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Press Release: icipe and Sida renew cooperation to support bioscience research and innovation and foster development of a sustainable bioeconomy in Eastern Africa

L-R. Dr Segenet Kelemu, Director General of icipe and Dr Claes Kjellstrom, Senior Policy Specialist/Research at Sida signing the BioInnovate Africa phase III Agreement on 21 March 2022 at icipe Campus, Nairobi, Kenya.

Press Release: icipe and Sida renew cooperation to support bioscience research and innovation and foster development of a sustainable bioeconomy in Eastern Africa

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http://www.icipe.org/news/icipe-and-sida-renew-cooperation-support-bioscience-research-and-innovation-and-foster

Nairobi, Kenya, 31 March 2022: The International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (icipe) and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida) have signed a new five-year cooperation agreement to implement phase III of the Bioresources Innovations Network for Eastern Africa Development Programme (BioInnovate Africa).  With up to 160 million SEK (approximately US$ 17m) committed for BioInnovate Africa phase III, coupled with previous Sida support to BioInnovate Africa phase I (2010 – 2015) and phase II (2016 –2021), this becomes the biggest single investment in a regional bioscience research and innovation-driven initiative to date in Eastern Africa, thereby fostering the development of a sustainable bioeconomy.

The support to BioInnovate Africa phase III is to further strengthen capacity of scientists in Eastern African universities, research institutes, and private sector to translate their biologically based research outputs, inventions, or technologies into practical solutions that contribute towards increasing household incomes, creating jobs, and reducing poverty in the region. Scientists will receive support through competitive grants for regional research and innovation collaboration projects administered by icipe/BioInnovate Africa. The targeted beneficiary countries include Burundi, Ethiopia, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania, and Uganda.

Our contribution to icipe for implementing BioInnovate Africa phase III, strengthens Sida’s development cooperation with Eastern Africa, and enables icipe to continue playing an active role in regional development through scientific research, capacity building and innovation,” says Dr Karin Sverken, Head of Unit for Justice and Peace, Department of Africa at Sida. “Scientists, working collaboratively within a regional context, can accelerate the pace at which we find solutions for pressing needs of society, like climate change, biodiversity, jobs for the youth and poverty reduction.”

Innovating for Eastern Africa’s development

Eastern Africa is endowed with biological resources, which sustain the livelihoods of majority of its nearly 400 million inhabitants. The challenge, however, is that minimal value is added to the biological resources and significant portions of it are discarded as waste, thereby polluting the environment. Furthermore, human activities occasioned by rapid population growth, urbanisation, and climate change, put pressure on the biological resources. As the recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report indicates, Africa contributes the least carbon emissions, and yet it is experiencing widespread and escalating loss of its biodiversity with every 0.5oC increase above present-day global warming. The impacts of climate change are also leading to reduced food production, water shortages, and reduced economic growth. Addressing these and other challenges will require innovations that reduce carbon emissions, conserve biodiversity, and create jobs.

Our development challenges are not insurmountable,” says Dr Segenet Kelemu, Director General & CEO of icipe. “The region has talented scientists in universities, research institutes and private sector, who can generate knowledge of how to solve these challenges and, through innovation, put the knowledge to practical use in the form of goods and services we use in our daily lives.” In Dr Kelemu’s view, scientists in Eastern Africa are generating good scientific outputs. If well facilitated, they can co-create solutions that address the region’s development needs, and this is the incentive that icipe is providing to scientists through BioInnovate Africa.

Taking advantage of its biological resource endowment, the region can innovate and build a competitive and sustainable biobased industry and society (bioeconomy) that is now gaining worldwide recognition as the growth pathway of the future. In the past five years, icipe/BioInnovate Africa supported several regional innovation projects that involved academic scientists working collaboratively with industry and government on projects aimed at improving human and animal nutrition; controlling plant pests, diseases, and weeds; controlling human and animal diseases; preventing postharvest losses; converting organic waste into biofertilisers and other products; enhancing bioentrepreneurs capacity; and supporting the development of sustainable bioeconomy strategies and innovation policy activities in the region.

