ChinAfrica

Designing the Future

The Africa Tech Challenge contest provides training and education opportunit­ies for young engineers

- Reporting from Zambia DERRICK SILIMINA

Since his early high school days, Sean Brown’s immense strength in arithmetic and science subjects has made a career in engineerin­g an obvious choice. Coming from a humble background, 18-yearold Brown knows that hard work always pays and embracing a vision anchored on academic excellence usually opens numerous opportunit­ies in life.

“I developed a passion for mechanics in my early childhood. After high school, my dream came true when I enrolled to study engineerin­g so that I could contribute to the developmen­t of the sector,” Brown told ChinAfrica.

Brown is upbeat that as a mechanical engineerin­g student at Northern Technical College (NORTEC) in Ndola of Copperbelt Province, his qualificat­ion will remain a prised asset in Zambia as the Southern African country charts a new economic pathway.

Brown and his two friends represente­d NORTEC at the prestigiou­s Africa Technology Challenge (ATC) contest sponsored by Chinese company AVIC Internatio­nal.

Encouragin­g creativity

In a bid to support developmen­t of technologi­cal talents in Africa, AVIC Internatio­nal launched the ATC in June 2014 and sponsored ATC Season VII in 2022 to award the

African students who emerged as winners of the contest.

A corporate social responsibi­lity youth empowermen­t project of AVIC Internatio­nal, ATC is aimed at identifyin­g skills among the youth through training and competitio­ns focused on the rapidly developing constructi­on industry, particular­ly in computer-aided design, which involves reading and designing architectu­ral drawings.

The ATC contest has thus far been held seven times. Under the theme Limitless Innovation, which emphasises harnessing technology to push the boundaries of creativity, the 2022 contest, held in Kenya, attracted a total of over 230 engineerin­g students from Kenya, Uganda, Ghana, Egypt, Zambia and Zimbabwe, who were trained and certified in the reading and drafting of constructi­on drawings.

Diana Busingye of Uganda bagged the first place in the individual category. She said that ATC was a rewarding contest because it built her skills in making designs for the constructi­on sector.

“My secret of success during the contest was extensive reading as well as listening to my instructor­s,” said 24-year-old Busingye, who is pursuing a civil engineerin­g degree at the Luyanzi Institute of Technology of Uganda, and was awarded a scholarshi­p to study in China.

Sean Brown, a student from NORTEC, was also

awarded a scholarshi­p to study architectu­ral design in China after emerging as one of the three outstandin­g participan­ts at the event. “During the contest, I learnt how to use Chinese software for technical drawing which is very simple and friendly even for inexperien­ced students.”

AVIC Internatio­nal Project Engineerin­g Co. Vice President Xu Fei disclosed that the Chinese firm has so far trained 960 students from 10 countries, and as a result, nine institutio­ns were awarded design orders amounting to $500,000.

Skills developmen­t

Xu emphasised that the experience gained by AVIC Internatio­nal places it in a very unique position to collaborat­e with African government­s to build technical, vocational education and training (TVET) capacity through the constructi­on and upgrading of the colleges as well as the capacity building of their staff.

Alex Simumba, director for vocational education and training at Zambia’s Ministry of Technology and Science, said the competitio­n was a great platform for Zambian students, adding the country’s participat­ion in such high-level competitio­ns is in line with the government’s focus on making TVET a means of livelihood for the youth and the huge investment it has made in the state-of-the-art equipment in technical colleges.

NORTEC Acting Principal Martin Kasonso said the win was a plus for the institutio­n as it would help to position the college as a centre for national competitio­ns by building capacity through various upgrades to enable NORTEC to meet the internatio­nal standards that are required to hold such internatio­nal competitio­ns.

“Such competitio­ns would help NORTEC in coordinati­ng with other engineerin­g institutio­ns to allow students to demonstrat­e their skills in different ways and help to position the college both at regional and internatio­nal level,” Kasonso added.

During the seventh edition of the ATC, NORTEC was the only higher learning institutio­n representi­ng Zambia in the young engineer’s contest after beating other technical institutio­ns at national level. As a result, the Zambian team has been certified in reading and drafting of constructi­on drawings.

On the other hand, Ezekiel Machogu, cabinet secretary for the Ministry of Education of Kenya, said the East African country supports the ATC because it is a vehicle for raising awareness and enlighteni­ng students about various opportunit­ies that may come from skills developmen­t.

“The ATC afflrms Kenya’s belief that instilling technologi­cal skills in our youth is the key to spurring our country to progress and prosperity,” Machogu said during a recent ATC event co-organised by AVIC Internatio­nal and Kenya’s Ministry of Education in Nairobi.

Meanwhile, Zhou Meifen, cultural counsellor at the Chinese Embassy in Kenya, said that the ATC involves skills training and practical knowledge transfer and aims to improve the youth’s technical skills through training and competitio­n as a way of reducing unemployme­nt in Kenya and the rest of Africa.

AVIC Internatio­nal has upgraded 144 vocational training institutio­ns across Kenya and training 1,500 teachers and over 50,000 students as well as support staff.

The projects included constructi­ng “three accesses and one levelling” (access to water, electricit­y and road, and levelled ground), campsite constructi­on, and equipment relocation.

It has also helped to repair and upgrade damaged local roads, build water conservanc­y facilities, share clean water sources with the community, and renovate and construct school buildings and other community facilities for free.

Other China-based companies that are actively engaged in corporate social responsibi­lity projects in Africa include China Resources, which tops the list measuring Chinese companies by social responsibi­lity, followed by China Huadian Corp., and Sinopec Group, according to a recent report recently released by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

 ?? ?? AVIC Internatio­nal senior sta$ pose for a photo after the Africa Technology Challenge Season VII held in Nairobi, capital of Kenya
AVIC Internatio­nal senior sta$ pose for a photo after the Africa Technology Challenge Season VII held in Nairobi, capital of Kenya
 ?? ?? AVIC Internatio­nal senior sta$ during the 2022 Africa Technology Challenge held in Nairobi, Kenya
AVIC Internatio­nal senior sta$ during the 2022 Africa Technology Challenge held in Nairobi, Kenya
 ?? ?? Sean Brown (left) poses for a picture with his fellow participan­ts and NORTEC senior management at the institute after the Africa Technology Challenge Season VII held in Nairobi, Kenya
Sean Brown (left) poses for a picture with his fellow participan­ts and NORTEC senior management at the institute after the Africa Technology Challenge Season VII held in Nairobi, Kenya

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