Africa Prize announces finalists for continent’s largest engineering innovation award

Thu, Jul 1, 2021
By editor
7 MIN READ

Award

FEMALE innovators make up three out of four finalists for Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation, as Gambian and Ivorian-based innovators feature for the first time, alongside Nigeria and South Africa.

Engineering innovations to tackle inequality in the media industry, provide financial services to people who have no access to banking, 3D print customisable orthopaedic equipment for patients, and help farmers generate income from biowaste, have been selected as finalists for the prestigious Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation 2021.

The four finalists – three of whom are women – from Côte d’Ivoire, Nigeria, South Africa, and The Gambia were selected from a shortlist of 16 African innovators for their ability to use engineering to solve problems for African communities. They were chosen after receiving eight months of training, mentorship and support through the Africa Prize, with expert volunteers providing bespoke, one-on-one support on topics including business plans, scaling, recruitment, IP protection, financing, commercialisation, and more. For the first time, Gambian and Ivorian- based innovators are in the running. Both South Africa and Nigeria have seen local innovators win the Africa Prize in previous years.

“All 16 entrepreneurs have developed innovative and sustainable solutions to problems faced by Africans,” said John Lazar. “It has been a remarkable experience to learn about all 16 innovations in the past eight months. These four finalists represent an impressive potential for impact in Africa.”

 

The Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation, founded by the Royal Academy of

Engineering in 2014, is Africa’s biggest prize dedicated to developing African

innovators, and assisting them in maximising their impact. It awards crucial

commercialisation support to ambitious African innovators developing scalable

engineering solutions to address local challenges, demonstrating how

engineering can enable improved quality of life and economic development.

An eight-month period of tailored training and mentoring will culminate in a

showcase event where a winner is selected to receive £25,000, along with three

runners-up who are each awarded £10,000. The Africa Prize is generously

supported by the UK Government’s Global Challenges Research Fund, having

been supported by The Shell Centenary Scholarship Fund from 2014 to 2020.

The 2021 Africa Prize winner will be selected on 8 July 2021. Local supporters,

industry peers, engineering and entrepreneurial enthusiasts as well as media are

encouraged to join the free, virtual event.

The speakers will include Charles Murito, Director of Sub Saharan Africa, Government Affairs and Public Policy at Google, as well as Sarah Burns, CEO and co-founder of NIA Crowdfund. Samuel Njuguna, founder of Chura and an alumnus of the Africa Prize, will also speak. For more information and to register for the event, click here.

Judges, mentors and expert reviewers for the Africa Prize for Engineering

Innovation have volunteered a combined 2,300 hours of support to entrepreneurs across the continent since the prize was established – estimated at well over £1 million in support.

The Africa Prize runs annually and is designed to bring together individual innovators changing their communities, to form a network that can transform a continent. Alumni of the Africa Prize are projected to impact over three million lives in the next five years and have already created more than 1,500 jobs and raised more than $14 million in grants and equity. The 2022 Africa Prize for

Engineering Innovation is now open for entries. Individuals and small teams living

and working in sub-Saharan Africa who have a scalable engineering innovation

that can solve a local challenge are invited to enter. Interested entrants can find more information here. The deadline for entries is 20 July 2021.

This year’s finalists are:

 

  • BlueAvo, a digital platform that connects creative brands and people in

the media industry with local content creators, providing a digital

workspace for collaboration and project development. South African

business specialist, Indira Tsengiwe, developed the platform in response

to the need for innovation in the African media industry, creating

opportunities for youth, small businesses and emerging markets where

large agencies once dominated the industry. BlueAvo has used the

support from the Africa Prize to launch online across Africa, and set a

target of 10,000 creative users by the end of 2021. The team has also

generated multiple revenue streams, enabling the innovation to attract

more investors.

