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  • By the year 2050, the population of Africa will have doubled.

  • One in four people on Earth will be African at that point,

  • and this is both really exciting and daunting all at once.

  • It's really exciting because, for the first time in the modern era,

  • there will be enough Africans on the Earth to bully everybody else.

  • (Laughter)

  • I'm only kidding.

  • But it's daunting, because we're going to have to have economies

  • that can sustain this population growth,

  • and many of the people are going to be very young.

  • Now most of governments in Africa have a plan for this economic growth --

  • in Kenya, we call ours Vision2030 --

  • and they're all predicated on industrialization.

  • The thing is, though, that the world

  • is going through the Fourth Industrial Revolution right now,

  • which means that there's a merger

  • of the physical, cyber, and biological worlds.

  • It means that because of massive interconnectivity

  • and the availability of artificial intelligence and robotics,

  • many of the jobs that we know and are used to right now

  • won't exist in the future.

  • So the challenge is a lot greater, in many ways,

  • than it even was when Asia was industrializing, for example.

  • To add to this, one of the kinds of person that you need

  • for industrialization is an engineer,

  • and they're really in short supply on the continent.

  • If you compare, for example, the number of engineers

  • that those same Asian countries had

  • a couple of decades ago when they were industrializing,

  • we fall far short.

  • And I've taught for a while,

  • and many of the students who are studying engineering

  • end up actually working in auditing firms and banks,

  • and many of them spend half their time doing accounting and so on

  • as they're preparing.

  • Now, I was fortunate enough to do my undergrad and postgrad education

  • in the UK and the US, in countries, environments,

  • where there was all the equipment that you required,

  • all the sophistication in the systems,

  • and then I worked for about three years in Japan

  • doing R&D for a large firm.

  • And so I was very used to having good equipment,

  • and went back home

  • and joined the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Nairobi,

  • wanting to contribute and be on the continent.

  • And I quickly found I was really quite useless,

  • because there wasn't all the equipment that I had become accustomed to available.

  • And I was teaching students who I would find very bright ideas in their minds

  • and they'd be presenting things that I knew

  • if only we had sufficient equipment,

  • they'd be able to really contribute to the challenge of industrialization.

  • So I kind of had to change hats, and became quite entrepreneurial

  • and started looking for money to buy the equipment that we required.

  • And I heard about a concept out of MIT, called the Fab Labs.

  • These are digital fabrication labs

  • that allow, in a rather small space with not very expensive equipment,

  • people to have access to these tools

  • to be able to make almost anything,

  • as the slogan goes.

  • And so I was able to convince a government official

  • to buy one of these for the university where I was teaching.

  • And immediately, we had wonderful results.

  • We saw all kinds of innovations coming through,

  • and for the first time in this context at the university,

  • engineering students from different disciplines

  • were doing the lab and practical exercises together in the same space.

  • Normally, they'd be siloed.

  • And not just that, but students who weren't engineers at all

  • were also working in the same place,

  • and non-students, people who had nothing to do with the university,

  • were also coming into this space.

  • So you had this rich mix of people,

  • people who think differently from one another,

  • and this always is really good for innovation.

  • I was really proud of what we were seeing.

  • So you can imagine my surprise

  • when one day the dean of engineering came and said to me,

  • "Kamau, the students who spend most of the time in the Fab Lab

  • are failing their exams."

  • I said, "What do you mean?"

  • And I looked into it, and he was right,

  • and the reason they were failing

  • is that they'd honed their skills so well in certain things

  • that they were going out into the city and offering services for money.

  • So they were making money --

  • (Laughter)

  • and they therefore weren't focusing on their studies.

  • And I thought, what a good problem to have.

  • (Laughter)

  • Don't quote me on that. I'm an academician.

  • So we needed to scale this,

  • and at the university, things were a bit too bureaucratic,

  • and so I moved out and I hooked up with people who, in Nairobi,

  • were providing spaces for IT experts

  • to share fast internet and things like that.

  • And some of these places are really quite famous.

  • They've made Kenya famous for IT.

  • And together we set up a space which we are setting up right now.

  • We've moved from where we were.

  • We are in a much larger space,

  • and we're sort of making available a wide range of equipment,

  • including the digital fabrication tools that I mentioned,

  • and analog tools,

  • to anybody really, on a membership basis.

