- Early career African scientists receive up to £300,000 (US$391,500) each to conduct research over 2 years.
- Scheme supports African researchers to develop into science leaders while establishing independent research careers on the continent.
- African researchers address today's global challenges in ways that are relevant to the needs of their countries.
- Researchers are drawn from diverse African countries including Sudan, Ethiopia, Madagascar, Cameroon, Uganda, South Africa and Ghana.
Nairobi/London - The African Academy of Sciences (AAS) and Royal Society, supported by the UK's Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF), today announce the second cohort of FLAIR research fellowships. Outstanding early-career African scientists, whose research is focused on the needs of the continent, will be supported by the Future Leaders - African Independent Research (FLAIR) programme to develop independent research careers in African institutions and ultimately, lead their own research groups.
The 2020 cohort of FLAIR funded scientists were selected from a competitive pool of more than 400 applicants. Their research is diverse, ranging from new techniques for sustainable agriculture and fisheries, managing water shortages to mitigate the worst impacts of climate change, improved methods to store cleaner energy and targeting health conditions that are most acute for people living in Africa.
They join the 2019 intake of FLAIR fellows, who are already making a significant contribution to science on the continent in their fields.
Africa needs to pay urgent attention to growing and retaining scientific talent to keep improving the continent's scientific input and its sustainable development. The FLAIR partnership with the Royal Society is one of several initiatives through which the AAS is addressing this need.
The Royal Society's programmes are synonymous with excellence in science and its grants programmes play an important role in nurturing the next generation of researchers to be tomorrow's scientific leaders. The FLAIR partnership extends the Royal Society's support of science in Africa.
Professor Nelson Torto, Executive Director of the African Academy of Sciences, says, "The AAS welcomes the new cohort of FLAIR grantees to our growing postdoctoral family. Postdoctoral programmes are vital in training and developing early career researchers into research leaders whose scientific leadership will influence policies that will promote the socio-economic development of the continent."
Dr Judy Omumbo, Programme Manager, Affiliates and Postdoctoral Programmes, says, "The announcement of this second cohort of FLAIR fellows is a significant milestone for the postdoctoral programmes team at the AAS. We anticipate that they will find the opportunities for networking and collaborations with other African scientists unique in supporting them in their pursuit of excellence in science for the benefit of mankind."
Professor Richard Catlow, Foreign Secretary of the Royal Society, says, "On behalf of the Royal Society, I'd like to offer heartfelt congratulations to this year's FLAIR fellows.
"Climate change, food sustainability, emerging disease, these are challenges facing us all, but the risks they pose to individuals and ecosystems across Africa are especially pronounced. That is why we're proud to be part of a programme that is investing in the next generation of African scientific leaders, as they research solutions and adaptations to these challenges.
This programme extends well beyond the grant recipients themselves. Our first cohort of FLAIR fellows are forging partnerships across institutions and disciplines, supporting young African PhD candidates and postdocs, and helping strengthen the research economies in countries such as Senegal, Democratic Republic of Congo, Cameroon, and the wider continent. We know this second cohort of talented FLAIR researchers will match their success."
The next round of FLAIR applications is currently open and will close on 27 May 2020. More details about eligibility and how to apply here.
Get to know the 2020 FLAIR fellows:
Abel Gari (Ethiopian), International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), Ethiopia
Napier grass, a feedstock for the immense bovine industry of Sub-Saharan Africa, presents a solution for underproductive meat and dairy cattle. Abel will seek to optimise yields of Napier grass and harden it against climate change pressures by investigating its genetic diversity and potential.
Annettee Nakimuli (Ugandan), Makerere University, Uganda
Research and screening tests to identify high-risk pregnancies were not developed to fully account for the populations, or socio-economic conditions of Sub-Saharan Africa. Annettee will address this by conducting follow-up studies of 1,512 Ugandan women before and after birth to develop a test for risk of pre-eclampsia.
