Tag: Kigali

  • Rwanda, UNEP, Others Secure Funding For Eco-Friendly Fridges, Air Conditioners

    Rwanda, UNEP, Others Secure Funding For Eco-Friendly Fridges, Air Conditioners

    Rwanda, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the University of Birmingham, and other project partners will share £4 million in order to eliminate dangerous emissions from aged air conditioning, refrigeration, and cold supply networks.

    The environmentally beneficial funding was revealed on April 20, with the goal of preserving the ozone layer, which protects the world from UV radiation.

    Funding will be awarded in May of this year as part of Defra’s Sustainable Cooling and Cold Chain Solutions programme.

    Thérèse Coffey, the United Kingdom’s secretary of state for the environment, stated, “This funding will help developing countries play their part in tackling climate change and communities around the world with more efficient food and medicine storage – as well as support farmers to increase their productivity.”

    The investment will also help to improve the management of the refrigerated chain for fruits and vegetables.

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    How Poor Cold-Chain Management Is Affecting Food Production

    Small-holder farmers produce 80 percent of the food produced in Sub-Saharan Africa; around 37 percent of all food is wasted between production and consumption, and nearly 50 percent of fruits and vegetables are lost owing to poor cold-chain management.

    Currently, in developing economies, a lack of adequate cold storage and refrigerated transport vehicles contributes to over 1.5 million vaccine-preventable deaths per year.

    According to estimates, 25% of vaccinations arrive at their destination with impaired efficacy, owing mostly to breaks in cold chains.

    Officials from Rwanda’s Ministry of Environment confirmed the country’s commitment to establishing the Africa Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Cooling and Cold-chain (ACES) headquarters in Kigali, which is set to open in late 2023.

    Cold Economy Professor at the University of Birmingham and Heriot-Watt University, Professor Toby Peters, is leading the collaboration of UK universities supporting this project in Africa and India.

    “Sustainable and equitable cooling and cold-chain infrastructure is now more critical than ever in a warming world,” he said. Food preservation is just as vital as food production.

    For the first time, this plan provides an integrated approach that includes on-the-ground training and support for subsistence farmers and their communities, viable business models, and a network of qualified engineers to assist with equipment installation and maintenance.”

    Professor Peters explained that doing so will allow ACES to address multiple global challenges at the same time, including “mitigating climate change and the environmental impacts of meeting new cooling demand; reducing food loss and converting it into increased farmer incomes, food security, and consumer affordability; and designing the next generation of efficient, resilient, responsive, and sustainable vaccine cold-chains.”

    In addition to financing pledges from the United Kingdom, the Rwandan government is overseeing the building of critical campus infrastructure to support the Centre.

    The University of Birmingham, Heriot-Watt University, Cranfield University, and London South Bank University are leading a consortium of Rwandan and UK universities in developing the Centre’s teaching and research programmes, which will provide a pipeline of skills, expertise, and innovation in cooling technology solutions, systems, and models.

    The UK’s ACES funding is assisting in the construction of Specialised Outreach and information Establishments (SPOKEs) to transfer information and implement solutions across Africa, with the first of these being established in Kenya, as well as giving technical help to duplicate the model in Telangana and Haryana, India.

    Defra has allocated an additional £1.2 million to project partners to support the development of roadmaps and digital tools to help developing countries design equitable, resilient, and cost-effective approaches, quantify the full economic, environmental, and societal impact, and understand the policy landscape required to implement new approaches.

    Rwanda’s Plans For Ozone-Safe Electronic Appliances

    Rwanda is contemplating a new mechanism to facilitate access to inexpensive, ozone-safe refrigerators and air conditioners that do not contribute to climate change.

    According to information provided by the Rwanda Environment Management Authority, there is a programme called ” A green on-wage financing mechanism ” that aims to make energy-efficient and climate-friendly refrigerators and air conditioners more affordable.

    The programme is part of the Rwanda Cooling Finance Initiative (R-COOL FI), which aims to promote energy-efficient and climate-friendly cooling and the recycling of inefficient existing systems.

