Monday, June 29, 2015

Brazil ICT to represent 10.7 percent of GDP by 2022

 Sector exports could reach $4bn within the next seven years
By Angelica Mari, Brazil Tech

Brazil's IT and communications sector is expected to represent 10.7 percent of the country's gross domestic product, government officials told delegates at an industry event today.

The expectation is that the share of the ICT sector in Brazil's GDP will jump from 8.8 percent in 2013 to 10.7 percent in 2022, with exports reaching R$12bn ($3.96bn) and 3 million people employed within the sector versus 1,5 million in 2013.


Secretary for information technology policy at the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation Virgílio Almeida made the predictions at a conference promoted by the Brazilian Internet Association to discuss challenges and opportunities for Internet companies.

The numbers are a lot more optimistic when compared to the predictions made by the country's man IT trade body, the Brazilian Association of Information Technology and Communication Companies (Brasscom), a couple of years ago: the association had predicted that the participation of the ICT sector in the economy would rise to 8 percent within the same timeframe.

The government's predictions regarding competitiveness should also be taken with a large pinch of salt, since recent tax measures designed to shore up the country's budget have more than doubled social security contributions that sector companies have to pay.

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Israeli invention to end cooking, hunger?

A coffeemaker-sized appliance promises to prepare mess-free, all-natural, healthy food in just seconds
By Julie Wiener

JTA — Plenty of mobile apps help consumers order meals for delivery or offer recipes.
But a new app developed by Israeli entrepreneurs will actually prepare the food for you on your kitchen counter.

While not quite as fantastical as it sounds — to use the app you also need a coffeemaker-sized appliance called The Genie — the invention promises to prepare mess-free, all-natural, healthy food in just seconds.

Described by one writer as “like a Keurig [coffeemaker] for food,” the device, which looks sort of like a fancy rice cooker, uses Keurig-like single-serving, disposable (but in this case recyclable) pods.

Genie creators Ayelet Carasso and Doron Marco told Reuters the food in the pods will be nutritious and free of preservatives, the ingredients kept fresh simply through freeze-drying technology.

“The dish can be anything, it can be a meal like chicken with rice, like couscous with vegetable or an amazing Ramen or even a chocolate soufflé or any other desert that you want,” Carasso told Reuters. (The product does not appear to have its own website yet, nor is it featured on the site of Marco and Carasso’s White Innovation company.)

While not yet available commercially, at least not to individual consumers, the Genie, expected to cost several hundreds dollars, is preparing for mass production and distribution. The meal pods will be “priced so they are comparable to a meal, snack or dessert,” Reuters reported.

The Genie’s creators say it could also help solve global hunger. “In our world, we are getting fat and we are throwing away a lot of food, in their world, they don’t have any food,” Marco told Reuters. “So if you use Genie, you can distribute the food better, you can have the shelf life much longer without the preservatives, give the people better food for them.”

One thing that remains unclear from the coverage so far is what the cooked product looks like: Promotional materials show beautifully plated meals, but from what I could see on the Reuters video, the food comes in the form of mush and is served up, Cup-o’-Noodles style, in a cardboard container. Which makes me think of the chewing-gum meal in “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” that tastes great but turns Violet Beauregarde into a giant blueberry.

The Genie also brings to mind another revolutionary Israeli kitchen appliance: SodaStream soft-drink makers. Let’s hope The Genie manages to avoid the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions problems that hit SodaStream — keeping production out of West Bank settlements or Bedouin areas would help.

More importantly, if SodaStream chose Scarlett Johansson as its celebrity spokeswoman, who will The Genie choose? I’m rooting forNatalie Portman.

Monday, June 22, 2015

May Newsletter - Israeli Agro-Technology

Israeli agriculture is seen as an excellent example of the ability of advanced technology to change a semi-arid deserted land, with serious security problems, into one of the great success stories of world’s agriculture. Israeli Agro-Technology is Vega’s topic of the month.   For a full coverage of this topic please refer to the Full Article published at our Blog .


