UK to spend £4 million in building state of the art air condition facilities across Africa

Image

LONDON - The British government has announced its commitment to address the urgent lack of cold-chain in Africa as developing countries will receive £4 million to drive down harmful emissions from outdated air conditioning units, cooling refrigeration and cold supply chains.

This funding will be provided with this summer to the United Nations Environment Programme, the University of Birmingham, the Government of Rwanda and fellow project partners as part of Defra’s £21 million Sustainable Cooling and Cold Chain Solutions programme.

While announcing the funding Environment Secretary Thérèse Coffey said: “This funding will help developing countries to play their part in tackling climate change and communities across the world with storing food and medicines more efficiently - as well as support farmers to increase their productivity.”

In sub-Saharan Africa, small-holder farmers contribute 80 per cent of the food produced. About 37 per cent of all food is lost between production and consumption, and almost 50 per cent of fruits and vegetables are lost mainly due to improper cold-chain management.

A lack of adequate cold storage and refrigerated transport vehicles to support medical supply chains in developing economies currently contributes to over 1.5 million vaccine-preventable deaths each year. Estimates suggest that 25 per cent of vaccines reach their destination with degraded efficacy mainly due to failures within the cold chains.

Following the Downing Street reception, officials from Rwanda's Ministry of Environment reiterated the country's commitment to the development of the Africa Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Cooling and Cold-chain (ACES) headquarters in Kigali, which will be launched in late 2023.

Professor Toby Peters, Professor in Cold Economy at the University of Birmingham and Heriot-Watt University is leading the collaboration of UK Universities supporting this work in Africa and India. He said: “Sustainable and equitable cooling and cold-chain is now more than ever critical infrastructure in a warming world. Food saved is as important as food produced.

“This programme for the first time delivers an integrated approach that includes on-the-ground training and support for subsistence farmers and their communities, financeable business models and the network of skilled engineers needed to support equipment installation and maintenance. This work is underpinned by the evidence strategies required for the development of sustainable cold-chain and community cooling.”

Professor Peters added: “In so doing, ACES can simultaneously deliver against multiple global challenges including mitigating climate change and environmental impacts of meeting new cooling demand; reduce food loss converting it into increased farmers’ incomes and food security and affordability for consumers and design the next generation of vaccine cold-chains that are efficient, resilient, responsive and sustainable.”

Alongside the UK funding commitments, the Government of Rwanda is overseeing the development of key campus infrastructure to support the Centre.

The consortium of Rwanda and UK universities, including the University of Birmingham, Heriot-Watt University, Cranfield University and London South Bank University, are working together in collaboration with international academic and teaching partners and cooling industries to develop the Centre’s teaching and research programs to provide a pipeline of skills and expertise and innovation in cooling technology solutions, systems and models.

UK’s ACES funding is supporting the development of Specialised Outreach and Knowledge Establishments (SPOKEs) to disseminate knowledge and deployment of solutions throughout Africa – the first being in Kenya – as well as technical assistance to replicate the model in India in Telangana and Haryana.

An additional £1.2 million in funding from Defra has been allocated to the project partners to further support the development of roadmaps and digital tools to help developing countries design equitable and resilient and cost-efficient approaches, quantify the full economic environmental and societal impact as well as understand the policy landscape required to implement new approaches.

GAROWE ONLINE

Related Articles

Kenya Airways to resume direct flights to Somalia

There has been relative stability in Somalia for the last 12 months following the offensive against Al-Shabaab militants

  • Business

    30-11-2023

  • 02:50PM

Preparations on top-notch as Hormuud Telecom in full gear to organize a high-level conference

According to organizers, the conference will focus on and prioritize finding solutions to the challenges that have plagued Somalia's local production sectors.

  • Business

    10-10-2023

  • 05:42PM