Summary Bio Samuel R. Daines€¦ · 1 Summary Bio Samuel R. Daines University B.S. Utah State...

3
1 Summary Bio Samuel R. Daines University B.S. Utah State Univ. 1965 Logan UT LLB Harvard Law School,1968, J.D. 1972 Cambridge MA Post Doc Fellowships Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge 1976-1977, Center for Policy Analysis, Visiting Researcher: Brazil Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1986-1987, Visiting Researcher: India Stanford University, Palo Alto, California Food Policy Re- search Institute. Visiting Fellow, Zambia Non-Profit & Government 1968-1970 Ford Foundation, Santiago, Chile Training Associate: Legal Education Agriculture Planning 1970-1975, U.S. Agency for International Development , Washington D.C., Latin America Bureau, Economist (1970-73) Senior. Economist (1974-75) Academic Utah State University, Irrigation and Drainage Engineering Department, Logan Utah, Water Law, Researcher George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, 1972 Adjunct Professor, Microeconomics Brigham Young University, Food Science & Nutrition Department, Provo Utah 1977-78 Adjunct Professor of International Nutrition Marriott School of Management, 1978-79 Adjunct Professor of International Business Agribusiness Production, Processing & Marketing Farm, Processing and Marketing Venture Owner/Manager: 1969-1971: Fundo Alhucemas 2,970 acre fram in Southern Chile (Expropriated 1971 by Goverment of Salvador Allende) 1978-1983: Fundo Nipaco & Fundo La Vega 270 acre berry and asparagus farms and cooling/packing plants, and 320 acres of leased export cherry orchards and cooling plant in Chile. Sold to LAAD Latin American Agribusiness Corporation 1984 Safe Space for Humanity: Six Nexus Charter Corridors 1999- Present SRD Research Group and NEXcore LLC. 2003-2009 Afghanistan Pakistan Agribusiness Corridor 2010-2012 SE & S.Asia Corridors (Asian Development Bank) 2013-2014 Congo & South Atlantic Corridor 2014-2015 Chile & East Pacific Corridor 2015-2017 East Mediterranean Corridor Contract Research and Development SRD Research Group Five Years or More Chile India Jordan Afghanistan Colombia Pakistan Sri Lanka United States United Kingdom Dominican Republic Honduras Guatemala El Salvador Nicaragua Costa Rica Panama Belize Indonesia Philippines Two to Five Years Bangladesh Bolivia Brazil Ecuador Ghana Senegal Democratic Republic Congo Six Months to Two Years Argentina Paraguay Peru Egypt Sudan Ethiopia Kenya France Germany Hungary Turkey Iraqi Kurdistan Nether- lands Less than Six Months Canada Spain Italy Poland Norway Sweden Belgium Mo- rocco Spanish Sahara Nigeria Lesotho Myanmar Malaysia Thailand Laos Cambodia China Japan South Korea Singa- pore Research and Development Reports and Monographs 1966-1976 S. Daines, Water Laws of Latin American Countries: A Micrrofiche Collection of Country Legislation. Harvard Law Library and Organization of American States, Regional Center for Water Resources, Merida, Venezuela 1966-67 ________ Analysis of Alternative Agricultural Strategies in the South of Chile, Ford Foundation, Santiago Chile, 425p 1970 ________ Economics of Agricultural Production and Irrigation in Latin America. Department of Irrigation and Drainage, Utah State University, Logan Utah 1971, 426 p. U.S. Agency for International Development Wash.D.C. LA Bureau Sector Analysis Division Monographs Samuel R. Daines Team Leader 1971-76 S. Daines, C. Gleason, G. Poynor, J. Ricardo, Input- Output Matrices for Disaggregate Analysis 201 Sectors ‘Leoneif Model’ 130p 1972 ________Treatment of Capital Goods in the Leontief Input-Output Matrix, 65p 1972 ________ C. Gleason, J. Ricardo, Purchaser Price/Pro- ducer Price Adjustment: Marketing Services in the Input- Output Matrix 52p 1972 ________ Closing the Input-Output Matrix to the House- holds Sector 21p. 1972 ________ Partial Implications of Linear Programming Analysis, 39p. 1972 ________, C. Gleason, J. Ricardo, G. Poynor, R. Suttor, Employ - ment, Income Distribution and Small Farm Analysis, 179p 1972 ________, Costs of Employment Generation in Agricul- ture 101p. 1971 B. Robinson, and ___________ La Estructura de las Indus- trias de Elaboracion Agroprecuarios en Colombia, 64p. 1971 _________and D. Steen, Structure of Agriculture Inputs Industries in Colombia 46.1971 _________and J. Ricardo, Explorations of Possible Calcu- lations of Capital/Labor Substitution Elasticities by Crop and Region. 1971 _________, C. Gleason, J. Ricardo, G. Poynor, R. Suttor Employment, Income Distribution and Small Farm Analysis. 179p 1972 _________ Partial Implications of the Linear Programming Analy - sis for Decision Making in the Agricultural Sector 39p 1972 _________, C. Gleason, & J. Ricardo Marketing Margins Ma- trix: Purchaser Price-Producer Price Adjustment 70p 1972