Israel’s agro-technology industry is characterized by intensive research and development of innovative system, rooted in the need to overcome local scarcities of water and arable land . They industry’s growth arose from the close cooperation among researchers. Extension agents , farmers and agriculture related industries, cooperative efforts that led to breakthrough achievements. These in turn have fostered a market-oriented agribusiness that exports its agro-technology solution worldwide. The result is modern agriculture methods. Systems and products in a country where more than half the area is dessert  
Israeli agriculture is seen as a world-class example of the ability of advanced technology to change a semi-arid land, with serious security problems, into one of the great success stories of world agriculture.
Some facts & figures :

Ø  Agricultural productivity in Israel has grown by a factor of 10 since the
Ø  1950’s, while the amount of water used in agriculture has been substantially reduced, as have labor inputs.
Ø  Through advanced technology, Israel has reached record highs in productivity per unit for dairy cattle, cotton, olives, and other products.
Ø  Israel’s agricultural technology and broad range of know-how, has become a well-known brand-name for success in the agricultural world.
Ø  Agricultural technology accompanied by Israeli management has become a sought-after product in world agriculture
Ø  Israeli remains well known for breakthrough technology in advanced irrigation, greenhouse systems, vegetable seeds, plant protection and pest management, computerized monitoring and control, and more.
Ø  200 Agro-technology Exporters
Ø  US$4B - Export turnover
Ø  Labor Force - decreased in the last 60 years from 17% to 2.6%
Ø  Cultivated Land - decreased by 20%
Ø  Fresh Water Usage- decreased by 50%
Ø  Product’s Value/1m3 increased from $0.5 up to $4
Ø  Most exports of agricultural inputs are based on decades of development of technology and know-how, in search of solutions for Israeli agricultural constraints: scarcity of water and manpower.
Ø  Scale of this agritechnology is based on Israel’s capacity for development and marketing – it is not limited by natural resources. Israeli companies sell “Israeli smarts” in the form of agricultural inputs.
Ø  In most cases, exports come from innovations developed for Israeli agriculture, which has served as the testing station and the trial fields for the technology that is exported. 

Sunday, June 21, 2015

IAI Set to Produce Drones, Radars in Brazil

Israel Aerospace Industries is expanding its activities in Brazil through the partnership with local, strategic defense partners. 
By Jewish Voice
“IAI sees South America in general, and Brazil in particular, as a ‘growth engine’, and offers a large spectrum of products, backed by wide technological knowhow.” Joseph Weiss, IAI’s President and CEO said “Through working in Brazil extensively for the last few years, we have been exposed to the country’s unique needs and requirements. IAI plans to expand its activities in Brazil by means of cooperation with local companies.

Radar that sees beyond the horizon
Through its partnership with Iacit IAI is promoting comprehensive naval and homeland security capabilities, applicable to Blue Amazon Managing System (SisGAAz). One of these systems is the EZ-Guard ELM2270 Over the Horizon (OTH) radar project that broke ground last month at a coastal site in the South of Brazil. Backed up by transfer of technological knowhow from IAI-ELTA, the project is being conducted with the support of the Brazilian Navy

These advanced maritime surveillance features are combined with IACIT’s oceanic environmental HF capacities. IACIT has been developing an HF Radar solution since 2010 for oceanic environmental weather and sea surface surveillance, as well as pollution control and to assist prediction of environmental hazards such as storms and tsunamis.
The radar system is developed with the support of the Brazilian Federal Funding Authority for Studies and Projects (FINEP) and with the technological cooperation of IAI’s ELTA Group.
Operating in the High-Frequency (HF) band the new radar employs surface-wave propagation to provide continuous surveillance of the sea surface well beyond the horizon, up to 200 nautical miles (370km) range. The radar employs phased array technology and unique interference cancellation techniques which provide reliable and persistent coverage of the broader maritime area at all times, regardless of atmospheric conditions or sea state.
“The technological development process requires time and considerable financial resources, depending on the complexity of the project. The expected assimilation of technology, including by the National Defense Strategic (END), provides a significant leap for technologies already tested outside Brazil with validated solutions. In the case of a Strategic Defense Company (EED) such as IACIT, transfer of technology and know-how are mandatory to ensure continuous production in Brazil. said IACIT president Luiz Teixeira. “The OTH development has propelled IACIT’s capabilities years forward and will provide a strategic advantage for the Brazilian Navy as well as important lifesaving information for environmental control agencies”.
“We view this project as an important milestone towards persistent, affordable, reliable and efficient coverage of a broad Brazilian maritime area”, said Mr. Nisim Hadas, IAI Executive VP & ELTA president.

