Adolfo Cambiaso cloning of polo ponies

Cambiaso at Hurlingham: Fans may start seeing double when the Triple Corona gets underway this year.

It may sound like a bad sequel or a summer blockbuster, but it’s actually the debate being generated by the creeping acceptance of cloning in the sport of kings. The fact that one of Argentina’s greatest players has now partnered with a U.S. laboratory to create exact genetic duplicates of his prized ponies has only ratcheted up the debate.

Guillermo Buchanan, the president of the veterinarian association of the Argentina Association of Horse Breeders told BBC Mundo, “There is a big internal debate. We encourage all methods of artificial reproduction and genetic enhancement, but in this case we are talking about copying an animal and now we’re figuring out how to regulate it.”

If the pro-polo-cloning camp wanted a high-profile ambassador, they got it when Adolfo Cambiaso stepped into the ring of equine genetics. Cambiaso partnered with U.S.-based Crestview Genetics which operates a breeding facility just 12 miles outside of Pilar in Buenos Aires Province.

According to the website of Ernesto Gutierrez, one of the Crestview investment partners, “Adolfo Cambiaso has 17 one-year old clones (5 in Argentina and 12 in the United States), several 3-month old specimens, and 3 recent newborns from his wonderful Lapa mare. The price for the clones will vary depending on the demand in production. The price for a clone is approximately USD $100,000, while ten specimens will cost USD $600,000.

While some full-grown genetic twins are already participating in polo matches in the U.S., BBC Mundo says the clone revolution is just beginning in Argentina. Get your popcorn ready.  (Full Story in Spanish)

arteBA 2010 Sign

Annual events like arteBA and BAFWeek showcase BA's rising tide of creativity and entrepreneurial activity.

Entrepreneurship and creativity are two of our favorite topics @InvestBA. When we were choosing content category names for the site, we opted for The Creative Class as a nod to urban studies theorist Richard Florida.

In his 2002 best seller, Florida developed a Creativity Index to rank cities based on key criteria like Talent, Technology and Tolerance (aka the Three T’s). The review from Atlantic Monthly summed up the book’s thesis beautifully: Why cities without gays and rock bands are losing the economic development race.

Most BA visitors come away with the impression the city is chock full of the first, trying hard to nurture the second and taking the regional lead with the third. (Given the recent marriage decision, “gay friendly” tourism will flourish here like no other corner of the Americas.)

Now comes the annual ranking from Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) that confirms our suspicions we’re living in a magnet for creativity and entrepreneurial activity. “Buenos Aires is the Latin American city with the highest start-up rate per capita,” writes BBC Mundo’s Veronica Smink adding, “BA also fares well in comparison with some of the world’s major cities, taking seventh place in terms of entrepreneurial activity ahead of cities like New York, Paris, Madrid, Barcelona and Amsterdam.”

The majority of BA entrepreneurs are between 18-35 years old and focused on technology, design and visual arts. In closing, Smink says start-up growth should continue its upward trajectory given Argentina’s rich talent and human resource advantages. The GEM report’s only negative? The failure rate of local start-ups is fairly high after 2-3 years. But in the immortal words of Winston Churchill, Success is going from failure to failure without losing your enthusiasm.

Or in the words of Michael Scott, If tomorrow my company goes under I will just start another paper company. And then another and another and another. I have no shortage of company names. (Full article in Spanish)

 

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