Assumpta Chinwe Nwanya (Nigerian), University of Nigeria, Nigeria
Nanomaterials have unique and desirable properties for energy storage, but their synthesis from metal compounds can be unsustainable. Assumpta plans on using eco-friendly methods, such as extraction (bio-oxidisation) by plants and wet chemistry, to create nanomaterials via the 'green synthesis route'.
Bismarck Dinko (Ghanaian), University of Health and Allied Sciences, Ghana
When the malaria parasite enters the body, via a mosquito bite, the parasite must go through a phase of maturation and replication before it causes the disease. Bismarck will investigate the growth processes of the malaria parasite using new molecular and histological tools, including its proposed development location in human bone marrow.
Clinton Veale (South African), University of Kwazulu Natal, South Africa
Cancer treatments, which target and inhibit particular cellular functions, are ineffectual in Triple Negative Breast Cancers which disproportionately affect African women - meaning they have to rely on less effective, higher side effect treatments. Clinton's research focuses on finding alternative targets for inhibitor drugs that can help these women.
Cobus Meyer Visagie (South African), University of Pretoria, South Africa
Mycotoxins are one of the biggest threats to African food security due to human health problems and economic losses cause by food poisoning. Cobus is seeking to better understand the environmental variables that trigger mycotoxin production, while also developing cost-effective and rapid techniques for the monitoring of mycotoxigenic fungi in the food system.
Colince Kamdem (Cameroonian), Centre for Research in Infectious Diseases (CRID), Cameroon Malaria kills 400,000 people a year in Africa and control of the disease is being hampered by growing levels of insecticide-resistance among mosquitoes that spread the infection. To prevent the same thing happening to newly developed pesticides, Colince is exploring the rate that clothianidin resistance develops, and the genetic changes underpinning it, to inform future control measures.
Constantinos Kurt Wibmer (South African), National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD), South Africa
Snakebites kill or harm hundreds of thousands of Africans each year, but antivenom antibody research is limited by low profit margins. Constantinos aims to apply his skills from HIV research, finding "silver bullet" antibodies from the blood of horses. Animals are used to produce the current generation of crude and costly antivenoms, and they have developed antibodies that could be candidates for new human drugs.
Dalia Saad (Sudanese), University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
Though South Africa is ranked in the top 20 countries for mismanaged plastic waste, only one study on microplastic waste in freshwaters has been conducted. No such study has been done in Sudan. Dalia aims to fill this gap for the River Nile and Vaal River, which are a vital economic and social resource for its citizens and determine microplastic pollution to inform future policy and monitoring.
Edem Mahu (Ghanaian), University of Ghana, Ghana
Oyster fisheries in the Gulf of Guinea sustain impoverished communities in several surrounding countries. They are increasingly under threat from rising sea temperatures and erratic rainfall linked to climate change, as well as over-harvesting and pollution. Edem is working to gauge and forecast these impacts and provide scientific advice on sustainable management and adaptation.
Elie Kamseu (Cameroonian), Mission de Promotion des Materiaux Locaux (MIPROMALO), Cameroon
To meet development goals of 2035, the Cameroonian government needs to improve its houses, roads, and other engineered structures. Elie is developing a sustainable concrete variant, geopolymers composed of laterites - the iron and aluminium-rich clays which are local, plentiful, and eco-friendly.
Emmanuel Opolot (Ugandan), Makerere University, Uganda
By supplementing and consolidating existing soil data, Emmanuel plans to build extensive digital soil maps, whose information on nutrient richness, water availability, and crop yields, will be made available to farmers, improving resource usage and bolstering food security across Uganda.
Esther Muema (Kenyan), University of Pretoria, South Africa
Chickpeas not only provide nutrition but also use passenger bacteria, rhizobia, to lock nitrogen into soils, which in parts of South Africa, are weathered and infertile. Esther aims to identify local species of rhizobia bacteria to better understand their interaction with chickpeas, leading eventually to enhanced crop production and soil fertility.