IAI’s Heron turned into Caçadors
Another UAV project in Brazil is “Caçador”, an evolution of the IAI Heron I into a Brazilian-made Medium Altitude Long-Endurance (MALE) UAV. Heron I is operational in Brazil since 2010, operated by the federal police. Caçador UAV is based on this operational experience, to meet the specific requirements of Brazil.

Caçador will be equipped with an automatic takeoff and landing system (ATOL) and equipped to operate in civilian controlled airspace, as has already practiced with Heron I in Brazil and elsewhere. Caçador will carry multiple payloads for line-of-sight missions or beyond line of sight using satellite communications.

The manufacturing will take place in Brazil. IAI has teamed with Avionics Services of Brazil which is currently inducting the maintenance and support of the system at Botucatu airfield in Sao Paolo. European Advanced Technology (EAT), an Israel Aerospace Industries’ (IAI) subsidiary, has acquired minority holding in the Avionics Services in 2014, as part of IAI’s strategic investment in the Brazilian defense market. The cooperation agreement’s main target markets are defense and public security projects primarily for the Brazilian market, which may potentially be extended to international markets in the future. Under the cooperation agreement between the two companies Avionics Services will provide marketing and manufacturing of aircraft systems, unmanned aerial systems, sensors supporting upgrades of aerial platforms.

Saturday, June 20, 2015

Data Masking - Technology Requirement by Brazilian market


 We are looking for Israeli technology - addressing the need for Data Masking solution by Brazilian company. 
 If you have any information about Israeli companies addressing the data masking market , please share it with  us. 



The problem
Description of the problem
Data Masking (data obfuscation - Real customers’ data used in homologation environment, needs to be scrambled (masked) in order to avoid leakage of private information. Test environment.    
Current solution
In-house scripts written in SQL
The reason for new solution
Current solution is limited and not supporting all environments
Target audience / end users  
Testers will be using the scrambled data, IT departments
Customer info
General info (segment, location, size)
Financial institute, Credit cards
Contact person (decision maker)
Brazilian VAR - Ronaldo is handling this request
Other players (departments)

Allocated Budget
100-200K USD
Project size


Existing technology infrastructure
Application, platform
The solution should be environment independent
Competitors
Servers, OS
Support database such as DB2, SQL, Oracle
Security  
Input data must be kept under high level of security, according to PCI definitions
Integration with existing platform / solution
Independent

Solution Boundaries / requirements
Timetable
Immediate request
On-premises / cloud  
On-premises
Limitations

Regulations
PCI definitions applied for input data

Business issues
Sales cycle / process
2-3 months
POC
yes
Players and functions




 If you have any information about Israeli companies addressing the data masking market , please share it with  us. 
Contact information          Elazar Segal,     elazar@vega-bi.com

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Backyard unit eats trash to make biofuel

This TevaGas unit is installed in an educational model off-grid village owned and managed by the Eilat-Eilot Renewable Energy Initiative.
Abigail Klein Leichman, Israel21C

When UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon visited the sukkah of Israeli President Reuven Rivlin during the Jewish harvest holiday last October, he was treated to a demo of a machine the government has given to Bedouin families to convert organic waste into clean biogas for cooking, heating and lighting, as well as organic liquid crop fertilizer.


“He got very excited and told us, ‘Millions of women and children die each year due to indoor smoke from open fires. This is just the thing they need. The UN should be purchasing these units!’recalls Ami Amir of HomeBioGas, which develops and manufactures a new class of anaerobic biodigesters to convert organic waste to clean renewable energy.

