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tv   Empowering the Future  Deutsche Welle  February 26, 2025 2:15am-3:01am CET

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about these and other stories online. check us out at dw dot com, were also on youtube or the dw news channels. next, we have a documentary looking at innovators in africa and their climate friendly ideas for the future. check that out as even there's the invalid. that's watching the, the untold story details to point to the find it here. repos every weekend on dw, the, in africa as a continent on the fact that
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a continental 54 nations holding to 1500000000 people with a diversity and potential. those are frequently underestimate to us. we'll see this picture africa they think of by the poverty of safari. an image that is a world away from the reality is the continent heads towards a brighter future. africa, africa is the world's slop archery of the future. of the one innovations and needed here to improve people's lives on the last, everyone here is hungry. so the future what are the innovations fueling the confidence development which helped explain why someone call it the laura tree of the future. across africa, young people are tackling major problems with new ideas and technologies in africa will be solving real problems in healthcare and are going to be saving lives the
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this is the canyon, the sight of lake victoria. chuck o u d grew up here is one of the 14 children and as the oldest, it was his job to take their only co work degrees. the family could not afford more cattle. and the other farmers had to deal with another issue. the invasive plant species, what's your highest? and because that will stack up, we'll see, i mean, most likely at if we don't want to have it. i normally ask myself like when they weigh a, they don't according to me, what a has him. so be like kind of finding myself asking a lot of questions when i went to school and i to add the science, but biotechnology and elizabeth got you some nice kids in school like in june, the adding and science like in biology to trans from this kind of uh, i mean this for something important is father sold their only code to enable his son to continue his education. a decision that paid off. jack. so you,
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you went on to study. michael biology and i will be in part, most of he said by a desire to find out why codes didn't like the what's your highest and the leaves us to what? because i'm kind of send a crystals, we tell them that they get the, the color. so when they tried to feed on it, it's like so i'm going to check to, to send the 2nd thing if they need to send over to me. so you find exactly what the has the house lo, additional well in terms of put in. and that's that the most equating death system these fast growing plants also pose a threat to oxygen levels in the lake. but here people are turning this in piece of species into a resource one. so what's your highest and this dried a 2 week fermentation process involving funky and bacteria, produces protein rich animal feed, costing the equivalent of about 50 euro cents per kilo is 30 percent cheaper than comparable. so he put teens despite 3 employees, 30 people and currently has
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a relatively modest capacity of 40 tons of feed per year. the jackal yuki news, he could sell a lot more. he's already received inquiries from interested parties in thailand, for instance, of the budget also been getting a lot of people glance coming at to buy from us. and we are working on scaling our facility and working on getting a lot to meet that so that we can event that one to, to put this, this candle for next up so that we can reach more glance in the future. is thriving . businesses enabled him to build a separate room house for his family and the no 9 coast along site. optimizing fee production is keyed into another innovation, the digitalization of new production, the jackal you, he's probably are among $350000.00 small holders. but the read capital in kenya, we're know, using this digital offer support to daily producers across africa. this
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company is part of the bullying tech seen in kenya. adults, silicon, savannah colors. i mean a lot. they can inform me this. it means that source of revenue. so select if one foot in kenya, every household has the every morning, the must off mean. does she co develops phone apps and virtual platforms? dairy farmers can get the advice on life start farming. in some cases, free of charge. plus quick and straightforward information about topics like veterinary care and artificial insemination. digit code is associated fox, the advertising company. so what we do, we will advertise on behalf of one foot to the us district because the government didn't use. and in so doing with for us to ensure that if i'm against one defense and why the, how the product, what can they use? and then we are paid by the same people to take these concepts done to the,
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from us. and to ensure that these adoption, i mean fucked, or did you co offers users dependable and regularly updated information on life? start farming. ranging from tips on pest control and animal care, to the latest insights on feed. also included audio and video guides available on demand plus the app is compatible with older phone models that they closed. but on the level the tech was actually it who you and do own. do me. i'm by demo, walk you over to what my roof, what the 12 months wouldn't be for the future for the get to access extensions, resumes to short quotes, and also through the book gust this book, gus pushed the technology quoted, cut out the voices. pause therefore, must include, receive a phone call and they will be sending to the 4th cause this input costs use as a hosted within the digit co op. so for from us we've untruthful and stable to
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access the same and they can access videos and retain content. this went into some misses. that's what i was education, agriculture and health care. all these sectors are benefiting from innovation, leading to more jobs, and better prospects for the future. it tends to be the age of $29.00 darlington. a cocoa already has 13 years of programming experience under his belt. he wants to use artificial intelligence to transform africa. perhaps the whole world to a major milestone came and got his food and drugs authority issued approval for his ai system. i think i have the guy that has proven that. yeah. quite innovative. and for thinking, because the, i prove this guy system defense, you guys found the system in africa. his company specializes in the i,
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solutions for radiology and medical technology areas which involve processing huge amounts of data use data from china. yet ma'am us wanted to shut up busy i system is good regardless of whoever you bring in. so we looked at people from one us, 3 different. it listened to use the different continent. hello, dr. nixon. yeah, sorry. we are stuck in traffic. traffic is a daily heavy, cannot cra, will be that. so with the local infrastructure, struggles to keep pace with urban growth, with over 2000 beds. quarterly bu hospital, in the south of acura, is the largest teaching hospital in west africa here and u. x ray images are transferred anonymized to darlington. nicole, whose company the hospital which has funded over a century ago also has hundreds of thousands of patient records and its archives.
