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The continent enters the Robot Age

- Simon Allison

Science fiction writers predicted robots. They didn’t predict that they would look so boring. At the Africa Automation Fair in Johannesbu­rg this week, there were no cyborgs on display, or R2D2lookal­ikes scuttling between the stands. Instead, some of the most powerful machines were little more than black boxes with small screens and glowing lights, connected to a thicket of wires.

“Now you can control your factory from your phone. You don’t even need to be there,” said Unitronics salesman Dewald Potgieter.

He sells those black boxes, which are better known as Programmab­le Logic Controller­s. These are the electronic brains that can control dozens, if not hundreds, of industrial machines at a time. He says his company can barely keep up with demand. “It’s like a snowball.”

There are 117 exhibitors at the expo, which is held every two years. It gets bigger every time. Africa may have been a little slow to enter the Robot Age, but there’s no denying that it’s here now.

From a layman’s perspectiv­e, the most exciting exhibit is what’s called a “collaborat­ive robot”. It looks like someone wrenched the arm off an android — and it behaves in much the same way, complete with elbowlike joints and rubber “grippers” for fingers. This is a machine designed for the production line. It takes up about the same amount of space as a human would, but doesn’t take weekends or smoke breaks. It’s also faster and more reliable at completing repetitive manual tasks.

“It’s for the dumb and dangerous work, the repetitive work where having a human operator adds no value to the process,” said Gideon Smith, a representa­tive of manufactur­er Universal Robots.

One of their mid-range models goes for R365 000. The company already has 15 clients in South Africa, including big automotive and electronic­s firms, and predicts exponentia­l annual growth. It also plans to expand into Southern Africa.

Cumii, a division of mobile giant Econet, is already in the region. It offers custom kits to turn normal homes into smart homes, wirelessly connecting everything from security cameras to washing machines so that the whole house can be controlled from a mobile phone app. Cumii is proving popular in Zimbabwe, where it boasts hundreds of clients. The product is doing well in Tanzania, and the company is now targeting South Africa and Kenya.

The potential effect on human jobs is not lost on the humans selling these machines. In fact, that’s often the sales pitch: the machines, although expensive, will provide cheaper and better labour in the long term.

“You don’t have someone coming in with a hangover the next morning, or someone falling asleep because it’s such mind-numbing work. This gives a much more reliable output, and is so much faster,” explained one vendor.

But what does this mean for humans themselves? It’s a question that keeps the smartest people alive awake at night — if not the salesmen on the floor of the expo centre.

“What to do about mass unemployme­nt?” asked tech billionair­e Elon Musk at a conference earlier this year. “This is going to be a massive social challenge. There will be fewer and fewer jobs that a robot cannot do better. These are not things that I wish will happen. These are simply things that I think probably will happen.”

If the Africa Automation Fair is anything to go by, these things are happening sooner rather than later. Africa is especially vulnerable. About 67% of South Africa’s jobs are highly susceptibl­e to automation, according to a recent Oxford University study. That figure is 65% for Nigeria, and 85% for Ethiopia.

Developing-world countries are generally at much higher risk of losing jobs because most employment falls into the “unskilled” category — the repetitive work that machines do so much better than humans.

To prevent rising unemployme­nt and inequality, something’s got to change.

“Developing countries will need to search for new growth models,” concluded the Oxford report.

‘The world’s worst rape verdict’

A Kenyan rape case has earned the title of “world’s worst case for human rights” at the Gender Justice Uncovered Awards.

In the 2016 judgment, a man was acquitted of raping a 13-year-old girl because she seemed “willing”. The judge went on to say that children who “act like adults” should be treated as adults, regardless of their age. The runner-up was an Italian case in which a rape victim was blamed for not screaming loudly enough. The award is designed to draw attention to poor legal decisions that affect women and girls.

Floating The Gambia’s boat

There’s no bridge between The Gambia’s capital Banjul and Barra, the city that lies on the opposite bank of the Gambia River. The best way to get across is by ferry, but these are slow, overcrowde­d and poorly maintained. That changed this week when Damen Shipyards delivered a new ferry to Gambia’s government. The Kunta Kinteh is twice the size of other ferries and should be much safer. President Adama Barrow’s administra­tion has basked in the plaudits of the successful delivery — even though the ship was ordered on his predecesso­r’s watch.

African stances on Gulf crisis

Some African countries are taking sides in the diplomatic crisis in the Middle East. Senegal and Mauritania have joined Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain in severing diplomatic ties with Qatar, which has been accused of funding terrorist organisati­ons, and Gabon and the Central African Republic have voiced concerns over Qatar. Sudan, meanwhile, is on the fence and has offered to mediate in the dispute.

Boko Haram on the offensive

Boko Haram launched a major offensive on the northeast Nigerian city of Maiduguri on Wednesday. The militant group was repulsed by the Nigerian military after 45 minutes of heavy fighting, but not before thousands of civilians had fled. Just six months ago, President Muhammadu Buhari claimed that Boko Haram had “technicall­y” been defeated; if that’s true, then this is quite the sting in the tail.

Power farm blows in the wind

Africa’s largest wind farm, on the banks of Kenya’s Lake Turkana, was supposed to begin producing power this month. Although the 365 turbines are already up and running, they haven’t yet been connected to the national power grid — and won’t be until next year at the earliest. Constructi­on of the transmissi­on line has been delayed by land rights issues. The wind farm was built for $678-million and will produce about 300 megawatts of power.

UN slams DRC peacekeepe­rs

According to a leaked memo, the United Nations force commander in the Central African Republic has demanded that 750 peacekeepe­rs from the Democratic Republic of Congo be sent home. Lieutenant­General Balla Keïta accused the Congolese troops of sexual abuse, fuel traffickin­g and poor discipline. More than 100 peacekeepe­rs from Congo’s battalion were already sent back last year.

“It’s for the dumb and dangerous work, the repetitive work where having a human operator adds no value to the process”

 ??  ?? The future’s now: The shop floor robot has arms that are changed for different functions. Photo: Oupa Nkosi
The future’s now: The shop floor robot has arms that are changed for different functions. Photo: Oupa Nkosi

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