Felix Sizwe Dube (South African), University of Cape Town, South Africa
One-third of children born with HIV in Sub-Saharan Africa develop obliterative bronchiolitis - a type of chronic lung disease. The antibiotic azithromycin has been proposed as a long-term treatment, and Felix will lead the microbiological aspects of a clinical trial that seeks to understand its benefits and any adverse effects on health, lung microbial diversity, and the risk of increasing antimicrobial resistance.
Gudrun Dittrich-Schröder (South African), University of Pretoria, South Africa
Gudrun will lead one of the first research groups investigating the potential of cutting-edge gene editing tools, e.g CRISPR Cas9, for the management of invasive insect pests, like the Eucalyptus snout beetle and the Pine wood wasp, that blight crucial agriculture and forestry industries.
Jaclyn Mann (South African), University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
One barrier to curing HIV via antiretroviral therapy is the cells that act as HIV reservoirs, but which are unaffected by treatment. The mechanism by which these reservoirs endure - dormant or slowly mutating - is unclear and Jaclyn will lead a clinical trial that aims to explore this issue and inform future cure strategies.
Jesse Gitaka (Kenyan), Mount Kenya University, Kenya
Sexually transmitted infections can infect new-borns in utero, leading to premature and stillbirths. Current tests are prohibitively costly, impractical or inaccurate and Jesse aims to overcome these issues and save lives by developing a screening method using common bacterial DNA markers associated with an infection to identify issues earlier.
John Kuumuori Ganle (Ghanaian), University of Ghana, Ghana
Over 63% of disabled adults in Ghana are women, the group that has the most difficulty accessing sexual and reproductive healthcare. John will implement interventions to connect women with these services and assess the benefits, which he says might 'strengthen local health system capacity' and satisfy 'universal access to healthcare as envisaged [by the UN]'.
Lauren Arendse (South African), University of Cape Town, South Africa
Lauren is leading a new malaria drug discovery programme which aims to use our knowledge from cancer-treating "kinase inhibitors", to target the kinase enzymes which the malaria parasite relies on to reproduce and spread.
Leah Matsinha (Zimbabwean) University of Johannesburg, South Africa
Most African countries rely on wood for household cooking, but this has negative health implications, including lung cancer and heart disease. Leah is developing a cost-effective process to develop kerosene using glycerol which is produced as a by-product from bio-energy and food industries. Production of cheap alternate fuels from readily available glycerol will alleviate health problems associated with the use of wood for household cooking.
Lillian Wambua (Kenyan), International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), Kenya
Infections from antimicrobial-resistant bacteria are increasing in Africa, but current systems for diagnosis are time-consuming, expensive, and vulnerable to contamination. Lillian plans on first developing then deploying a prompt and sensitive diagnostic test to address these short comings.
Meron Teferi Taye (Ethiopian), International Livestock Research Institute, Ethiopia
Lake Ziway, a vital resource for local communities and business, is facing growing water scarcity issues because of uncontrolled overdrawing by the growing local population and private companies. Meron will work with local groups to measure the extent of extraction, and its uses, and model its likely impacts. Identifying ways to limit the exploitation of the lake, will have wider applications to other African natural resources as populations grow.
Nicholas Musyoka (Kenyan), Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), South Africa
Biogas - a renewable energy source composed of fermented organic matter - as widely used as it is, is crude unless processed into higher quality biomethane. Nicholas seeks to curb pre-existing and challenging waste streams (plastic refuse, combustion exhaust, wastewater) and use them to process raw biogas into biomethane.
Philip Antwi-Agyei (Ghanaian), Kwame Nkrumah University of Science & Technology, Ghana
Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA) is one method proposed for Ghanaian farmers to adapt in light of increasing temperatures and drought risk, but evidence for its effectiveness remain partial. Philip plans on using mapping tools, soil samples and a community approach to determine how CSA might be best applied to Ghana and West Africa, with a focus on soil viability.