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we go to the eyes and stuff from a mcgrath fee for the detection of breast cancer as a connection to, you know, my mcguffey cds. cons e i system is that to take different things and that's all we just go to. i says full as specialties outside of your village. yes. well cleaning the machine, learning model involved, the indexing in comparison of millions of data sets, the more data, the more precise the analysis will ultimately be. so basically takes. so basically you drop and i read you a graph, trumpets into the ai systemic b, and this gives a chest x ray, trumpets the estimate, looks that fits and generic results. so the ai system is looking for about 14 different on this is that will tell you which of the conditions are present, which i'm not present when we come, whether it's a tumor, pneumonia or an enlarged heart. the i can localize and diagnose medical conditions to a high degree of accuracy. with the x ray performed by medical staff,
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the radiologist can then confirm the diagnosis. this is a major step forward for medical care and gone to a country that feels only about 100 radiologists for more than 30000000 people. one of the things i like about the eyes takes over the mundane routine tasks. so makes what more efficient and then they leave the human being more time to do more critical. more memory does 6 things. so it did. one, did mix the work fast, the with increased access to health care. people in places where there is no radiologist to could help with pre screening and get it over with darlington. the cuckoos company, new health wants to make access to medical surfaces, easier and cheaper to make that access widely available. the data is stored in the cloud is everything we do send the cloud. basically,
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you're gonna connect all you guys some with any device connected to the internet. you're going to use our ai medical imaging interpretation system with a mobile phone, a tablet, a pc, whatever you don't really need the privacy devices moved from everything reboots, all of that behind the scenes. mental health is dependent on foreign investment for funding the limited resources, the canadian government has go largely towards running the countries, universities, people doubts. what we can do as africans will tell you that, you know, oh, innovation are drastic. knowledge is something that you can kind of do, african is kind of do that, which we know is false. we know the history of africa. what about now? this week i keep referencing those old days. if we did it before, we should be able to do it. we need to reboot africa as
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a sample from that rebuilding faces major challenges. the continents complex history is often reduced to a clean shaved narrative of poverty and conflict. is part of a wider tendency. the grossly misrepresents africa and it's people so weird to these distortions come from the map of the world known to people in western countries, typically features africa in the middle of the con, closer inspection re, linda, appears to cover almost the same area as the entire african continent to in fact, africa takes 20 percent of gorsline, mass is 14 times the size of women to this discharge of view, the world can be traced back to them or counter protection named after the flemish photographer got more content to increase the max. in 1569, he rendered the globes curve long, the choosing law to choose
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a straight lines in order to create a cylindrical, 2 dimensional nautical chart. extremely practical, it's inevitably distorted. the proportions of the world one messes near the poles, resulting in an artificially trunk representation of africa for the past 4 and a half centuries. in reality, africa is bigger than the united states. china, india, japan, and europe combined. this a 100 regional lou and is about the size of the us. and that's just one 3rd of the african continent to many in europe see africa with 54 nations, one and a half 1000000000 people. and well over 2000 different languages that couldn't be further from the truth. the whole to around 220000000 people. nigeria is the most populous nation in africa.