  • It's a bit like a gym, so you come in, you pay,

  • you get taught how to use the equipment,

  • and then you're set free to innovate and do whatever it is that you want,

  • and you don't have to be an engineer, necessarily.

  • And some of the people in the space are setting up a small company.

  • They just need a space at a desk,

  • and so we provide that at a fee,

  • and others take up bigger spaces and are able to set up their offices.

  • They're further along.

  • Maybe their company has been running for a certain period of time.

  • And so we're able to accommodate all of this

  • in an innovation space that is really quite active.

  • What you're seeing in this image over here is Douglas,

  • and Douglas is an electrical engineer,

  • one of the people who was really active in the Fab Lab.

  • I'm pretty sure he passed his exams.

  • And the image on the top left is a copper sheet.

  • And he designed a circuit that the client came to him and said,

  • "I need this circuit for a pay-as-you-go system."

  • And so this is a model for business

  • that's made accessibility to goods and services for very poor people

  • really much easier, because they're able to pay a little bit,

  • like a dollar a day, for example,

  • for a specific service.

  • And so this company wanted to pilot a new idea that they had,

  • and so they just needed 50 circuits,

  • so they hired him to make them,

  • and what you're seeing him doing there is,

  • he's able to design on the computer what the circuit will be

  • and then transfer it to an etching process --

  • that's the image on the top right --

  • and then populate the board using this robot.

  • And so what would normally take him maybe a day or something to solder by hand,

  • he can do in a few minutes using this machine.

  • So he was able to complete the entire order within Gearbox,

  • and this is really important,

  • because if it wasn't for what we provided right now,

  • he would have had to have hired a company in China to do this,

  • and because it's such a small order, it would have taken a long time.

  • It would be a small company,

  • because big companies wouldn't take small orders,

  • and even then, if they got a bigger order,

  • they'd bump him off in favor of that.

  • And there's language problems and so on,

  • so being able to do it in country is really very important,

  • and of course piloting as a phase within the progress of the business idea

  • is extremely important, because you can go back and make corrections and so on.

  • In this image -- Thank you.

  • (Applause)

  • In this image you see on the top left,

  • what you're looking at is a 3D render of a digital fabrication machine.

  • In this instance, it doubles as a plasma cutter

  • and also a wood router.

  • And so the plasma cutter makes possible the cutting of plate and sheet metal,

  • and basically, you make a design on the computer

  • and send it over to the machine,

  • and then quickly and precisely, it will cut the shapes you want.

  • But in this machine,

  • you can also change the plasma cutter and put on a spindle,

  • and then you can carve wood as well.

  • So this was designed by my Head of Engineering.

  • His name is Wachira,

  • and when I hired him about two years ago,

  • I asked him, "Just give me two years,

  • and by the time you've trained a lot of people

  • so that we have good staff under you,

  • then you can move out and become a good story for us."

  • And that's exactly what's just happened.

  • He's got two types of customers.

  • The higher-tier customer

  • is a company that's actually using his machine

  • to cut sheet metal for Isuzu truck fabrication in Nairobi,

  • which is being done by General Motors.

  • So we're really proud to be able to say

  • that we have an original equipment manufacturer in Nairobi

  • that's provided what's effectively an industrial robot

  • to supply parts for General Motors.

  • Now this is really important --

  • (Applause)

  • and it's really important because the population growth being what it is,

  • a lot of very large companies are looking very closely

  • at the market that's developing in Africa.

  • So in Kenya right now, we have Volkswagen, Peugeot, Renault,

  • we have Mercedes doing lorries,

  • and we've also got Toyota, they've been there a long time.

  • And these are all manufacturers planning to assemble vehicles

  • and in the future, to manufacture in the country.

  • Many of them are planning to train lots of people that they'd hire,

  • and that's really important for the economy,

  • but when the magic really happens,

  • when these companies begin to buy their parts for the vehicles

  • from local companies,

  • so supply chain development is something that's very important

  • for us to be able to pivot and to have very productive economies,

  • and that's something we're focused on at our space.

  • This other image shows another class of customer that he has.

  • On the top left,

  • you have these people who are actually using very crude tools

  • to work metal and wood.