Examples of products that have been successfully tested and are gaining market entry include, biofertilisers from agricultural wastes, a seed delivery system for virus free sweet potato vines,  nutrient enriched foods from sorghum and millet, edible insect enriched food, aroma honey toffees, orange fleshed sweet potato puree for bakery products, black soldier fly larvae for chicken feed, mushroom substrate blocks, and an integrated solution for treating industrial wastewater.

Scientists in Eastern Africa have demonstrated their ability to be innovators. If well supported and incentivised, they can provide the solutions needed for Africa’s development,” says Dr Claes Kjellstrom, Senior Policy Specialist/Research at Sida. “Scientists use their knowledge to refine the products, and when the products are taken to market, farmers increase their incomes, and hopefully they can live a better life.”

BioInnovate Africa phase III, which officially begins in April 2022, builds on the success of phase II. It will continue supporting value addition to biological materials, including converting biological waste into useful substances, and conserving biodiversity. However, unlike the previous phases that focused primarily on agriculture and environment, phase III includes health in the thematic area.  Of particular interest is health innovation that responds to disease epidemics and strengthens the region’s capability in surveillance and manufacture of biopharmaceuticals and diagnostics for economically important human diseases. Health innovations will also involve promoting use of indigenous knowledge, especially identifying active compounds in traditional medicine and standardising dosages to enhance their efficacy. Application of digital tools that enhance the value of biological resources in the innovation process like artificial intelligence, machine learning, and biosensing are also encouraged. Additionally, phase III will involve more policy analyses, and stakeholder engagement with policy makers to implement sustainable bioeconomy strategies.

BioInnovate Africa phase III comes at the right time in history, considering that the period 2020-2030 is a decade for accelerating efforts towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). It also aligns well with the sustainability aspirations of the African Union Agenda 2063, and the targets of the East African Community vision 2050 of boosting value addition and agro-processing as the biggest direct employer of all manufacturing industries in the region.

Notes for Editors:

BioInnovate Africa (the Bioresources Innovations Network for Eastern Africa Development, www.bioinnovate-africa.org) Programme is a regional science and innovation-driven initiative supported by the Swedish International Development Cooperation (Sida), and implemented by the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (icipe) in Nairobi, Kenya.  BioInnovate Africa supports scientists in Eastern Africa to translate innovative biologically based ideas, inventions or technologies into practical uses, including new business prospects, thereby fostering the development of a sustainable bioeconomy. With support of BioInnovate Africa, scientists in the public and private sector collaborate regionally to develop sustainable solutions that address the region’s pressing challenges, including climate change, jobs, and conserving biodiversity. Participating countries include Burundi, Ethiopia, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania, and Uganda.

The International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (http://www.icipe.org) headquartered in Nairobi, Kenya, is the only research institution in Africa working primarily on insects and other arthropods. Icipe mission is to ensure better food security, health, and livelihoods, by producing world-class knowledge and then developing solutions that are environmentally friendly, accessible, affordable, and easy-to-use by communities. These objectives are delivered through four thematic areas — Human Health, Animal Health, Plant Health and Environmental Health, providing a platform to build the capacity and leadership of African scientists; enable collaboration with hundreds of researchers and partners across Africa and the world; as well as the effective transfer of technologies and strategies to end-users.

The Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (https://www.sida.se) is a Swedish government agency. Its mission is part of the national policy for global development. Sida’s activities are funded through Swedish tax revenue. Sida strives to reduce world poverty by allocating resources and knowledge with the goal of making a difference for people in Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America. To achieve this, Sida collaborates with actors from civil society and universities as well as the public and private sector. Sida has bilateral development cooperation with 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe, as well as bilateral research cooperation with 7 countries out of which 5 are in Africa. Sida also works regionally in Africa, Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, as well as Europe, and supports organisations that contribute to poverty reduction globally across several thematic areas.

For further information, please contact:

BioInnovate Africa

Tel +254719052433

Email: bioinnovate@icipe.org