TideSync
- Tanzania
- For-profit, including B-Corp or similar models
The problem of coastal vulnerability to climate change impacts is particularly acute in Tanzania and globally. In Tanzania, over 25% of the population lives within 60 km of the coastline, making them highly exposed to sea-level rise, storm surges, and coastal erosion. Globally, an estimated 3.6 billion people live in coastal regions that are highly vulnerable to climate change hazards.
The World Bank estimates that Tanzania's coastal cities could suffer economic losses of up to $16.8 billion annually by 2050 due to climate change impacts. Globally, the IPCC projects that up to 1 billion people may be displaced by rising seas by 2050. However, many coastal communities lack the data, tools, and resources to effectively plan and prepare for these escalating threats.
Factors contributing to this problem include insufficient infrastructure investment, inadequate disaster preparedness, and a lack of integrated data to inform adaptation strategies. Outdated or incomplete information on local environmental conditions, population dynamics, and climate projections hampers evidence-based decision-making by urban planners and policymakers. As a result, vulnerable coastal populations remain at high risk from the devastating impacts of climate change.
TideSync is an integrated platform that combines AI, IoT sensors, and advanced climate modeling to create high-resolution digital twins of coastal regions. These virtual replicas integrate real-time data on environmental conditions, infrastructure, and climate projections to simulate various scenarios and assess vulnerabilities.
The core of TideSync is a cloud-based software application that ingests data from a network of distributed IoT sensors monitoring factors like water levels, wave heights, and storm surge. This real-time data is blended with geospatial information on coastlines, critical infrastructure, and population distribution. TideSync then applies machine learning models to this data, generating detailed digital twins that can be used to forecast the impacts of sea-level rise, extreme weather, and other climate hazards.
Urban planners, policymakers, and disaster response teams can then utilize the TideSync platform to evaluate the effectiveness of different adaptation strategies, such as nature-based solutions like mangrove restoration or engineered coastal defenses. By simulating the outcomes of these interventions, TideSync empowers evidence-based decision-making to strengthen the climate resilience of vulnerable coastal communities.
Through this data-driven approach, TideSync aims to fill a crucial gap in climate adaptation planning, enabling proactive measures to protect people, property, and vital infrastructure from the escalating impacts of climate change.
TideSync's primary target population is the coastal communities in Tanzania and other regions highly vulnerable to climate change impacts. This includes an estimated 12 million Tanzanians living within 60 km of the coastline, many of whom are low-income residents of informal settlements that lack adequate infrastructure and disaster preparedness.
These vulnerable populations are disproportionately affected by sea-level rise, storm surges, and coastal erosion, which can devastate homes, livelihoods, and critical public services. For example, a 2019 study found that a 1-meter rise in sea level could displace over 1.3 million Tanzanians and result in $10 billion in economic losses.
By providing urban planners and policymakers with a data-driven platform to assess climate risks and evaluate adaptation strategies, TideSync empowers these stakeholders to make more informed decisions to protect coastal communities. The high-resolution digital twins generated by TideSync can identify specific neighborhoods and infrastructure at risk, enabling targeted interventions like nature-based flood mitigation, resilient building codes, and emergency evacuation planning.
TideSync aims to reduce the human and economic toll of climate change impacts on vulnerable coastal populations. By catalyzing proactive, evidence-based adaptation measures, the solution has the potential to safeguard millions of lives, preserve livelihoods, and build the long-term resilience of frontline communities in Tanzania and other climate change hotspots around the world.
The TideSync team is uniquely positioned to deliver this solution, drawing on deep expertise and close ties to the coastal communities of Tanzania.
The CEO, Vaileth Ngulwa, is a lifelong resident of Dar es Salaam, one of Tanzania's most vulnerable coastal cities. Vaileth has witnessed firsthand the devastating impacts of climate change on her community and has a personal commitment to building resilience. As an urban planner, she has collaborated extensively with local government agencies and community organizations to address infrastructure gaps and disaster preparedness needs.
Vaileth is joined by a diverse, interdisciplinary team of Tanzanian professionals, including:
- Amani Mfinanga, a marine scientist from Zanzibar, who leads the development of the IoT sensor network and coastal modeling capabilities.
- Saumu Jumanne, a data scientist from Mtwara, who oversees the AI-powered data analysis and digital twin simulations.
- Asha Khamis, a community organizer from Tanga, who ensures the solution is designed with meaningful input from local stakeholders.
- Mapenzi Mturi, an urban planner from Mwanza, who integrates TideSync insights into municipal climate adaptation strategies.
