The Africa Agriculture Adaptation Atlas makes scientific knowledge practically accessible through interactive data explorations for policymakers, researchers, and investors to better understand climate risks, impacts, vulnerability, and adaptation strategies.
In this challenge, we’re asking you to bring your data wrangling expertise, visualisation skills, and creative storytelling to craft interactive data visualisation notebooks that answer critical questions about climate risk and adaptation for partner decision-makers in Africa. You’ll use climate, socio-economic and agricultural data and all your creative ingenuity to answer key questions and craft data-driven stories that inform policy and investment decisions.
We have 6 tracks within this challenge that address specific climate adaptation questions provided by real African institutions. Your notebooks should answer critical questions and communicate data insights through visualisations and compelling narratives. Winning notebooks will be incorporated into the Africa Agriculture Adaptation Atlas and assist decision-makers across Africa.
Track 5: Rainfall Reliability Explorer (in partnership with RCMRD)
This tool, proposed by RCMRD, analyses historical and projected climate data to assess how the onset, length, and variability of Kenya’s rainy seasons are shifting across counties. It helps farmers, planners, and policymakers identify vulnerable regions, link rainfall trends to crop and livestock risks, and plan climate-smart interventions like irrigation.
Key questions to answer in Track 5:
See the Data tab for a more detailed description of the topic, the key questions, and suggested resources to answer each question.
To help you get started with data storytelling in climate and health, we have partnered with the Capacity Accelerator Network (CAN) powered by data.org to provide free online accreditation in two relevant courses. These courses are quick to complete and will provide you with the skills and inspiration you need to succeed in this challenge. They also come with accreditation on Zindi.
This challenge will be evaluated in two phases - initial leaderboard position will be determined by preliminary rubric evaluation, and final winners will be decided based on expert panel evaluation of the top 10 Phase One scores in each track. Evaluation rubrics for Phase One and Phase Two are below.
The top ten participants in each track of Phase One will be asked to submit the URL link of their full notebook and supporting documentation for evaluation in Phase Two.
Phase one: Preliminary rubric evaluation
Your initial leaderboard score will be awarded, according to the following rubric:
Phase Two: Final rubric evaluation
If you achieve a score in the top 10 for a specific topic in Phase One, your notebook submission will be reviewed in Phase Two by an expert panel, according to the following rubric:
To make a submission in this challenge, users are required to fork and work directly from the Observable notebook template provided. You will export your Observable notebook to HTML and submit the HTML file for scoring on Zindi.
You will need to create a free Observable account to participate. Note that all Observable notebooks are either unlisted or public. We recommend that you keep your notebook unlisted for the duration of the challenge.
Exporting your Observable notebook to HTML with Notebook Kit
The Observable Notebook Kit module allows for an Observable notebook to be converted into a standalone HTML file for submission. To convert your Observable notebook into a static html, follow these steps:
Here is an example which shows how to convert the Observable notebook at https://observablehq.com/d/8a953dc1cde63a86 to a static html file called notebook.html
In this particular example the output name is notebook.html.
We recommend the output name follows the convention <username>_<track_number>.html. For example, if my Zindi username is ‘User 15’ and I am currently working on the first track, I will create a file called User15_track_1.html.
🥇 1st prize (per track) $1 000 USD
🥈 2nd prize (per track) $500 USD
⭐ Most innovative (across all tracks) $1 000 USD
🙆♀️ Best female submission (across all tracks) $750 USD
🌍 Best submission by an African citizen (across all tracks) $750 USD
🚀 There are 2 000 Zindi points available per track. You can read more about Zindi points here.
Winning notebooks will be incorporated into the Africa Agriculture Adaptation Atlas, potentially with modifications, and with acknowledgements of the original notebook author(s).
About Alliance of Bioversity & CIAT (International Center for Tropical Agriculture)
The Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT combines the expertise of two long-standing institutions to tackle global challenges like climate change, biodiversity loss, and malnutrition. CIAT, founded in 1967 in Colombia, has focused on improving smallholder farming through sustainable crop, landscape, and market management, while Bioversity International, established in 1974 in Italy, has advanced the conservation and use of plant genetic resources. Together, the Alliance develops research-based solutions that harness agricultural biodiversity to transform food systems, working with partners across Latin America, the Caribbean, Asia, and Africa to create sustainable landscapes, boost prosperity, and improve nutrition. The Alliance is a CGIAR research center.