“He asked us to be in touch with the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization to see where and when our systems could be deployed,” the marketing director tells ISRAEL21c.

The family-size TevaGas (TG) backyard units, available as an easy-to-assemble kit, generate safe energy and fertilizer through bacterial anaerobic digestion of organic waste such as food scraps and animal manure. They provide a sustainable solution for off-grid urban and rural families, as well as environmentally conscious homeowners and small farm owners, in warmer climates.

Last summer, Israel’s Ministry of Environmental Protection purchased and installed TG units at Umm Batin, a Bedouin village near Beersheva without access to clean energy and garbage removal.
Based on the success of a small pilot program, the ministry has ordered another 25 units – at NIS 8,000 apiece — for Umm Batin and another Negev Bedouin village, Amir tells ISRAEL21c.

From the Caribbean to the West Bank

After learning from the Israeli government about the Umm Batin program, officials from dozens of countries made inquiries to HomeBioGas.

The Dominican Republic purchased 50 biodigesters, hoping the Israeli machines will help lessen the Caribbean island nation’s overreliance on wood for home heating.

Based on the success of those initial installations, the Dominican Republic’s Ministry of Energy and Mining recently signed a contract with HomeBioGas to deploy TG systems in two additional villages, says Amir.

Israel’s Environmental Protection Ministry is donating TevaGas biodigesters to Negev Bedouin villages.

“The combination of social justice and environmental justice is a global solution fitting for Umm Batin, for the Caribbean and for every place in the world,” said Amir Peretz, who was Israel’s environmental protection minister when the units were first installed in both places.

“We found a way to generate cooperation with the Bedouin population from remote communities who feel that as a result of this, the country cares about them, and therefore, the chances are great that this project will succeed and become a model for the world,” Peretz said.


The units are in use in the Arava desert in an off-grid village is owned and managed by the Eilat-Eilot Renewable Energy Initiative. And the Peres Center for Peace in Jaffa arranged to buy the user-friendly biodigesters for two Arab communities in Palestinian Authority-administered areas of the West Bank that lack proper waste-disposal systems. These units will be shipped before the summer, Amir tells ISRAEL21c.

“We’ve received orders from various distributors in many countries, such as Australia, Nigeria and Costa Rica, that want to set up demo installations,” he says. “About 70 different countries are interested in establishing distributorships. So evidently we are answering a need.”

Building a better biodigester

HomeBioGas did not invent household biodigesters, but improved on existing models.

Amir explains that HomeBioGas cofounder Yair Teller traveled to Mexico about eight years ago to observe small biogas systems in use there, and went to additional countries to learn more about their operation.

“When he came back to Israel, he wanted to start a similar activity here,” says Amir.

Teller and partner Oshik Efrati acquired biogas systems from overseas — primarily China and India – and installed them locally, only to discover they really didn’t work well.

Three years ago, the partners were joined by Erez Lanzer and did some market research. They found that about 2.7 billion people live in places without access to clean energy or proper garbage disposal. More than 40 million home biogas systems have been installed by governments and aid agencies worldwide, mainly in farming communities. Some 50 million more are expected to be installed by 2020.

However, people often stop using the systems because they’re plagued with efficiency problems, bad odors and insect infestations.

If the Israelis were to make a go of their enterprise, they clearly had to develop an improved system. Over the next two years, they built prototypes until commercializing TG last summer.

The units, manufactured in Israel, have a built-in grinder for food waste, a tap for rinsing off plates, a sink and a manual mixer. A bio-filter reduces odors, and a chlorine filter eliminates pathogens in the fertilizer produced. The company, based in Beit Yannai, claims that TevaGas biodigesters can generate enough gas to cook three meals daily, assuming the household “feeds” it all its organic waste.