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over 60000000 people live in a curious financial hub and largest city legal salute. journalist and author, people for lawyer and was born in chicago and grew up in lagos. part of the scrolling biggest city is covered by a huge liquid which poses a very real danger to the city. nicholson kills go 121000000 people without many of the traditional structures of government that you would expect. and so you have a city that essentially is run of confidence. you build it yourself, you make it to go out there and you hustle to live in the city is to thrive within that chaos thriving is a challenge and not a community of flushing homes. the most of the people here live
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from fishing, their livelihood is dependent on the atlantic ocean. the illegals is under serious threat from rising sea levels. storms flooding and coastal erosion and in macro cool, an estimated 100000 residents live in simple shacks at the mercy of the elements. it's just one segment of the coastal city. this at risk of being submerged. the type of law anson from the university of lagos as a research team, looking at poverty and urban development, the sometimes called the vendor as of legal is one focus of the project. fine documents,
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you see likely goes well the 60 percent of the working population actually the working full, leaving a new football settlements on working in in for my economic activities. it's a tough cycle. very few i able to get talk to about the cycle moving from survival to growth in macro cool, where many of the homes are built on stilts and the like the in a constantly rising sea level poses and increasing danger is a conundrum, which is given researchers some valuable insights the 1st thing we can learn from the community, like michael cool is the power of resilience. the 2nd thing we can learn is the ingenuity to that, you know, if they, they use in the local engineering technique. college is that is deployed in
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building those houses. they something to learn from. that's the only other you mean as a frequent visitor to michael in 2013, the internationally a cleaned architect completed a floating school for 50 people in the impoverished district. truly pioneering idea went on the 1st things i learned was very basic ways of building with local materials. and i was asked by one of the media team members if i could have helped with the school that was flooding. the proof is how you profess quoting school was a huge success. over the course of several years, the project tapped into the engineering skills within the local community and showed a viable way to address right using sea levels. so the cases here, the buildings are on steels, which means for blue, rising sea levels,
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the subject to flooding. but we found a way to allow the structure to floats, adapt to the changing title conditions. the macro cool floating system comprises modular buildings that rest on pontoon like structures and adapt to changing sea levels. however, the project did face setbacks with residents facing a daily struggle to get by maintenance if the structure fell to the wayside. a lack of regular upkeep resulted in damage. then in 2016, the floating school was destroyed by a storm. undeterred, quickly, the has continued developing the splitting structures. a mock a co floating systems have been deployed in africa, asia, and europe. this, this innovation of the polluting structure was completed in 2021 and keep body and visitors business days for cultural events and the be of the deal with this concept be a long term solution for legal that
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type of undertaking would require major investment, which could be possible due to nigeria is pass screwing economy across the entire continent. goods and services turned over an estimated $1.00 trillion us dollars. and it's not just the super rich. we're doing the spending a yes, middle class. it sets me growing, growing in large numbers as industries develop. we're seeing that middle class bro with see more and more people join that middle class. we've seen that middle class having a huge impact the only care in the ultimate, but also around the world as well. a world is becoming increasingly more connected . currently, the world's longest substitute cable system is being laid around africa. the to africa cable is supposed to massively improve connectivity between dozens of countries in africa, europe and asia in gone us capital, the world trade center. ultra is a business house working to foster are rapidly growing networks of digital surfaces
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. gilbert deborah is in charge of a canadian coal center zoo handles services like customer support and payroll for companies all over the globe space we have buckling is processing, and the last month we have through processing, we have the tie entry and a wide variety of by the things i cvt is the clients who access to help in projects around half of africa is one and a half 1000000000 population was born in this millennium uses teamworks via cloud based i t system.