    By 2024, the initiative hopes to generate $4 million in financing to support the procurement of 12,500 climate-friendly and energy-efficient cooling products in Rwanda.

    She stated that energy-efficient and eco-friendly refrigerators and air conditioners are available at a discount through credit.

    As part of implementing the Montreal Protocols, Rwanda reduced by 54% by the year 2020 its importation of ozone-depleting hydro-chlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs).

  • CCHUB Institute Design Lab in Kigali

    CCHUB Institute Design Lab in Kigali

    Co-creation Hub (CcHUB) will today, officially launch the CcHUB Design Lab’ in Kigali Rwanda The design lab is an unprecedented next step in Africa’s growing tech sector and is set to become a leading creative space where its multidisciplinary team of product designers and engineers will collaborate with scientists and stakeholders globally, to explore the application of emerging technologies that will solve Africa’s systemic problems in Public Health, Education, Governance and the Private Sector.


    The new state-of-the-art lab, located in Kigali, Rwanda, sees CcHUB, the leading innovation centre dedicated to accelerating the application of social capital and technology for economic prosperity, expand its physical presence to another African country for the first time in its eight-year history. CcHUB is now looking to partner with both public and private industry bodies from across the continent.

    H.E. Minister of ICT and Innovation, Rwanda, Paula Ingabire, will launch the new lab with CcHUB’s Founder and CEO, ‘Bosun Tijani. They will be joined by Kampeta Pitchette Sayinzoga [Director General, National Industrial Research & Development Agency, Rwanda], Patrick Buchana Nsenga [Chief Executive Officer, AC Group Rwanda], and Jeanine U. Condo [Director General, Rwanda Biomedical Center]. Special guest Bez will provide live musical entertainment on the day.

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    Commenting on the official launch, H.E. Paula Ingabire says,
    CcHUB’s expansion into Kigali, marked with the launch of the Design Lab today, is an exciting landmark for Rwanda’s burgeoning tech community. Rwanda is keen on collaborating with world-class partners to establish itself as a leading destination that nurtures innovation-driven enterprises.

    We see technology as an integral gateway and means of developing society – an ethos and mission shared by CcHUB. As we strive to become a knowledge-based economy, we will continue to build long-lasting, strategic partnerships that celebrate excellence, forge ahead with progress and that is, essentially, a force for good that will impact thousands of people across the continent.”

    To coincide with the launch, CcHUB will announce the Rwanda Biomedical Centre as its first local company to partner, joining the likes of Go-Ga Lab, Nimcure and Safe Online.

    The Design Lab, which further reinforces CcHUB’s commitment to solving Africa’s biggest development and social challenges, will be powered by a multidisciplinary design team of designers and engineers. Using design and innovation, the three key sectors of focus are:

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    Public Health: Focused on digital epidemiology by collaborating with a cross-sector of stakeholders including scientists, researchers, health professionals, and developers to use technology in accelerating the adoption of locally-created solutions for better detection and surveillance of diseases, and improving adherence to treatment.

    Education: Focused on improving students’ interests, participation, and learning outcomes in STEM education, with attention paid to teaching methods and the use of creative content.

    Governance: Focused on the role of technology in helping the government promote participatory governance, transparency, and more effective public services for social and economic prosperity.

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    On the launch of the Design Lab, ‘Bosun Tijani, CcHUB’s Co-founder and CEO comments, “We’ve been building tech businesses alongside African entrepreneurs for almost a decade and in that time, we’ve identified a common challenge that businesses face when it comes to sustainable growth – Design and Innovation”.

    “With the CcHUB Design lab, we will be collaborating with organizations that may not have the capacity to design, build and innovate as quick as leaner startups would. The lab will also build on CcHUB’s extensive global and pan-African network of partners, research institutes, and governmental organizations to execute practical design projects that will solve some of our social and business challenges at scale”.

     

    Since launching in 2011, CcHUB has built a community of over 13,000 technologists, entrepreneurs, and thought-leaders, and has incubated and provided support to a portfolio of over 110 early-stage ventures providing solutions to social problems with technology. With the expansion, CcHUB plans to invest approximately $11m in Rwanda.