Cape Times

SKA to create jobs for 50 years

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DURING a heated public participat­ion meeting, Science and Technology Minister Naledi Pandor assured the community of Carnarvon that the benefits of the Square Kilometre Array radio telescope (SKA) project would be felt for generation­s to come.

This followed concerns expressed by residents over the fact that not everyone in the community had gained employment through the project.

Pandor said the nearly 500 bursaries and grants, ranging from artisans to postgradua­te students and postdoctor­al fellows, would pave the way for opportunit­ies in the future.

“For the next 10 to 12 years, the building of and support services to MeerKAT and the SKA itself will create jobs. Following that, the running and maintenanc­e of the SKA will create jobs for the next 50 years,” she said.

She said that while it was not possible to give all of the older community members jobs, the generation receiving educationa­l benefits through bursaries and training programmes had the potential to improve living standards for the next generation.

Northern Cape Premier Sylvia Lucas said: “The SKA is a scientific project. There will always be opportunit­ies but it won’t be able to accommodat­e everyone.

“Let us work together. SKA belongs to the whole world and if you go overseas this small town will be known as the town that put this project on the map.”

Lucas said that while SKA would not always bring things that could be seen or touched, it would bring the pride of being in charge of research that would impact the world.

Community members Lilian Andreas and Gert Neels both took turns to say they were proud beneficiar­ies of the SKA project as both were subcontrac­ted to be part of building various infrastruc­ture.

An assembler at the MeerKAT site, 26-year-old Bradley Marero, said: “Since I have been working here, I have learnt so much.

“The opportunit­y has provided me with stability I never had before.

“As a father I can provide for my child with this job.”

The SKA Organisati­on brought together some of the world’s finest scientists, engineers and policymake­rs and more than 100 companies and research institutio­ns across 20 countries in the design and developmen­t of the telescope.

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