About CGIAR (Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research)
CGIAR is a global partnership that unites international organisations engaged in research around food security, poverty reduction, human health, and sustainable resource management. The network supports 15 research centers worldwide, mainly in the Global South, working with partners across governments, NGOs, academic institutions, and the private sector. CGIAR's mission is to achieve sustainable food security and reduce poverty in developing countries through scientific research in agriculture, environment, and related fields.
About Africa Agriculture Adaptation Atlas
The Adaptation Atlas is a tool designed to address Africa’s urgent need for accessible, context-specific climate adaptation data. It equips decision-makers with practical, data-driven insights to design locally relevant adaptation strategies, assess climate risks, identify vulnerable populations, and evaluate economic returns of adaptation options. The Atlas includes interactive notebooks and maps, making climate science actionable for practitioners, policy makers, and communities across Africa. The Sustainable Agriculture Foundation managed use-case partnerships testing the Atlas, and The Africa Network of Agricultural Policy Research Institutes, Agricultural Transformation Institute, Regional Centre for Mapping of Resources for Development, and African Group of Negotiators Experts Support provided the challenge content based on the real-world needs of their stakeholders.
About data.org
data.org is a platform accelerating the use of data and AI to solve major global challenges and build the field of data for social impact. It convenes and coordinates across sectors to advance practical solutions, host innovation challenges, and train purpose-driven data practitioners. By 2032, data.org aims to train 1 million purpose-driven data and AI professionals, foster digital public goods, and build connections for impactful data use around the world.
About CAN (Capacity Accelerator Network)
The Capacity Accelerator Network, powered by data.org, is building a workforce of purpose-driven data and AI practitioners and enabling organizations to unlock the power of data to meet their missions. With five Data Capacity Accelerators based in the United States, India, Africa, Latin America, and Asia Pacific, CAN’s capacity building is globally-informed and locally-grounded through a network of more than 100 cross-sector partners around the world.
ENTRY INTO THIS CHALLENGE CONSTITUTES YOUR ACCEPTANCE OF THESE OFFICIAL CHALLENGE RULES.
Full Challenge Rules
This challenge is open to all.
Teams and collaboration
You may participate in challenges as an individual or in a team of up to four people. When creating a team, the team must have a total submission count less than or equal to the maximum allowable submissions as of the formation date. A team will be allowed the maximum number of submissions for the challenge, minus the total number of submissions among team members at team formation. Prizes are transferred only to the individual players or to the team leader.
Multiple accounts per user are not permitted, and neither is collaboration or membership across multiple teams. Individuals and their submissions originating from multiple accounts will be immediately disqualified from the platform.
Code must not be shared privately outside of a team. Any code that is shared, must be made available to all challenge participants through the platform. (i.e. on the discussion boards).
The Zindi data scientist who sets up a team is the default Team Leader but they can transfer leadership to another data scientist on the team. The Team Leader can invite other data scientists to their team. Invited data scientists can accept or reject invitations. Until a second data scientist accepts an invitation to join a team, the data scientist who initiated a team remains an individual on the leaderboard. No additional members may be added to teams within the final 5 days of the challenge or last hour of a hackathon.
The team leader can initiate a merge with another team. Only the team leader of the second team can accept the invite. The default team leader is the leader from the team who initiated the invite. Teams can only merge if the total number of members is less than or equal to the maximum team size of the challenge.
A team can be disbanded if it has not yet made a submission. Once a submission is made individual members cannot leave the team.
All members in the team receive points associated with their ranking in the challenge and there is no split or division of the points between team members.
Datasets, packages and general principles
The solution must use publicly-available, open-source packages only.
You may use only the datasets provided for this challenge.
You may use pretrained models as long as they are openly available to everyone.
Automated machine learning tools such as automl are not permitted.
If the error metric requires probabilities to be submitted, do not set thresholds (or round your probabilities) to improve your place on the leaderboard. In order to ensure that the client receives the best solution Zindi will need the raw probabilities. This will allow the clients to set thresholds to their own needs.
You are allowed to access, use and share challenge data for any commercial, non-commercial, research or education purposes, under a CC-BY SA 4.0 license, except where explicitly noted in the documentation.
You must notify Zindi immediately upon learning of any unauthorised transmission of or unauthorised access to the challenge data, and work with Zindi to rectify any unauthorised transmission or access.
