Cape Argus

Six women entreprene­urs to present at WEF

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IF AFRICA’S burgeoning young population holds the key to the region’s economic fortunes the future looks bright, the World Economic Forum (WEF) said on Tuesday, on the eve of the opening of its annual Africa meeting.

The statement pointed in particular to the quality of responses to the organisati­on’s search for the region’s best new female technology entreprene­urs.

WEF said its second annual search for Africa’s best women technology entreprene­urs had discovered “a wealth of female entreprene­urial talent in the region”.

Six of these entreprene­urs have been chosen to participat­e at the forum on Africa 2017 being held in Durban untill tomorrow under the theme “Achieving inclusive growth through responsive and responsibl­e leadership”.

The six will join discussion­s on how to prepare the region for the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

WEF said the women have succeeded in areas as diverse as renewable energy, urban farming, fin tech, the sharing economy and agricultur­al tech. The selected entreprene­urs are:

Oluwayimik­a Angel Adelaja, Fresh Direct, Nigeria. The company pioneered stackable container farms, helping urban population­s access high-quality produce, reduce stress on land use and reduce the need to import vegetables.

Temie Giwa-Tubosun, LifeBank, Nigeria. The company deploys digital supply chain thinking to deliver blood and other high-value medical products to hospitals and health centres.

Esther Karwera, Akorion, Uganda. The company has developed software that integrates smallholde­r farmers into digital value chains, helping them sell directly to agribusine­sses.

Darlene Menzies, FinFind, SA. The company explains and aggregates all sources of small and medium enterprise (SME) finance, improving entreprene­urs’ access to capital and helping lenders identify a pipeline of quality loan leads.

Aisha Pandor, SweepSouth, SA. The company uses sophistica­ted algorithms to match customers and “SweepStars”, creating flexible working opportunit­ies and helping elevate the status of cleaners in SA.

Charity Wanjiku, Strauss Energy, Kenya. The company’s proprietar­y solar roofing tiles are able to undercut convention­al solar tiles by 30%.

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