This team's deep roots in Tanzania's coastal communities, combined with their technical expertise, enable a human-centered approach to solution design and implementation. Through ongoing engagement with local government, civil society groups, and vulnerable populations, the TideSync team ensures the platform remains responsive to the evolving needs and priorities of those most impacted by climate change.
- Strengthen coastal and marine ecosystems and communities through the broader blue economy, including fisheries, clean energy, and monitoring, reporting, and verification.
- 11. Sustainable Cities and Communities
- 13. Climate Action
- 14. Life Below Water
- Prototype
Our solution is currently at the Prototype stage. We have built an initial working version of the TideSync platform, integrating AI-powered data analytics, IoT sensor networks, and climate modeling capabilities. This prototype has been tested in a limited pilot program with the Dar es Salaam City Council, providing high-resolution digital twins and scenario modeling for several vulnerable coastal neighborhoods.
Through this pilot, we have gathered valuable feedback from urban planners, policymakers, and community representatives to refine the TideSync user interface and optimize the data inputs and analytical features. However, we have not yet scaled the solution to serve a large number of direct beneficiaries across Tanzania's coastal regions.
The prototype phase has allowed us to demonstrate the technical feasibility of the TideSync approach and establish important partnerships with local government agencies and research institutions. But to reach the next stage of development, we will need to secure additional funding and resources to expand the sensor network, enhance the modeling capabilities, and roll out the solution to a wider range of coastal communities in Tanzania and potentially other climate hotspots globally.
We are applying to Solve because the program's focus on supporting innovative, technology-driven solutions to critical global challenges aligns closely with our own mission and approach. As a Tanzanian startup, we face several barriers that we hope Solve can help us overcome:
Financial Barriers: Securing the necessary funding to scale the TideSync platform and expand our sensor network across Tanzania's vast coastline is a major challenge. The grants and prize opportunities offered through Solve could provide crucial financial resources to supplement our own seed funding and accelerate our growth.
Technical Barriers: Developing the advanced AI and modeling capabilities required for our high-resolution digital twins requires ongoing R&D and expertise that we are still building internally. Solve's extensive partner network could connect us with technical experts, research institutions, and other resources to strengthen the TideSync technology.
Market Barriers: Effectively engaging and gaining buy-in from local government agencies, urban planners, and coastal communities is essential for the widespread adoption of TideSync. Solve's community-focused approach and emphasis on human-centered design could help us navigate cultural and political barriers to ensure our solution meets the needs of the target users.
Beyond just financial support, we are particularly excited about the opportunity to leverage Solve's extensive partner network and collaborative platform to forge strategic alliances, access specialized mentorship, and amplify the impact of our work. With Solve's guidance and connections, we believe TideSync can realize its full potential to build climate resilience and protect vulnerable coastal populations in Tanzania and beyond.
- Business Model (e.g. product-market fit, strategy & development)
- Monitoring & Evaluation (e.g. collecting/using data, measuring impact)
- Technology (e.g. software or hardware, web development/design)
TideSync's innovative approach lies in its unique integration of cutting-edge technologies to address the complex challenge of coastal climate resilience in a comprehensive and data-driven manner.
Unlike traditional climate adaptation planning that relies on static models and limited data sources, TideSync creates dynamic, high-resolution digital twins of coastal regions by blending real-time IoT sensor data, detailed geospatial information, and advanced climate projections. This enables urban planners and policymakers to simulate a range of scenarios and assess the vulnerabilities of specific neighborhoods, infrastructure, and populations.
The ability to generate hyperlocal insights and test the efficacy of different adaptation strategies sets TideSync apart from existing solutions, which often lack the granularity and scenario-based analysis capabilities needed to inform evidence-based decision-making.
Moreover, TideSync's open-source architecture and modular design allow for easy integration with other smart city platforms and data sources. This interoperability could catalyze broader positive impacts by enabling coastal communities to share data, collaborate on joint resilience initiatives, and scale successful interventions across regional and national boundaries.
By democratizing access to high-quality climate data and simulation tools, TideSync has the potential to fundamentally shift the landscape of coastal adaptation planning. Rather than relying on reactive, one-size-fits-all approaches, local stakeholders can now proactively design and implement customized, community-specific solutions to protect their most vulnerable populations and critical assets.
This innovative, data-driven paradigm for building coastal resilience could serve as a replicable model, inspiring similar technology-enabled initiatives in other climate change hotspots around the world.
TideSync's theory of change is grounded in the premise that data-driven, community-engaged approaches to coastal climate adaptation can significantly enhance the resilience of vulnerable populations.
By developing high-resolution digital twins of coastal regions, TideSync empowers urban planners, policymakers, and disaster response teams with the analytical tools and real-time data they need to make informed decisions. This includes the ability to:
Outputs:
1) Identify specific neighborhoods, infrastructure, and populations most at risk from climate hazards like sea-level rise and storm surges.