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the company also specializes in technical support an area where they are now out. pacing the competition from india as you mention of india, i mean is being yes, india was the preferred destination. now it is not we a very dynamic, innovative and for thinking of going to is ition in the science, we make sure we give value for the money of their clients actually is paying. so when you entrust your business to us, we should be able to tell any of the on to move some metrics to ensure that's got profitable. the average monthly salary and gonna is the equivalent of around a 190 years. even doctors and hospitals are just about 650 year as a month in that regard. gayona's lou national wages mean
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these young professionals are becoming a globally competitive force. africa is going to be the leading workforce in terms of generating resources for b, p. o. services, why do i see this? africa has a very young age globally in gun. uh we have a young and youthful students. lawanda. you've gotten done lines you yeah. i mean, you can see the, a lot of the average age doesn't. that's why the goal be on $25.00. young people have always been drivers of innovation. their wealth of ideas and resourcefulness, coupled with modern technology, could help to improve the lives of countless people across africa. but in terms of development, nations in africa still trail industrialized nations in the west nations whose wealth largely stems from
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a history of exploitation. the arrival of europeans in the america has no wait. 15th century was followed by the emergence of the transatlantic slave trade. europeans treated weapons, all coal and fabrics per human beings. in america, africans were forced to produce the key commodities at the so called new world shoes, or tobacco and gold, which merchants sold to europe lucrative prices. more than 12000000 africans were transported into slavery in the americas, and an estimated 2000000 died on the higher risk journey. for over 400 years, the triangular slave trade fuel the economies of european powers and their american colonies. for africa, it was an immeasurable loss of human life, a legacy of violence and exploitation, that still being unravelled in 1880 for various colonial powers convened in berlin to essentially carve off the content for themselves. they wanted to avoid their scramble for africa escalating into war. among each other. arbitrary lines,
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they drew up as borders gave no consideration to the different peoples languages and kingdoms already in place. these borders are the root cause of many internal conflicts in africa that there still unresolved today. even before the german empire was founded in 1871 regional, some friends were profiting from the slave trade, including in modern day gunner loose friedreich's book was that brandenburg prussian colony created on the gulf of guinea in 1683 darlington, a cocoa as noon. the police since he was a child, centuries ago, it was a marketplace for gold spaces, ivory or an sleeves. so this is for this box. it is um, a sleeve for it displays basically max,
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i know fortune needs connection between germany and gunner. so over here, the had about $10000.00 to thousands. nice and do a transfer with it from yeah, to germany, to north america, to south america, the caribbean, the, the fast this africa was quite an influx needs events. right. and i believe the reason why we need to know about this and then lessons from it. because physically we are experiencing a digital scramble for africa. we're experiencing very serious brain tree. we have a lot of the young people that exit to gun african countries. going to have that part of the war being lost to you know, europe young talent leaving the country is also a big issue here from bossy kwame, including the university of science and technology or key and
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u. s. t is graduation date for these nurses after a 3 year course of study. but not everyone will find a job in gonna fight many plan to lose elsewhere. who wants to rec, outside god, i guess it's all a dream. so we get to where you want to go. okay, i want to go to canada. and you, you. i said, yes, i didn't get into it. yeah. you must work there. why don't you go to the germany pick? yeah, just the idea many, dr. linda along the, by what kind of that us and that you key does speak english and i would, i think the speaking yeah. gonna has more university graduates than the domestic economy kind accommodate for many emigrating as their sole prospect of finding a job. a cynthia duncan is an associate professor of pharmacology. research has antibiotic resistance and collaboration with the university of oxford,
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some natural component of anti bacterial and antibiotic properties. cynthia done qual wants to develop new agents using substances. this are naturally available in gonna we believe that nature has a lot to offer and to find new palm pounds from plants. so that's how structural diversity to be able to feed into the drug discovery and development pipeline and was as a search in resistance, that the number of it's about is keep the munition that's about the pipeline is running dry. the past 4 decades have produced only a small number of new antibiotics because there is still unexplored flora in africa . there's a huge opportunity to find new agents. women like cynthia done quad, her students will be playing a crucial role in this development. an estimated 40 percent of the roughly
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90000 students that key and u. s. t r women figure that set to rise further. alisha in europe as aging populations. africa has the youngest population in the world. a. how will this young, creative, and dynamic group of people shape the future of our world? africans population is set to nearly double by 2050, to 2 and a half 1000000000 people. the median agent, africa is about 19, and women have an average of 4 children. median age and here it is about 45 women have an average between one and 2 children and the birth rate is following according to projections and immigration to europe stopped. the confidence population would decline by around 10 percent by 2050. by 2060. there would be a 118 children and senior citizens for every 100 people of working age, a mass of decline and prosperity is a very real possibility. some nations and