Transcript of Summary Bio Samuel R. Daines€¦ · 1 Summary Bio Samuel R. Daines University B.S. Utah State...

Page 1: Summary Bio Samuel R. Daines€¦ · 1 Summary Bio Samuel R. Daines University B.S. Utah State Univ. 1965 Logan UT LLB Harvard Law School,1968, J.D. 1972 Cambridge MA Post Doc Fellowships

1

Summary BioSamuel R. Daines

UniversityB.S. Utah State Univ. 1965 Logan UT LLB Harvard Law School,1968, J.D. 1972 Cambridge MA

Post Doc FellowshipsMassachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge 1976-1977, Center for Policy Analysis, Visiting Researcher: BrazilHarvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1986-1987, Visiting Researcher: India Stanford University, Palo Alto, California Food Policy Re-search Institute. Visiting Fellow, Zambia

Non-Profit & Government1968-1970 Ford Foundation, Santiago, ChileTraining Associate: Legal Education Agriculture Planning1970-1975, U.S. Agency for International Development, Washington D.C., Latin America Bureau, Economist (1970-73) Senior. Economist (1974-75)

AcademicUtah State University, Irrigation and Drainage Engineering Department, Logan Utah, Water Law, ResearcherGeorge Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, 1972Adjunct Professor, MicroeconomicsBrigham Young University, Food Science & Nutrition Department, Provo Utah 1977-78 Adjunct Professor of International Nutrition Marriott School of Management, 1978-79 Adjunct Professor of International Business

Agribusiness Production, Processing & MarketingFarm, Processing and Marketing Venture Owner/Manager:1969-1971: Fundo Alhucemas 2,970 acre fram in Southern Chile (Expropriated 1971 by Goverment of Salvador Allende)1978-1983: Fundo Nipaco & Fundo La Vega 270 acre berry and asparagus farms and cooling/packing plants, and 320 acres of leased export cherry orchards and cooling plant in Chile. Sold to LAAD Latin American Agribusiness Corporation 1984

Safe Space for Humanity: Six Nexus Charter Corridors1999- Present SRD Research Group and NEXcore LLC.

2003-2009 Afghanistan Pakistan Agribusiness Corridor2010-2012 SE & S.Asia Corridors (Asian Development Bank)2013-2014 Congo & South Atlantic Corridor2014-2015 Chile & East Pacific Corridor2015-2017 East Mediterranean Corridor

Contract Research and Development SRD Research GroupFive Years or More

Chile India Jordan Afghanistan Colombia Pakistan Sri LankaUnited States United Kingdom Dominican Republic Honduras Guatemala El Salvador Nicaragua Costa Rica Panama Belize

Indonesia Philippines

Two to Five YearsBangladesh Bolivia Brazil Ecuador Ghana Senegal

Democratic Republic Congo Six Months to Two Years

Argentina Paraguay Peru Egypt Sudan Ethiopia Kenya France Germany Hungary Turkey Iraqi Kurdistan Nether-

landsLess than Six Months

Canada Spain Italy Poland Norway Sweden Belgium Mo-rocco Spanish Sahara Nigeria Lesotho Myanmar Malaysia Thailand Laos Cambodia China Japan South Korea Singa-

pore

Research and Development Reports and Monographs 1966-1976

S. Daines, Water Laws of Latin American Countries: A Micrrofiche Collection of Country Legislation. Harvard Law Library and Organization of American States, Regional Center for Water Resources, Merida, Venezuela 1966-67________ Analysis of Alternative Agricultural Strategies in the South of Chile, Ford Foundation, Santiago Chile, 425p 1970________ Economics of Agricultural Production and Irrigation in Latin America. Department of Irrigation and Drainage, Utah State University, Logan Utah 1971, 426 p.