  • In Côte d’Ivoire, KubeKo helps Ivorian smallholder farmers to efficiently

manage and monetise biowaste. Chemical engineer Noël N’guessan

developed Kubeko to improve the lives of thousands of farmers and their

families to generate more income from the by-products of their harvests,

without any additional labour. The Kubeko composter and biodigester are

both specifically designed to ferment agricultural post-harvest by-

products. Biowaste represents two to five times the quantity of crops or

produce sold, amounting to 30 million tonnes of waste disposed of

annually in Côte d’Ivoire. The machine is prefabricated for easy on-site

assembly and is produced in two forms – a composter and a biodigester –

producing solid and liquid compost and cooking gas.

  • From Nigeria, Social Lender is a digital financial services solution that uses

a Social Reputation Score to provide access to financing. Finance specialist,

Faith Adesemowo, created the digital solution to give access to Africans including farmers, students and small business owners who lack access to

formal financial services. Five years on, the platform has impacted the lives

of more than 100,000 customers in Nigeria and South Africa. Social Lender

partners with service providers like banks, microfinance institutions, micro-

insurance companies, and agricultural input companies to offer facilities

based on Social Reputation Scores.

  • Make3D Medical uses 3D printing to create customised orthopaedic

equipment for medical institutions and their patients. Mechanical and

electronics engineer Juka Fatou Darboe from The Gambia has identified

areas where Make3D Medical devices can be used as an alternative to

 

surgery, and where they can be used to modify existing devices to make

them more culturally acceptable, more physician- and patient-friendly, and

better suited to local climates than Plaster of Paris. The company also helps

medical professionals learn how to print their own components, providing

a package of training, hardware, software, raw materials, and 3D designs.

The remaining 12 candidates from the 2021 Africa Prize shortlist are now eligible

for a brand new One-to-Watch Award worth £5,000, which will be judged on the

strength of their business pitch by the audience. They will compete for the

public’s vote at the Africa Prize final on 8 July, which can be booked here free of

charge. They are:

  • Aevhas, Jacob Azundah from Nigeria – a high-efficiency machine used to

process cassava roots into the West African diet staple, garri.

  • Biopackaging, Armelle Sidje from Cameroon – a sustainable

manufacturing process that transforms banana and plantain stems to

biodegradable paper packaging products.

  • CodeLn, Elohor Thomas from Nigeria – an automated tech recruitment

platform that supports software engineering recruitment by connecting

companies with talented people in the field and helps test their coding

abilities.

  • Dissolv Bioplastic, Tshepo Mangoele from South Africa – a bioplastic made

from plant waste material, which is compostable and dissolves in water at

pre-determined rates.

  • I3S, Marie Ndieguene from Senegal – a sustainably made and affordable

storage space solution made from diverted landfill waste, designed to solve

the problem of post-harvest loss in agriculture.

  • Jumeni Field Service Software, Eyram Amedzor from Ghana – software

that assists service-based businesses by providing a three-part cloud-

based application to help increase the productivity of their field teams.

  • Mkono-1, Dr Atish Shah from Tanzania – a locally 3D-printed prosthetic

hand that provides an affordable solution for people living with upper limb

amputations.

  • Orbit Health, Pazion Cherinet from Ethiopia – a digital health platform that

manages and stores patient data and dispenses medication, allowing for

seamless continuity of care.

  • Reeddi, Olugbenga Olufemi Olubanjo from Nigeria – an energy system

used to provide clean, reliable and affordable electricity to households and

businesses operating in energy-poor communities.

  • RealDrip, Taofeek Olalekan from Nigeria – an intravenous therapy solution

combining the Internet of Things and AI to monitor dosages, flow rates and

intake time.

  • ShiVent, Yusuf Bilesanmi from Nigeria – a low-cost, non-electric and non-

invasive ventilator for patients with respiratory difficulties.

  • SuaCode.ai, George Boateng from Ghana – a smartphone application that uses artificial intelligence to teach coding remotely.

July 01, 2021 @ 16:50 GMT|

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