Friday 21 September 2012

What Africans Really Want - Simple but Effective Technologies


Technology is known to be a game-changer when it comes to development. The industrial revolution which saw the complete transformation of agricultural and manufacturing industries in Britain and later in Western Europe, North America and Japan was premised on steam engine technology. That technology enabled a great leap forward of the human race, through enhanced productivity, as man was able to capture and unleash immense energy stored abundantly in water and coal.  The technology gap is a critical factor that explains the difference between economic development and prosperity between the developed and developing countries.

Today rapid technological advancement continues to take place in high income and middle-income countries, while insignificant technological progress is taking place in low-income countries.  This has been the case for centuries, thus condemning citizens of low-income countries to perpetual poverty. Anyone interested in solving the challenges of poverty, hunger and disease in Sub-Saharan Africa should boldly come up with strategies of reducing the yawning technological gap currently existing in the region. It’s true that in this part of the world people lack access to food, reliable electricity, clean water and sanitary facilities, health facilities, reliable transport, enough clothes, including shoes, stable and affordable broadband etc.

There are a lot of suggestions on how this gap can be plugged. Some advocate for technological transfer mechanisms, which allows the sharing of risks and rewards between the technology developer and the recipient country, institution or company. Technological and innovation diffusion proponents also argue that over time an innovation or technology can be passed to all members of the world community, subject to demographic and cultural factors. The other way is for less technologically advanced countries to just import the technology for production. Thus a country in Sub-Saharan Africa would import some earth-moving equipment from a manufacturer in a developed country. This is, however, very costly to Africa because the resources expended are just too much and leave these communities poorer. The foreign exchange used to import these pieces of technology could be used to solve pressing issues like the provision of basic services, including disease prevention and cure. Again the terms of trade are such that the poor countries are losing out. Great amount of raw materials are shipped out, at low prices, determined, it would appear, by the manufactures of the equipment, and not by the producers of the raw materials. When the equipment, made from the same materials bought at rock-bottom prices, and in some cases looted from Africa, is exported back to Sub-Saharan Africa, the cost to the importing countries is often exorbitant, especially in light of available budgets. The premium of value addition offshore is close to profiteering, from the eyes of consumers of technology in Africa.

SOLUTIONS:
Africa today is clamoring for simple but effective technologies across the whole spectrum of life. The technology should talk to indigenous knowledge systems and environmental issues. In fact, the future of Africa lies in these technologies. They are the foundation of further technological development which shall see the continent pushing farther the boundaries of poverty, hunger and disease. So what kind of technologies are we talking about, and which Africa really wants?

1.    Water harvesting technologies- these enable rural, impoverished communities in dry regions to harness the little precipitation they receive to increase the resilience of their food and income-generating projects.

2.    Irrigation technologies- After the water has been harvested, how can rural farmers use the water in the most efficient way possible to increase productivity and income in cost-effective manner?

3.    Water purification technologies- these enable communities to purify water for consumption to reduce water-borne diseases like cholera, dysentery etc.

4.    Food preservation technologies- to assist the rural farmers to preserve agricultural produce, including fruits for longer periods.

5.     Food processing technologies- to add value, rudimentary as it may be, to the produce such that the income generated from their endeavors is enhanced.

6.     Crop and animal breeding technologies- to increase the productivity of crop and animal varieties.

7.    Aquaculture technologies- to enhance fish production to secure a sustainable source of protein supply to the rural and urban poor.

8.      Energy-efficient technologies- these provide energy for the least cost possible to the environment and users, utilizing renewable sources to stem desertification and other effects of climatic change.

9.    Waste management and recycling technologies- to deal with a menace of litter in urban areas and protect the environment and people from pollution.

10.  Farming and mining technologies- motorized equipment for tilling, cultivating, harvesting and storing crops, and simple and effective mining equipment which reduces the siltation and pollution of rivers.

11.  Technologies for Mosquito Mass Destruction (TMMD)- simple, but effective technologies for launching a frontal attack and totally eliminate Anopheles Gambiae in Africa.

12. Latrines and sanitary technologies- to arrest the spread of fatal diseases like cholera, dysentery, typhoid etc in densely populated areas.

13.  Cotton, wool and silk weaving technologies- produce basic garments to cover one’s body, with further processing for those who can afford.

14.  Synthetic fiber technologies- to accelerate the access of people to new clothing, including shoes, and not to rely on the benevolence of others from developed countries, who currently donate old clothes, including undergarments to poor countries.

15. Hide tanning technologies- to process hides from abattoirs for manufacturing of basic   leather products for local consumption and for exporting the surplus, processed products.

16.  Motorized transport- to efficiently move both people and cargo, especially bulky agricultural produce to markets and mineral ore to the processing zones.

17. Construction technologies- to enable people to build decent, yet cost-effective accommodation.

18. Pharmaceutical & health technologies- to harness the indigenous knowledge systems in medicine passed from our forebears to solve health care challenges.

19.  Information and Communication Technologies (ICT)- for conducting research,   e-learning, e-commerce, e-health, e-government and other critical sectors to enhance efficiencies and use technology to broaden access to basic services, especially targeting marginalized communities.

      

Testing a treadle pump in Malawi courtesy of Appropedia (www.appropedia.org)


The above applications are by no means exhaustive but are illustrative of how technology can change lives. Any person, or organization, or government, or NGO, or multilateral institution, or institution of scientific research, higher and/or vocational learning willing and capable to offer practical, simple and effective technologies for Sub-Saharan Africa is encouraged to do so not only for compassionate reasons, but to make money. The economics of these technologies offer huge potential for higher returns. According to one Peter Makwanya, on his article on How Corporates Can aid Rural Technologies, Zimbabwe Independent, August 17, 2012, “Real builders of modern Zimbabwe would be those whose ideas address the needs for economic development and job creation in rural areas and the business sector should play a leading role.”

A Parabolic Solar Cooker- made from waste material can cook delicious food and pasturize  drinking water  - Courtesy of Appropedia 

On his recent visit to Zimbabwe, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, director-general, Dr Jose Graziano Da Silva, emphasized the need to use local knowledge and solutions to tackle local challenges, particularly in areas of food security. His remarks, as reported by The Herald Zimbabwe, 18 July 2012, “Our target is to increase production by between 50 and 70 percent by the year 2050 and this is only possible if we equip the smallholder farmers in particular with information on the use of cheap but effective technologies.”

There is, therefore, an agreement among stakeholders that Zimbabwe and Sub-Saharan Africa’s production challenges can be tackled by simple, cheap, appropriate, practical and effective technologies, for the benefit of those communities. Government intervention in terms of crafting and implementing enabling policies to direct and incentivize role players, which include but not limited to the corporate sector, investors, research institutions, lenders and individuals to increase and intensify their efforts is invaluable. External support to complement local resources is required from developmental partners and philanthropists. 

A simple but effective Greywater Purification System, Ecuador- Courtesy of Appropedia