Prinessa Chellan (South African), Stellenbosch University, South Africa
Resistance to antimalarial drugs is a growing problem in malaria prone countries, and the race is on to develop new treatments. One promising area is the 'metal complexes', drugs containing iron or other metals which may be particularly potent against resistant malaria strains. Prinessa will build on her research in this area identifying likely new compounds and developing them into biologically active molecules.
Rondrotiana Barimalala (Malagasy), University of Cape Town, South Africa
The historically "weak" tropical cyclones that form in the Mozambique Channel led to them being largely ignored in hazard planning, until the 2019 cyclones Idai and Kenneth wrought catastrophic damage. Rondrotiana will investigate traits, ocean eddies and temperature changes, that give rise to tropical cyclones, and from this, develop an early warning toolbox for future disasters.
Ross Blamey (South African), University of Cape Town, South Africa
The largest and most important rivers in southern western Africa begin in the Angolan Highlands - dubbed the "water tower". Mismanagement threatens these rivers and the populations, and ecosystems - like the Okavango Delta they support. Using the latest climate data and models, Ross will identify patterns of rainfall and water use with the aim of developing a framework for the responsible management of the Angolan Highlands water tower.
Samuel Iwarere (Nigerian), University of Kwazulu Natal, South Africa
Millions of deaths could be prevented each year with access to clean water, an issue more acutely faced by low-income communities. Samuel will develop a new and accessible technology to purify river water and serve those most in need.
Samwel Muiruri (Kenyan), International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Kenya
Cassava, a starchy root, is a dietary staple for millions of people in developing countries, but adaptations through conventional breeding techniques are increasingly outstripped by pests and challenges of a changing climate. For his project, Samwel plans to speed up the breeding and cultivation process, through genetic manipulation to induce premature flowering - fast-forwarding the adaptive capacity of cassava.
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The African Academy of Sciences, Nairobi, Kenya
Deborah-Fay Ndlovu, Communications Manager
d.ndlovu@aasciences.africa; +254 727 660 760; +254 20 806 0674
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Bronwyn Friedlander, Head of Media relations
Bronwyn.Friedlander@royalsociety.org; Tel +44 207 451 2514; Mobile +44 7939 320 759
Notes to editors
About the African Academy of Sciences
The African Academy of Sciences (AAS) is a non-aligned, non-political, not-for-profit pan African organisation. The AAS' vision is to see transformed lives on the African continent through science. Our tripartite mandate is recognising excellence through the AAS' highly prestigious fellowship and award schemes, providing advisory and think tank functions for shaping Africa's Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) strategies and policies, and implementing key STI programmes addressing Africa's developmental challenges.
Join us on Facebook.com/AASciences and Twitter @AASciences and learn more at http://www.aasciences.africa
About the Royal Society
The Royal Society is the science academy of the UK, which draws its Fellows from across the Commonwealth. The Society's fundamental purpose, as it has been since its foundation in 1660, is to recognise, promote, and support excellence in science and to encourage the development and use of science for the benefit of humanity.
The Society's flagship fellowship programmes support outstanding researchers in the UK and internationally from the early stages of their science careers. Its GCRF funded programmes draw on this approach to create a high quality research base by supporting talented researchers who are contributing to research excellence in global challenge areas relevant to development. Its programmes also promote research collaborations between low and middle income countries and UK researchers. http://royalsociety.org
Follow the Royal Society on Twitter (@royalsociety) or on Facebook (facebook.com/theroyalsociety).
About the Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF)
The Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) supports cutting-edge research and innovation that addresses the global issues faced by developing countries. It focuses on funding challenge-led disciplinary and interdisciplinary research; strengthening capability for research, innovation and knowledge exchange; and providing an agile response to emergencies where there is an urgent research or on-the-ground need. It is a £1.5 billion fund which forms part of the UK Government's Official Development Assistance (ODA) commitment and is overseen by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS), and delivered through nine delivery partners including UK Research and Innovation (comprising the research councils, Research England and Innovate UK), the UK Academies, the UK Space Agency and other funding bodies.