A three-day conference that kicks of in Port Elizabeth today (9 May 2018) brings together innovators from research, government, industry, NGOs and the media to explore the tensions and opportunities around implementing the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in Africa.

Seedbeds of Transformation: The Role of Science with Society and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in Africa is hosted by Future Earth, the Department of Science and Technology, the National Research Foundation, and START.

It will run until 11 May 2018 at the Boardwalk Hotel.

According to the organisers, while Africa has made significant progress towards implementing the SDGs in recent years, “huge challenges” remain.

“There are problems in tracking the SDGs due to lack of data. There are tensions and trade-offs between various SDGs – for example whether to promote water conservation or food production – and there are criticisms that the SDG framework itself is top-down and in some cases unsuitable for various African contexts,” the organisers said in a statement.

The conference will examine different practices and approaches to working with these tensions and dilemmas from an African perspective and aims to enhance dialogue and openness about the challenges of working with, and implementing, the SDGs.

The focus of the conference includes ocean health, ecosystem change, sustainable cities and the impact of digitalisation.

The conference will engage scholars, practitioners, and policy experts from across Africa to share information, ideas, and products that showcase innovative efforts.

Conference speakers include:

  • Amy Luers, Executive Director of Future Earth, former Obama and Google executive
  • Belay Begashaw, Director General to the Sustainable Development Goals Centre for Africa
  • Peter Messerli, Co-chair UN Panel for the Global Sustainable Development Report
  • Heila Lotz Sisitka, Environmental Learning Research Centre, Rhodes University
  • Bernard Slippers, Director of the Forestry and Agricultural Biotechnology Institute, University of Pretoria
  • Solomon Assefa, Director of IBM Research Africa
  • Brian Armstrong, Head of Digital Business, University of the Witwatersrand
  • Karoli Njaum, Nelson Mandela African Institution for Science and Technology
  • Ward Anseeuw, International Land Coalition
  • Oonsie Biggs, Centre for Complex Systems in Transition, Stellenbosch University
  • Bob Scholes, Distinguished Professor, Global Change and Sustainability Research Institute, Witwatersrand University
  • Rike Sitas, African Centre for Cities and Mistra Urban Futures, South Africa
  • Nadia Sitas, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, South Africa
  • Million Belay, MELCA Ethiopia/ Alliance for food sovereignty in Africa/ Stockholm Resilience Centre, Ethiopia

Sessions include:

Digital futures in Africa: science, policy and action Seeding sustainability I: pathways for change Power and equity dimensions of the SDGs

Examples of projects to be presented at the conference:

  1. Breaking down bureaucracy When sustainable development in Africa is hampered by fragmented planning and bureaucratic decision-making processes, “decision-theatres” offer an alternative. A decision-theatre can engage researchers and leaders in visualizing solutions to complex problems using the latest expertise in collaborative, computing and display technologies. The project Establishing a road-map for Africa’s first Decision-Theatres (South Africa), led by Luanita Snyman-van der Walt at Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, aims at introducing decision theatres based on international best practice to the African context.
  2. Dealing with plastic -Plastic waste is a growing problem in Kenya and not least so on the beaches of Mombasa. In the project Not in my ocean. Reducing marine debris in a coastal city (Kenya) David Obura from CORDIO East Africa is leading a broad team of researchers and local stakeholders in dialogues and workshops about how to reduce debris.
  3. Talking trees – The project Baobab talker (Tanzania) aims at protecting the iconic, culturally important Baobab trees, the places where elders used to meet to resolve problems. The solution is a combination of maker space and dialogue: to monitor trees’ environment (making them “talk”) by fitting them with low-cost sensors on a Raspberry Pi/Arduino network, and engaging village leaders and local schools. Run by Karoli Njau from Nelson Mandela African Institution of Science and Technology, Tanzania, and a team of local village leaders and international researchers.

For more information visit the conference website https://seedbeds.futureearth.org/

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