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advocacy, high rates of economic growth as well as high birth rates. so how does a young population shape the confidence ongoing development the customers can shop to g is the executive director of the african population in health research center and institute in the canyon capital. and i will be the doctor and epidemiologist is originally from uganda. incomplete is for ph. d. in heidelberg, germany, the demographic didn't distribute just the costs up to because it's about the potential. you have a very big chunk of you for pollution being in what is known as they can only go to production age. that's between 15 and 64. i know they are working on all of them are producing and contributing for economy. and at some point, as those people are growing, you reduced your facility so efficiently. that's now the population of people 15 is
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less under population above $65.00. maintaining a demographic dividend requires at least 1.7 working people, each 15 to 65 for every dependent individual. and this could happen in the future when africa's large use population reaches working age bus. the decisive factor will be whether enough girls and women receive good education, spots us, which again, they have to be sure that those children got enough food, enough health care definitely went to good schools. the good a good education. if you don't do those things, then every year you keep on sort of closing the window, the middle keeps, keeps of getting narrower. and that's my concern that the african countries are not doing the right things to give that demographic dividend to the social scientists and demographics. experts working at the research
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institute informed governments about the challenges and opportunities i had. their findings are vital and supporting the continents development with concrete policy making. with all that data, political action would be an effective. i think also they'll be the demographic disaster. if you go into the business as usual, because i, i, i come from uganda, i live in kenya, and they look up they, because of the system under the quality of the divisions system. and i don't think that's the quoted, that is going to provide a dividend. so we have a danger. and i think it's really evidence of having these huge populations of young people entering almost a non existent job market situation. this is keenly felt the key n u s t in gonna funds the 1st or is
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a pharmacist and part of cynthia down close team at the university. when she's complete his, her degree. she'll have to move on in order to meet way for new researchers. he's already looking for her next job. if i get a chance, i would love to study and to experience the life out side there's. there's notion about korea, women. that's the i intimidating. i have had some conversations and some of the young men, some friends, and they feel that mean to me, dates and you've done a 6 year programming pharmacy ok, maybe driving a car, you are beautiful. i thought now that i mean my prime strong, i have, you know, fresh men refresh thoughts. i'm able to think of my feats. i think this is that time for me to put my knowledge and then my brains to use. and along that line, if the mind comes months of forest or is i'm vicious,
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an open to wherever her career might take her most, everybody will get the opportunity to be able to go to the us or the u. k, or canada. and so if i get an opportunity to study in germany, i'm going to do the best buy kind of, we the opportunity given to me, cynthia, done quite herself, was a research academic visitor to the university of oxford in the u. k. so how does she see the issue of brain drain as see it's as um, opportunity uh for them to go out there and learn. why is they'll come back to contribute to that growth of the country. and because the as far as uh, it's also good for them and they are being trained to be able to excel and do better. and my hope it says that they would come back one be at some help, grew the crunchy among africans with
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a university degree 50 percent. can imagine moving abroad among people without any school certificates is under. one of them for researchers are considering the implications of losing promising talent to other parts of the world. it's true that the african might, for the future walk over, there was especially looking at the demographic pressure as the other continents and other regions of the expediency. but i don't think that at this point, that's what they should be looking at. i think it should be looking at maintaining that migration dynamics. people migrate because the opportunities people make risk a bit of their life, not because they're being pushed by local between a piece of their own country. so there's a disconnect between all these things they're trying to do and why i, i think that's the african walker would be the future. but that's if we can work on needs to be that just needs to have the right skills, need to didn't get the experience of the se,
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comes over the next 30 years. africa's working age population will account for some 68 percent of global economic growth. meanwhile, aging populations in european countries like germany, will lead to a substantial drop in well use. there is project to drop by an estimate of 274000000000 euros by 2040. on the flip side, when it comes to the rose fastest growing economies in 2024, almost half of them were african nations list include seneca rolanda, a new shannon. the, the continent still needs that ideas and investments translate into local jobs on the ground. and development is largely contingent on another factor to to africa harnesses. renewable energy is 600000000 people in africa loc access to
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electricity. but there is a mens potential for renewables in central and east africa. countries like uganda and 10 year uses 90 percent renewables from windham solar, the hydro power, and use thermal that makes electricity very cheap and this is a land gifted mitchell. we are position so nicely, we are high up one up lead to we are on the equate to we have quiz crossed by so many revise. our 1st priority to us develop hydro electricity which is renewable. and now we have excess in which, in our consumption of electricity we have exists. so we're giving to enables but we can also use it to electrify. we have just been lazy in, apply and go science and technology. science and technology will be key to boosting the economy in uganda. the hope is that cheap electricity will helps
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a deep carbonized transport starting with a bytes or boat of what does that route route you've been seen any way in the world where you have um with the cycles as a solution to public transport. these are indigenous solutions and now the issues to make them sustainable. john boss school begins wants to be part of that solution . for him, it makes financial sense. he recently made the switch to an e mail. sure, right from the company google electric was made possible thanks to a micro fluid which pays for itself through the money he saves on fuel. i'm like electricity, petrol is extremely expensive. uganda, which is why junk against a know, runs on battery power. we're moving up and down because this is transportation, so i can use every day you can use the bathroom cause we're not going to do anything fun, ridiculously that on average, changing batteries as