2) Evaluate the effectiveness of different adaptation strategies, such as nature-based solutions, resilient building codes, and emergency evacuation planning.
3) Integrate climate risk considerations into long-term infrastructure investments and land use planning.
Outcomes:
1) Targeted, cost-effective implementation of adaptation measures to protect vulnerable coastal communities.
2) Increased preparedness and reduced impact of climate-related disasters on lives, livelihoods, and critical services.
3) Strengthened collaboration between local governments, civil society, and coastal residents in building climate resilience.
Evidence supporting this theory of change comes from academic research on the potential of digital twins and IoT sensors to enhance urban climate adaptation, as well as case studies of successful community-based resilience initiatives in other regions. Additionally, our pilot program in Dar es Salaam has demonstrated the high demand for and positive impact of the TideSync platform among local stakeholders.
By continuing to refine and scale the TideSync solution, we believe we can catalyze a transformative shift in how vulnerable coastal communities plan for and respond to the escalating threats of climate change.
TideSync's overarching impact goal is to enhance the climate resilience of vulnerable coastal populations in Tanzania and other global hotspots, thereby reducing the human and economic toll of climate change-related disasters.
Specifically, we aim to:
1. Protect 1 million people living in high-risk coastal communities from the impacts of sea-level rise, storm surges, and coastal erosion by 2028.
2. Catalyze $50 million in climate adaptation investments by local governments and private sector partners to implement nature-based solutions and resilient infrastructure by 2030.
3. Increase the proportion of coastal urban areas in Tanzania with comprehensive disaster preparedness and emergency response plans from 25% to 75% by 2027.
To measure our progress towards these goals, we are collecting and monitoring the following key indicators:
- Number of people living in coastal communities that have been mapped and assessed for climate vulnerabilities using the TideSync platform
- Total value of public and private sector investments in climate adaptation projects facilitated through TideSync's data and modeling insights
- Percentage of coastal cities and municipalities in Tanzania that have integrated TideSync's risk assessments and adaptation strategies into their long-term development plans
- Reduction in the number of lives lost and economic losses incurred due to climate-related disasters in TideSync-enabled communities
By setting clear, measurable impact targets and continuously tracking our performance against these indicators, we can ensure that TideSync remains focused on driving meaningful, sustainable change for the most vulnerable coastal populations.
The core technology powering the TideSync solution is a combination of advanced AI, IoT sensors, and data modeling capabilities:
AI-powered Data Analytics: At the heart of TideSync is a sophisticated machine learning platform that ingests and processes vast amounts of real-time and historical data from a distributed network of environmental sensors. These AI models analyze patterns in factors like water levels, wave heights, wind speeds, and precipitation to generate highly accurate forecasts and simulations of climate change impacts.
IoT Sensor Network: TideSync relies on a network of strategically placed IoT sensors along coastal regions to capture granular, hyperlocal data on environmental conditions. This includes water level gauges, wave monitors, weather stations, and even camera-based monitoring of shoreline changes. The sensor data is fed directly into the TideSync platform to update the digital twin models in real-time.
Climate Modeling and Simulation: Building on the sensor data and AI-driven analytics, TideSync utilizes cutting-edge climate modeling techniques to generate detailed virtual replicas of coastal communities. These digital twins can then be used to simulate the impacts of sea-level rise, storm surges, and other climate hazards under various scenarios. This allows urban planners and policymakers to test the effectiveness of different adaptation strategies before implementing them.
By seamlessly integrating these advanced technologies, TideSync provides a comprehensive, data-driven approach to coastal climate resilience planning. This innovative solution empowers vulnerable communities to make more informed decisions that protect lives, livelihoods, and critical infrastructure from the escalating threats of a changing climate.
- A new application of an existing technology
- Artificial Intelligence / Machine Learning
- Big Data
- GIS and Geospatial Technology
- Imaging and Sensor Technology
- Internet of Things
- Software and Mobile Applications
- Tanzania
The TideSync solution team currently consists of:
5 full-time employees:
- Vaileth Ngulwa, CEO and Co-founder
- Amani Mfinanga, Chief Scientist and Co-founder
- Saumu Jumanne, Head of Data Science
- Asha Khamis, Community Engagement Lead
- Mapenzi Mturi, Urban Planning Advisor
4 part-time contractors:
- Geospatial Analyst
- Software Engineer
- Communications Specialist
- Business Development Consultant
This diverse, interdisciplinary team brings together expertise in coastal science, urban planning, data analytics, community outreach, and business strategy to drive the development and deployment of the TideSync platform.
