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY, where she serves on its alumni board. Anderson is also a board member at nonprofit news outlet Bay Nature. She lives in the Bay Area.

 

Braj Singh

B. K. (Braj) Singh is the co-founder of Green Roots Consultants, a consulting firm dedicated to providing local solutions to global challenges in agriculture production, natural resource management, and human capacity enhancement. A Doctor of Philosophy, Singh has advised more than 65 theses research in soil fertility, plant nutrition & environmental health. He is a former professor of Soil Science & Plant Nutrition at EARTH University in Costa Rica and one of the founding members of EARTHIANOS – a global group of EARTH graduates committed to innovation based social entrepreneurship. Singh has been providing training and conducting international workshops in soil and plant nutrition for the past 28 years. He has developed, registered, and introduced in international markets over 25 products.

Comment