U.S. Agency for International Development Wash.D.C. LA Bureau Sector Analysis Division Monographs

Samuel R. Daines Team Leader 1971-76

S. Daines, C. Gleason, G. Poynor, J. Ricardo, Input-Output Matrices for Disaggregate Analysis 201 Sectors ‘Leoneif Model’ 130p 1972________Treatment of Capital Goods in the Leontief Input-Output Matrix, 65p 1972________ C. Gleason, J. Ricardo, Purchaser Price/Pro-ducer Price Adjustment: Marketing Services in the Input-Output Matrix 52p 1972________ Closing the Input-Output Matrix to the House-holds Sector 21p. 1972________ Partial Implications of Linear Programming Analysis, 39p. 1972________, C. Gleason, J. Ricardo, G. Poynor, R. Suttor, Employ-ment, Income Distribution and Small Farm Analysis, 179p 1972________, Costs of Employment Generation in Agricul-ture 101p. 1971B. Robinson, and ___________ La Estructura de las Indus-trias de Elaboracion Agroprecuarios en Colombia, 64p. 1971_________and D. Steen, Structure of Agriculture Inputs Industries in Colombia 46.1971_________and J. Ricardo, Explorations of Possible Calcu-lations of Capital/Labor Substitution Elasticities by Crop and Region. 1971_________, C. Gleason, J. Ricardo, G. Poynor, R. Suttor Employment, Income Distribution and Small Farm Analysis. 179p 1972_________ Partial Implications of the Linear Programming Analy-sis for Decision Making in the Agricultural Sector 39p 1972_________, C. Gleason, & J. Ricardo Marketing Margins Ma-trix: Purchaser Price-Producer Price Adjustment 70p 1972

Page 2: Summary Bio Samuel R. Daines€¦ · 1 Summary Bio Samuel R. Daines University B.S. Utah State Univ. 1965 Logan UT LLB Harvard Law School,1968, J.D. 1972 Cambridge MA Post Doc Fellowships

2

J. Riordan, __________ Overview of Methological Procedures for the Colombian Agricultural Sector Analysis 45p. 1972C. Lopez, _________, F. Ortegon, Partial Applications of Input-Output Models in Project Analysis: Bananas, Cocoa, and Broilers 29p 1973_________, C. Gleason, G. Poynor, J. Ricardo, R. Suttor, Seaonality of Labor Demand: Inter-Regional and Inter-Crop Data and Comparisons. 119p. 1972________, D. Dalrymple, B. Lowenstein, Utilization of INCORA Loans and Farm Production 64p 1971_________ Analysis of Backward Linkage of Agricultural Pro-cessing Industries and Forward Linkage of Primary Agricultural Production 194p 1971_________, J. Ricardo, C. Gleason, G Poynor, Inverse I/O Ma-trices Condensed for Analysis of Primary Agricultural Sectors 144p. 1972_________, ________, ________ Input-Output Matrices Con-densed for Employment and Income Distribution Analysis -- 76 Sectors, 120p 1972_________, _________, _______ Transactions and Input Coef-ficients Matrix for Agricultural Processing and Marketing Analy-sis - 115 Sectors 1972_________, J. Ricardo, Backward Linkage of Agricultural Pro-cessing Industries 148p. 1971_________ Marketing Margins Matrix: Purchaser Price-Producer Price Adjustment Matrix 143p. 1972_________ J. Brainard, J. Doster, R. Suttor, Nutrition, Agriculture and Economic Development in Colombia, 161p 1975J. Brainard, _________, R. House, H. Hinman, J. Riordan, R. Suttor, A Methodology for Agriculture Sector Analysis, 287p 1975_________ Summary Results of Colombian Agricultural Sector Analysis, 1975__________ & H. Howell Guatemala Farm Policy Analysis: The Impact of Small Farm Credit on Income, Employment and Food Production. 1975 126p._________ & B. Naseth, Evalutation of Small Farm Credit in Chile: Analysis of Farm Level Impacts and Institutional Efficiency, 1976_________ & Richard Kreitman, Costa Rica Agriculture Sec-tor Assessment, 153p 1976