  • And Kenya has a population of about 44 million people.

  • The work force is about 13 million,

  • and about 80 to 90 percent of those are in the informal sector.

  • And what you're seeing in the image at the top left over there

  • is very typical of semi-skilled artisans

  • who are making products for the marketplace

  • that are really crude.

  • Their production rate is very slow.

  • The quality of the product isn't high.

  • And so we've teamed Wachira up with a bank,

  • and the bank is paying him to train people from this sector

  • on how to use this industrial robot.

  • And the result is that some of them

  • are going to be able to get loans to buy the machine for themselves.

  • Others will be able to go to centers where they can carry their material,

  • get the design done,

  • and take the materials back that have been made really, really fast

  • and assemble them in their own spaces.

  • So somebody making a gate, for example, out of metal,

  • may take a week to make just one gate,

  • but with this machine, they might make 10 in a day.

  • So the productivity of a large swathe of our population

  • should be able to jump by a quantum amount, quite significantly,

  • because of this kind of machine.

  • And that's what we're at the beginning of, so this is really very exciting.

  • This is another person who uses our space.

  • Her name is Esther.

  • She's in her mid-20s,

  • and she came in very passionate about a problem that she explained.

  • She said that schools days are missed every month by young girls

  • because of their menstrual cycle,

  • and they're not able to buy a sanitary towel.

  • And the reason that she described

  • was that the manufacturers packaged these in bundles of seven to 10,

  • and breaking it down is unhygienic at the retail level,

  • and packaging each one of them is too expensive.

  • So she thought up an idea, which is brilliant, and simple.

  • Why don't we just use vending machines?

  • And she, in a very clean environment, can break down the bundles

  • and fill up the vending machines,

  • and then girls can buy these sanitary towels

  • in the privacy of a toilet, in a public space, in a school, and so on.

  • She was able to pilot this and it worked really very well,

  • and she's been able to sort of get the bugs out and so on.

  • So the significance here is that the piloting process is possible.

  • She's not an engineer.

  • She was able to engage people in our space to be able to help her to do this,

  • and she's off and running now with a business accelerator,

  • so we expect to see great results.

  • (Applause)

  • In this image you're looking at --

  • the result of a master's project that was done at University of Nairobi

  • by Tony Nyagah, an engineering student,

  • and he just integrated a solar cell into a roof tile

  • and decided to make it a business.

  • He joined up with his sister who is an architect,

  • and they have this business,

  • and they present the roof tile to a person who is doing development and say,

  • "You can buy it for the cost of just the roof tile without the solar."

  • So they're giving it at a discount,

  • and then they'll build them using the internet of things over time,

  • they'll pay about a third of the utility charges for the electricity

  • and they can sell the excess back to the grid.

  • And so they'll make their money over time,

  • and they've been able to do quite a few installments.

  • We were very proud to be able to show this to somebody kind of famous,

  • as you can see there,

  • and this other famous guy actually presented the same idea,

  • but as far as we're concerned, if it was after us, so --

  • (Laughter)

  • (Applause)

  • So in closing, going forward, of course being able to prototype

  • and do low manufacturing in this kind of a setting

  • is very important for the industrialization process,

  • but we're also taking advantage of a lot of new ways of doing things:

  • the open source movement,

  • distributive manufacturing, circular production.

  • So it's all very important for not just industrializing

  • and being able to meet people's needs,

  • but also making sure that the environment is taken care of.

  • We're also really interested in culture.

  • We have lots of discussions in our space around who we were as Africans,

  • who we are today, and who we want to be

  • vis-à-vis things like consumerism and ethnicity and corruption and so on.

  • So we see ourselves as providing, adding value to people

  • by teaching them to add value to things or materials

  • so that they can build things that matter.

  • Thank you very much for your attention.

  • (Applause)

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

By the year 2050, the population of Africa will have doubled.

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TED】カマウ・ガチギ:ケニア初のメーカースペースからのサクセスストーリー (ケニア初のメーカースペースからのサクセスストーリー|カマウ・ガチギ) (【TED】Kamau Gachigi: Success stories from Kenya's first makerspace (Success stories from Kenya's first makerspace | Kamau Gachigi))

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    Zenn に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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