Your solution must not infringe the rights of any third party and you must be legally entitled to assign ownership of all rights of copyright in and to the winning solution code to Zindi.
Submissions and winning
You may make a maximum of 10 submissions for this challenge.
Before the end of the challenge you need to choose your best submission to be judged on for the private leaderboard.
During the challenge, your best score will be displayed regardless of the submissions you have selected. When the challenge closes, your best public score will be displayed, unless you are in the top 10, in which case your Phase Two score will be displayed.
Note that to count, your submission must first pass processing. If your submission fails during the processing step, it will not be counted and not receive a score; nor will it count against your daily submission limit. If you encounter problems with your submission file, your best course of action is to ask for advice on the challenge page.
If you are in the top 10 at the time the leaderboard closes, we will email you to request your code. On receipt of email, you will have 48 hours to respond and submit your code following the Reproducibility of submitted code guidelines detailed below. Failure to respond will result in disqualification.
If your solution places 1st, 2nd, or 3rd on the final leaderboard, you will be required to submit your winning solution notebook URL to us for verification, and you thereby agree to assign all worldwide rights of copyright in and to such winning solution to Zindi.
If two solutions earn identical scores on the leaderboard, the tiebreaker will be the date and time in which the submission was made (the earlier solution will win).
The winners will be paid via bank transfer, PayPal if payment is less than or equivalent to $100, or other international money transfer platform. International transfer fees will be deducted from the total prize amount, unless the prize money is under $500, in which case the international transfer fees will be covered by Zindi. In all cases, the winners are responsible for any other fees applied by their own bank or other institution for receiving the prize money. All taxes imposed on prizes are the sole responsibility of the winners. The top winners or team leaders will be required to present Zindi with proof of identification, proof of residence and a letter from your bank confirming your banking details. Winners will be paid in USD or the currency of the challenge. If your account cannot receive US Dollars or the currency of the challenge then your bank will need to provide proof of this and Zindi will try to accommodate this.
Please note that due to the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict, we are not currently able to make prize payments to winners located in Russia. We apologise for any inconvenience that may cause, and will handle any issues that arise on a case-by-case basis.
Payment will be made after code review and sealing the leaderboard.
You acknowledge and agree that Zindi may, without any obligation to do so, remove or disqualify an individual, team, or account if Zindi believes that such individual, team, or account is in violation of these rules. Entry into this challenge constitutes your acceptance of these official challenge rules.
Zindi is committed to providing solutions of value to our clients and partners. To this end, we reserve the right to disqualify your submission on the grounds of usability or value. This includes but is not limited to the use of data leaks or any other practices that we deem to compromise the inherent value of your solution.
Zindi also reserves the right to disqualify you and/or your submissions from any challenge if we believe that you violated the rules or violated the spirit of the challenge or the platform in any other way. The disqualifications are irrespective of your position on the leaderboard and completely at the discretion of Zindi.
Please refer to the FAQs and Terms of Use for additional rules that may apply to this challenge. We reserve the right to update these rules at any time.
Reproducibility of submitted code
If your submitted code does not reproduce your score on the leaderboard, we reserve the right to adjust your rank to the score generated by the code you submitted.
If your code does not run you will be dropped from the top 10. Please make sure your code runs before submitting your solution.
Always set the seed. Rerunning your model should always place you at the same position on the leaderboard. When running your solution, if randomness shifts you down the leaderboard we reserve the right to adjust your rank to the closest score that your submission reproduces.
Custom packages in your submission notebook will not be accepted.
You may only use tools available to everyone i.e. no paid services or free trials that require a credit card.
Consequences of breaking any rules of the challenge or submission guidelines:
Teams with individuals who are caught cheating will not be eligible to win prizes or points in the challenge in which the cheating occurred, regardless of the individuals’ knowledge of or participation in the offence.
Teams with individuals who have previously committed an offence will not be eligible for any prizes for any challenges during the 6-month probation period.
Monitoring of submissions
We will review the top 10 solutions of every challenge when the challenge ends.
We reserve the right to request code from any user at any time during a challenge. You will have 24 hours to submit your code following the rules for code review (see above). Zindi reserves the right not to explain our reasons for requesting code. If you do not submit your code within 24 hours you will be disqualified from winning any challenges or Zindi points for the next six months. If you fall under suspicion again and your code is requested and you fail to submit your code within 24 hours, your Zindi account will be disabled and you will be disqualified from winning any challenges or Zindi points with any other account.
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