MIT Center for Policy Analysis, Monograph Series1975-1976

__________Analysis of Industrial Structure, Technology and Productivity in the Food Processing Sector Brazil, Volume I: Technology and Contribution to National Devel-opment Objectives 126p. 1975Volume III: Productivity Ratios, 84p 1975 Volume II: Methodology for Analysis of Technology in the Food Processing Sector of Sao Paulo. 1976 Center for Policy Analysis, Massachusetts Institute of Tech-nology, Cambridge, Massachusetts

1977-1987__________An Overview of Data Analysis Techniques for Project Design and Evaluation, 126p. USAID Washington D.C. 1977_________ Analysis of Small Farms and Rural Poverty in El Salvador, 128p. 1977, US Agency for International Devel-opment, San Salvador_________, F. Morrow, W. Rodgers, An Overview of the Role and Potential of Rural Enterprises to Contribute to the

Employment and Income of the Rural Poor in Developing Countries, 22p. 1978, U.S. Agency for International Devel-opment, Washington D.C._________ Impact Evaluation of the Haiti Small Improve-ment Project, 1979, U.S. Agency for International Develop-ment, Port au Prince,________, B. Smith, W. Rodgers, F. Mann, Agribusiness and Rural Enterprise Project Analysis Manual, 1979 177p. U.S. Agency for International Development, Washington D.C.A. LeBaron, _________, K. Hancock, C. Anderson An Economic Analysis of Integrated Rural Development: The Salcedo, Ecuador Project, 43p. 1980

___________ A. LeBaron, L Posner, K. Hancock, R. Buttars, Energy in the Food System: Dominican Republic, 213p. 1980 U.S. Agency for International Development, Santo Domingo___________ Data Gathering & Statistical Methods for Rural Development Planning, 105p. 1980 Agency for Interna-tional Development, La Paz_________, K. Hancock, Raspberry, Blueberry, Asparagus and Cherry Export Development Plan (Eight Volumes), 1981, SRD International and Fundacion Chile, Santiago__________ , K. Hancock, Jamaica Medium and Large Scale Agribusiness Survey, 52p 1982 U.S. Agency for International Development, Kingston_________ El Salvador Small Farm Irrigation Systems, 121p. 1984, U.S. Agency of International Development, San Salvador_________ India Irrigation Sector Strategy Review, 117p. 1985, U.S. Agency for International Development, New Delhi_________ Famine Protection and Irrigation in India: A Pub-lic Policy Analysis, 148p. 1985 Food Science Department, Brigham Young University, Provo_________An Analysis of Food and Agricultural Markets in China, 111p. 1987, U.S. Agency for International Develop-ment, Washington D.C.

1988-1998_________, P. Rogers, J. Pawar, An Economic Evaluation of Irrigation Systems in India 84p 1989, U.S. Agency for International Development, New Delhi_________ Zambia Horticulture Export Feasibility Studies and Investment Prospectus, 115p 1992, World Bank, Lu-saka and Food Policy Research Institute, Stanford Univer-sity, Palo Alto__________ Horticulture Export Foundation HORTEX: Export Potential Graphic Analysis Briefs 192p 1992, World Bank, Dhaka and Food Policy Research Institute, Stanford University, Palo Alto

Pakistan Horticulture Export Development Program HEDP Monographs and Briefs 1981-1993

Samuel R. Daines Team LeaderU.S. Agency for International Development, Islamabad

_________ Growing, Packing & Exporting Fruits and Veg-etables from Pakistan, 53p 1993_________, K. Kodituwakku, B. Burns, D. Nastri, W. Horse-field, Pakistani Asparagus, Table Grapes, Mangoes, Mel-ons, Strawberries, Raspberries, Peaches, Nectarines, and Plums in European and Japanese Markets (7 Volumes 48p each) 336p. 1991,

Page 3: Summary Bio Samuel R. Daines€¦ · 1 Summary Bio Samuel R. Daines University B.S. Utah State Univ. 1965 Logan UT LLB Harvard Law School,1968, J.D. 1972 Cambridge MA Post Doc Fellowships

3

__________, E. Hurlston, S. Thomson, K. Hancock, J. Ahrens Production and Post-Harvest Technology Training Manuals (Seven Volumes) 328p 1991, __________, S. Smith, M. Thorpe, D. Erikson, T. Smith, B. Burns Export Potential Graphic Analysis Briefs (26 Vol-umes) 208p 1989__________, Lazlo Bus, Jordan Horticulture Export Poten-tial Graphic Analysis Briefs (23 briefs) 184p 1993, Agricul-ture Marketing Organization, Govt. of Jordan and USAID, Amman__________ Egypt Horticulture Export Marketing, 148p 1998, SRD Research Group, Abt Associates & U.S. Agency for International Development, Cairo