Monday, June 15, 2015

Israel’s Agro-technology “Grow More with Less”


Israel’s agro-technology industry is characterized by intensive research and development of innovative system, rooted in the need to overcome local scarcities of water and arable land . They
industry’s growth arose from the close cooperation among researchers. Extension agents , farmers and agriculture related industries, cooperative efforts that led to breakthrough achievements. These in turn have fostered a market-oriented agribusiness that exports its agro-technology solution worldwide. The result is modern agriculture methods. Systems and products in a country where more than half the area is dessert  
Israeli agriculture is seen as a world-class example of the ability of advanced technology to change a semi-arid land, with serious security problems, into one of the great success stories of world agriculture.
Some facts & figures :

Ø  Agricultural productivity in Israel has grown by a factor of 10 since the
Ø  1950’s, while the amount of water used in agriculture has been substantially reduced, as have labor inputs.
Ø  Through advanced technology, Israel has reached record highs in productivity per unit for dairy cattle, cotton, olives, and other products.
Ø  Israel’s agricultural technology and broad range of know-how, has become a well-known brand-name for success in the agricultural world.
Ø  Agricultural technology accompanied by Israeli management has become a sought-after product in world agriculture
Ø  Israeli remains well known for breakthrough technology in advanced irrigation, greenhouse systems, vegetable seeds, plant protection and pest management, computerized monitoring and control, and more.
Ø  200 Agro-technology Exporters
Ø  US$4B - Export turnover
Ø  Labor Force - decreased in the last 60 years from 17% to 2.6%
Ø  Cultivated Land - decreased by 20%
Ø  Fresh Water Usage- decreased by 50%
Ø  Product’s Value/1m3 increased from $0.5 up to $4
Ø  Most exports of agricultural inputs are based on decades of development of technology and know-how, in search of solutions for Israeli agricultural constraints: scarcity of water and manpower.
Ø  Scale of this agritechnology is based on Israel’s capacity for development and marketing – it is not limited by natural resources. Israeli companies sell “Israeli smarts” in the form of agricultural inputs.
Ø  In most cases, exports come from innovations developed for Israeli agriculture, which has served as the testing station and the trial fields for the technology that is exported. 

Expertise

v   Irrigation

Israel is the most advanced user of agriculture irrigation, with over half of all agriculture land under irrigation. Israel’s highly innovative irrigation industry has earned a worldwide reputation with more than 80% of the products line are exported.  Israel pioneered innovative irrigation technologies, systems and accessories, such as drip irrigation, automatic valves and controllers, media and automatic filtration, low discharge valves, mini-sprinklers and compensated drippers.
The Israeli developed computer-controlled drip irrigation system save huge quantities of water and also provide the abilities to supply fertilization with the water, Israel irrigation system are used worldwide

        Israeli companies hold 30% of the global market
        Only 12% of the world irrigation is through drip irrigation
        More than 80% of Israel’s irrigation products are exported
        Second most important sector for exports of agricultural inputs
        Developed in order to deal with Israel water scarcity, costs, quality, recycling, and shortage of labor
        As a result, Israel became world leader in advanced irrigation and “the brand” for irrigation
        International concerns have invested in Israel and bought Israeli companies; Israeli firms produce domestically and abroad


v  Greenhouse

Natural restrictions of soil, water and climate led to Israeli-developed greenhouse technologies for high added value crops.
Greenhouse systems, including specialized plastic films, heating, ventilation and structure
systems, enable Israeli farmers to achieve superior results.
Grow more than 3,000,000 roses per hectare per season.
Average of 300 tons of tomatoes per hectare per season, four times the yields of open fields.