The TideSync solution has been in development for the past 11 months. The core team first began conceptualizing the platform in mid-2023 to address the growing climate adaptation needs of Tanzania's coastal communities. Over the past year, the team has built a prototype, established partnerships, and conducted a pilot deployment in Dar es Salaam. This initial phase has allowed the team to refine the technical capabilities, user experience, and go-to-market strategy for TideSync. With this solid foundation, the team is now poised to scale the platform and expand its reach across Tanzania's vulnerable coastal regions.
Diversity, equity, and inclusion are core values that are deeply embedded throughout the TideSync organization and team. We firmly believe that building a diverse, representative, and inclusive workforce is essential for driving innovation and ensuring our solution meets the needs of the vulnerable coastal communities we serve.
Our leadership team is intentionally diverse, comprised of individuals with varied backgrounds, expertise, and lived experiences. Our CEO, Vaileth Ngulwa, is a woman of Tanzanian descent, while our Chief Scientist, Amani Mfinanga, comes from a minority ethnic group. Together, they have assembled a team that reflects the diversity of the communities we work with, including women, youth, and individuals from marginalized backgrounds.
Beyond our leadership, we have implemented several practices and policies to further our DEI goals:
- Inclusive hiring: We actively seek out and encourage applications from underrepresented groups, and have implemented blind resume screening to mitigate unconscious bias.
- Equitable compensation: We conduct regular pay equity audits to ensure fair and competitive compensation for all team members, regardless of gender, race, or other identity factors.
- Capacity-building: We provide professional development opportunities and mentorship programs to empower our team members, especially those from disadvantaged backgrounds, to grow their skills and advance their careers.
- Inclusive culture: We foster a welcoming, collaborative, and psychologically safe work environment where all voices and perspectives are valued. We also celebrate the diverse identities and cultural traditions of our team.
By embedding DEI principles throughout our organization, we aim to not only build a stronger, more innovative team, but also serve as a model for how technology-driven solutions can be inclusive and equitable in their approach to solving complex global challenges.
TideSync's business model is centered on providing a comprehensive, data-driven platform to support coastal climate adaptation and resilience planning for local governments, urban planners, and community stakeholders.
Our primary customers are city and municipal authorities in Tanzania's coastal regions, as well as national government agencies responsible for disaster management and environmental protection. We offer them a suite of software-as-a-service (SaaS) products and tailored advisory services, including:
1. TideSync Core: The flagship digital twin and modeling platform that allows users to visualize climate risks, assess adaptation strategies, and develop resilience plans.
2. TideSync Sensors: A turnkey IoT sensor network and data integration service to provide real-time environmental monitoring and data inputs for the digital twin models.
3. TideSync Advisory: Expert consulting services to support the implementation of TideSync, as well as the design and evaluation of climate adaptation projects.
Our value proposition is rooted in helping these customers make more informed, data-driven decisions that can effectively protect vulnerable coastal communities and critical infrastructure from the impacts of climate change. By reducing the human and economic toll of disasters, TideSync delivers both societal and financial returns for our clients.
The revenue model combines subscription fees for the SaaS products, equipment leasing for the sensor networks, and project-based consulting fees. We also seek to secure grants and government funding to subsidize the adoption of TideSync in lower-resource communities.
Our business model is designed to be financially sustainable while maximizing the positive impact we can have on the lives of coastal residents in Tanzania and, eventually, other climate hotspots around the world.
- Organizations (B2B)
TideSync's plan for financial sustainability is multi-pronged, drawing on a combination of revenue streams and external funding sources:
Revenue Streams:
1. SaaS Subscriptions: The core TideSync platform is offered as a software-as-a-service model, with local government authorities and urban planning agencies paying subscription fees to access the digital twin modeling, data analytics, and decision-support capabilities.
2. Sensor Network Leasing: TideSync provides a turnkey IoT sensor network installation and data management service, with clients paying equipment leasing and data service fees.
3. Advisory Services: In addition to the SaaS products, TideSync offers consulting and advisory services to support the implementation and integration of the platform, as well as the design and evaluation of climate adaptation projects.
External Funding:
1. Government Grants: TideSync has already secured $41,000 funding from the Tanzanian Ministry of Environment to pilot the platform in Dar es Salaam. We are actively pursuing additional grants and subsidies from national and local government agencies to support the wider rollout of the solution.
2. Development Finance: We are in discussions with impact investment funds and development finance institutions to secure blended financing that can help scale the TideSync platform and subsidize adoption in lower-resource coastal communities.
3. Corporate Partnerships: TideSync is exploring strategic partnerships with multinational companies and foundations interested in supporting climate adaptation and resilience initiatives in East Africa.