1999-2017Safe Space for Humanity: Six Nexus Charter Corridors

Indian Ocean Corridor_________, A. Munir Horticulture Export Plans for the Afghanistan Balhucistan Segment of the Indian Ocean (Af-Pak) Corridor 128p 2004, Ministry of Commerce, Kabul_________, D. Himelrick, Table Grape Production and Post-Harvest Technology Manual, 128p 2005, Ministry of Commerce, Kabul

2

Safe spaces, transitions, FWE Charter “a com-munity of practice” Corsortiumfounders Harvard, Valmont, SRD, Invite to other Universities, Public and Private Secort entities three stage initiatives 1. Desk studies, plans, designs confer-ences, info exchange 2. Field Pilot scale proof-of-concept pro-jects $100m per corridor 3. Full scale infrastructure projects $5-30b per corridor

Peter Rogers, Harvard University, Cambridge MA

April 6, 2016

Three centuries after Columbus, in 1776 Adam Smith published An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations His answer to the question ? -- Two charted voyages!

“The discovery of America, and that of a passage to the East Indies, ..are the two greatest and most important events recorded in the history of mankind. Their consequences have already been very great... What benefits or what misfortunes to mankind may hereafter result from those great events, no human wisdom can foresee.

Columbus’ charted course led, by surprise, to a vast land and thirty million hands with which to build a new world. Conflict and disease from the The Conquest left only three million hands in the ashes. Nevertheless out of those ashes a Phoenix arose -- our new world -- invented initially from a handful of European technologies, a few American food plant species, financed by Aztec and Inca gold.

Recent conflicts in six corridors have displaced thirty million, about the same number that Columbus originally found. Our Charter is to put three million of these thirty to work -- producing food for the sixty million migrants who have recently moved into the six corridors’ megacities. The result will be six prosper-ing new-world corridors arising from the ashes of our generation’s conflicts.

Six Corridor Lend-Lease Charter:• invent with twenty-one recent water and energy saving technologies• ignite with 30 billion dollars from six lease-backed corridor bond issues • establish corridors with a lend-lease charter. “Lend” capital to preserve local

ownership - no foreign equity. “Lease” corridor lands to allow refugees to go to work now without citizenship/ownership legal or political issues

• build in five years, operate, lease and train for 10, transfer after 15 “BOLTT”• plant on 3 million acres of unused but quality soils in key fruit producing climates• irrigate with 30 bm3 of unclaimed water by building new dams and pipelines• reduce food production cost by organizing small holder irrigation coops under com-

munity scale center-pivot circles to achieve large scale cost reducing efficiency• save 90% transport cost with energy efficient RoRo waterway/railway corridors• sell direct in bulk-package pallets to 60 million megacity migrants in onsumer coops• home-distribute by tricicle from field-to-market reefer-container “shops”

It’s our generation’s “go to work” opportunity -- let’s not waste it!

Samuel R Daines, President NEXcore LLCa consortium founder

NEXcore LLC, 16940 Frederick Road, Poplar Springs MD 21771www.nexcore.com email [email protected] tel 617-943-4333

FWE CONSORTIUM MILESTONES

1966: Peter Rogers appointed Associate Professor in Harvard’s Applied Engineer-ing School and starts an interdisiplinary approach to resource planning with a seminar: Engineering, Economics and Public Policy Planning inventing his first nexus. Sam Daines, a Harvard Law student registers in Peter’s first seminar.

1989: Sam, founder of SRD Research hires Peter as consultant and they combine water engineering, and food economics with water law in a nexus evaluation of the vast national -level India Famine Protection Irrigation Programme.

2008: Peter charts a bus voyage across rural Nebraska to see what is behind the precision irrigation revolution and meets Bob Meany CEO, and Rich Berkland International VP at Valmont Industries Inc.-- the inventor and major manufacturer. 2010: With a $53m grant from Valmont’s founder, Doughtery the Water for Food Institute is founded at the University of Nebraska with Peter on the board..

2011: Peter goes on sabbatical to Cambridge England and then Singapore and invites Rich and Sam to come to Singapore to found a Harvard University led and private sector “consulting community of practice” consortium to launch a three stage world wide food-water-energy nexus initiative.