        Developed specialized greenhouses for Israeli climatic conditions
        Improved export-quality crops and saved water
   Israeli greenhouses models and technology for operating systems is marketed worldwide


v  Post-Harvest

        Maintaining appearance and nutritional value is key to profitability, especially in a world where produce often travels thousands of miles before consumption.
        An Israeli fruit and vegetable rinsing appliance reduces fresh citrus losses from 15 percent to less than two percent.
        By appropriate post-harvest treatment, including washing and cleaning, application of sanitizing and dis-infestation materials, sorting by size and quality, and application of wax coatings and plant growth regulators where required, freshness can be maintained over long journeys.
        In addition, advanced, product-specific packaging helps preserve and protect produce, as do sophisticated modified atmosphere (MA) and controlled atmosphere (CA) cooling systems ,minimizes post-harvest losses, maximizes producer profits, and results in better appearing, more nutritious fruits and vegetables on consumer plates  


v  Dairy Farming

        Israeli-developed advanced technologies that have revolutionized the industry.
        Israel’s dairy exports include frozen semen, embryos for transplant, heifers, advanced milking and computerized feeding systems, consulting, and joint international project
        development.
        Average milk production has increased two and a half times since the 1950s – from 3,900 liters annually to an average of nearly 11,000 liters per dairy cow.
        Developed to deal with shortage of production resources, harsh and hot climate, labor shortage, and need for self-supply of basic foodstuffs
        Result is the development of most advanced technology for the dairy sector, marketed throughout the world



v  Poultry Farming

Israeli-developed innovations improve production and make poultry farmers’ work more efficient.

        Breeding - Breeds developed in Israel are highly disease-resistant, and adaptable to extreme climate conditions (high humidity & extreme heat). They are characterized by rapid growth rate, high egg production and low-fat meat.
        Equipment - Israel exports automatic egg collector, poultry drinking systems and durable plastic-slat flooring that contribute to hygienic conditions in the henhouse.
        Control System - Sophisticated control systems maintain desired levels of humidity, heat, lighting, feed, ventilation and cooling 24 hours a day.


v  Aquaculture

        Fish farming is carried out in the open sea in floating cages and in man-made reservoirs and ponds.
        Due to the lack of fresh water, fish farmers use closed water systems for intensive farming.
        Wide range of ornamental fish and marine plants are bred, including cold water fish, tropical fish and water lilies, exported overseas, especially to Europe.
        Israel is a world leader in Commercial Microalgae Cultivation with state-of the art production processes and technologies to maximize the efficiency of production and to allow for a high quality line of products, eliminating the risk of microbiological contamination.


v  Seeds

Israeli seeds and seedlings are widely sought on the world market.

        colored cotton & high-yield crops requiring less water Disease-resistant seed varieties that remain durable when stored and are suited to a variety of climatic conditions
        40% of European tomato greenhouses use seeds of a long shelf-life hybrid that was developed in Israel
        Seedless watermelon
        Disease-resistant squash
        Yellow zucchini
        A variety of hybrid cotton with longer & stronger fibers , colored cotton & high-yield crops requiring less water


v  Mechanization

Israel manufactures and exports a variety of specialized agricultural equipment, including:

        Mobile celery packing house
        Machinery for packing houses
        Machinery for digging silage and mixing the feed uniformly
        Poultry equipment (drinkers, automatic egg collectors, climate control systems and scales for weighing)
        Flower bulb trans-planters
        Air-blast Sprayers for use in citrus growing and
        vineyards which provides an efficient cover of the tree


v  Fertilizers

Israel’s southern region, particularly the Dead Sea area, is rich in mines providing potassium, phosphorus and magnesium for the agricultural sector.
        Direct raw material exports
        Local processing and compounding to enhance utility, effectiveness and environmental safety
        Remarkable developments include:
ü  Application of fertilizers through drip irrigation buried in the ground to ensure that less mobile components, such as phosphorous, will reach the roots directly.
ü  Controlled-release Fertilizers – coated in polymers to ensure slow, prolonged
ü  release and delivery via diffusion. Slow release fertilizers allow better exploitation of the fertilizer and less groundwater pollution.


v  Turnkey Projects, Engineering & Consulting

Increasingly, Israeli Agro-technology companies join forces and supply turnkey
projects for both crop and livestock development programs.
Multiple skills, talents and experiences are enlisted to provide integrated solutions that embrace:
        Soil
        Water Additive
        Plants
        Livestock Varieties, Equipment and Structures
The Results:
        Improved Yields at Lower Cost
        A win-win situation in a resource-stressed world