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a charging station in kampala takes just 2 minutes for junk again, the time is money the the idea is the brainchild of german uganda mechanical engineer. yeah, i know it's besides of his colleagues of google. after finishing his studies in the german city of austin design, so began setting up english cycle into structure and uganda bikes battery's charging stations all under one umbrella to l. c. and the we currently produced 60 to 80 moved to bind about 120 to 150 batteries. and we opened on average one station per week. tulsa on the existing network comprises 1100 drivers from around 2300 mattress and 65 charging stations around central and eastern uganda, and also got the yellows. besides who has new issue finding skilled personnel to assemble the motor bikes with parts source from india, china,
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on the domestic market, as google base costs the equivalent of 1300 use a lot of money for the average boot about a driver here. so how is it financially feasible? the f find this a listing homes speak of electronic data from public and now you can switching from gas power to electric main savings of about 50 percent. so i just, my goodness, the cost of that is the reduced fuel cost of yours and the law. good. be back to you. we can reach our customers pantries for less than the cost of petrol at the gas station, the inch quick. but i can con plus fewer parts means fewer repairs. the lower price of electricity means lower operating costs. and that's in naples drivers to finance their own e motor bikes and junk again, this case after 2 years with the help of a micro loan. well, the bank is, here's the battery remains a property of its supplier. built in software prevents it from being charged anywhere other than a google facility. the number of drivers making the
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switch to electric will need to keep growing in order to fund the infrastructure and expand it for less and more not in the bundle, frequent costs as low as i. as in the above, down to 16 months ago, there was 35 on this in the now there are over 31516 months ago we have 350 active customers and the 2 wheeler segments it to the now we've added $900.00 more owns of the production capacity is up 10 fold one and we've started saving 2 new regions in uganda and event about the strategic development of the new charging stations is particularly costly in order to optimize operations. all email terabytes and batteries are fitted with sim cards. the supply a constant flow of data using cotton, dean dot, so dot e d. if we bought a video to add one shot to one of the sim cards are used by uploading relevant data
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to the mattress banks and charging points every 30 seconds. it means we can secure property and data of our customers to the clinton remind us of, of the move please. if it's the idea is to maximize efficiency. when we need to service vehicles in stock or assigned batteries to stations. but he even switched out. so you want them to orland junk against a peas digits, the via his food when he charges his battery. as long as the price is fair, he's not bothered that you can only use a google charging point. yeah, making money in these innovations have the potential to transport them, transportation, africa, and you could learn something as well. it does the in about ceilings. kalima is a gust is on the as a climate of innovation in uganda is dramatically different to that in germany. and big one, find to is perhaps that being to view regulations which present obstacles collect.
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also, i could argue that germany has too many regulations, arcs viewed as a type of either so many that it can be difficult to even introduce new ideas. and that alone, try to implement those things. it's implemented in africa. the devastating consequences of colonialism are still apparent to date. nevertheless, this is a continent that's flourishing in terms of people, ideas on economic growth. when you really start to become curious about all that exists across the confident you start to see it as success story in the sense of all that has been a cheap, it's such a short period of time considering it as well. with these countries inherited from colonialism. if you look at stories of ingenuity across a tech and in medicine, you know, you, you, you can look it up and say that this is an example of, of how to build nations and how to, to be in either the ingenuity of, of this region is something that is extremely special. as the proof of loins, boot africa is not a country remains us. this is a continent of
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a men's diversity opportunity and find less potential, the thinking as a network thing, as one a show about vision raised and bad project. the challenges that can be tackled together for a future worth living, a wedding for a more united? well d w. ask for cop what the funds in these senegalese
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neighborhoods about things, all the residents have come together to give the neighborhood kind of gain stain in the process. an unconventional competition with 10 expected results in 19 minutes on d w. the if you like, history and with the side of culture, travel and control the sea. and i'm based in a book us that will put the wow, that's up, i can do it every day. not every day we encounter so many things that we don't even notice and i just kind of fade into the background. but it is still showing a spotlight on them. what you say might just surprise where to dig up the,
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the on the everyday things around. when did they come from? when, why did they have all the time? i should, we can just search for the day and change them out where i mean that's the, this is dw news and these are our top stories. the ukranian officials say keep in washington have agreed to the terms of a draft minerals deal. the agreement could be signed as early as friday, with plans for your premium present. it flooded mid zalinski to travel to the us to meet with donald trump. us president has been demanding ukraine, give access to its rare earth minerals to compensate for war time. a received under joe by the united states has the man set to become germany's next. chancellor says hawks are under way to form a coalition government with
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a sensor less social democrats.

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