2012: Peter makes his 5 Transitions speech at the World Sustainability Confer-ence in May in Delhi and drafts the Charter launching of the Food Water Energy Consortium in December in Manila.

2014: Three years of first stage design work and conferences on the three Asian cor-ridors completes with funding from the Asian Development Bank, and Sam and Peter present the final reports at the Delhi World Sustainability Conference in February.

2015: Two years of work complete the first stage nexus designs in the Africa and Latin America corridors and Sam presents the Consortium final reports at the Water Week regional conference in March at Vina del Mar. In December Peter and Sam present a pre-design sketch of the sixth corridor, East Mediterranean Tigris-Jordan -Nile, at the Arab Mideast Food Water Energy Conference in Amman in December.

2016: SRD incorporates its FWE Consortium affiliated six corridor operations as NEXcore LLC to launch Stage Two Projects with licenses of SRD’s NEXTech 21 tech-nologies, and it’s 15 year cycle BOLTT management, legal, and financial approaches.

NEXCORE MILESTONES

1964: Sam Daines overees the design and construction of a small dam for sprinker irrigation on the family farm.

1966. Sam works part time for the Organization of American States and Harvard’s Law Library collecting and filming a microfiche compendium of water laws of Latin America for the OAS Center for Water Resource Planning in Mreida Venezuela. Sam joins Peter’s first engineering-economics-policy Nexus Seminar and invents his own “food-water-law” version of a nexus.

1969: With family funding and Ford Foundation support, Sam purchases the 3,000 acre R&D, Alhucemas, hacienda in Southern Chile cooperating with the adjacent Huilliche tribe, to establish an export fruit and berry industry in a heretofore sleepy livestock grazing region. Sam’ finishes his Analysis of Alternative Agrciultur-al Strategies for the South of Chile (425p. Ford Foundation Santiago 1970)

1983: Fourteen years of R&D creating 21 new and derrivative technologies wrap up. (see NEXTech 21 Insert) The berry, cherry and asparagus export industries finally take-off after a marxist expropriation of Alhucemas and the subsequent re-purchase of two new R&D farms. SRD Research Group charters its “new lands lease, new waters, new market exports” model as a 15 year build-operate-lease-train-transfer (BOLTT)

1984-2002 SRD “exports” its 15 year BOTT model to South Asia and Central America, and elaborates BOLTT designs in Africa and the Middle East. Imple-mentation is with SRD design and overview, a US/UK agribusiness company consortium, and funding from private banks, USAID, and development banks (WB, IDB, CABEI, and NABARD)

2003-2008 : SRD began work in Afghanistan, following up on 1989-94 work in the North Western Frontier Province of Pakistan, where more than four million Afghan refugees were then stranded. SRD leased a 21,000 acre resettlement corridor in Parwan and Logar provinces and began its 15 year BOTT cycle, with intermitent holds Tabliban interventions.

2008-2011: With the Taliban on hold, SRD returned to earlier work in the Mideast includ-ing the Tigris-Jordan, Nubian Aquifer, and Nile basins in Kurdistan, Jordan and Sudan. In early 2011 the Mideast too was put on indefinite hold by the Arab Spring, by coinci-dence on the very same day that Peter called for FWE help in Singapore (see above)

3

East Indies and Bay of Bengal Corridors__________, P. Rogers Food Supply-Chain Infrastructure Design: The Nexus Approach to Water and Energy in Food Security in South & Southeast Asia Corridors, 172p, 2014 Asian Development Bank, ManilaP. Rogers & ____________ A Safe Space for Humanity: The Nexus of Food, Water & Energy: An ADB Policy Brief, 12p. 2014, Asian Development Bank, Manila

South Atlantic & East Pacific Corridors__________P. Rogers & R. Berkland, Congo-SRD Cooperative AgroParks: PreDesign Concept, 81p. 2013 Prime Minister’s Cabinet, Democratic Republic of Congo, (South Atlantic Cor-ridor) KinshasaP. Rogers & ___________, A Safe Space for Humanity: The Nexus of Food, Water in the South Atlantic (and East Pacific) Corridors, 23p. 2015, Fundacion Chile (FCH) & Corporacion de Fomento, (CORFO) Santiago

East Mediterranean Corridor__________, P. Rogers, Tigris-TransJordan Canal and the East Mediterranean Corridor, Preliminary Sketch Anima-tion, SRD Research Group & NexCore LLC, (YouTube “Daines TransJordan”) Harvard MA , 2015