One of the elementary
adages we learnt early in life is that ‘necessity is the mother of
invention’. This is self-evident and it has been proved true throughout
human history and experience. During the Biafran war of independence, we learnt
how to extend the shelf-life of batteries so that we could listen to Oko-Okoo
Ndem, Onwuzuligbo Umezulike et al from Radio Biafra, which most of the time,
operated the guerrilla-broadcast model. We learnt that we could eat
cocoa-yam and cassava leaves and
discovered new ways of preparing and preserving them. We learnt how to extract
salt for the salty stockfish, which we ordinarily never touched. Biafra was
able to refine its own oil, some in secondary school compounds, manufacture its
arms and ammunitions, including the famed ogbunigwe (the real
weapon of mass-destruction), while Biafran recruits practiced the art of
warfare and weapon-handling with bludgeons! The real name for necessity is
adversity.
Beyond the Biafran war, we have had seasons of
adversity in this country: during SAP
era, the June 12 riots, which led to oso-Abiola,(
fleeing from the Abiola Crises) and even, the security challenge, which
continues to intensify by the day and which has transfigured from a North-East
affair to a National challenge. But the Coro-adversity is indescribable,
overwhelming and global. Everywhere was subjected to the triple locks( Lock-up,
lock-down, lock in); health systems were overwhelmed, including those of Europe
and America, our people who went
overseas to buy ice-cream had to stay at home and many of them were treated in
our local hospitals, which have
deteriorated from ‘mere consulting clinics’ to mortuaries. Our big men also could not show off their wealth
as there were no avenues and occasions
for sinful ostentatious displays; global
supply chain was disrupted and the world was in
socio-economic quandary while we lived in collective fear and uncertainty. I am
intentionally using the past-tense because even though the war is not over, we
speak and act as if it is over, especially as the jabbing has
started and we are now more self-confident that we can overcome the scourge.
True to the above ancient adage, adversity
became the mother of inventions. People who lived in morbid fear and paralysis,
were able to pull themselves together, put on their thinking caps and went on
an invention splurge. I am proud to note that Nigeria has not been left out in
these inventions, both in Nigeria and outside
Nigeria. In no special order (though I wish to start at home where charity
begins, though it should not end there), here is a roll-call of some of the adversity-propelled
inventions. The OOU Research Team produced an anti-Covid syrup
that can manage the scourge and boost immunity just like a group of Catholic
Priests collaborated with other institutions and experts to produce another cure, the Pax CVD Plus
and the Plateau Research Team on Coro which also developed a herbal cure.
The Federal Poly, Oko in Anambra state, produced a solar-powered Coro
disinfection machine just as their counterparts at Federal Polly Nekede
fabricated an automated and manually operated hand-washing and drying
machine while in Ife, the OOni Covid-19 Team invented motorized
modular fumigators.
At Federal University of Technology, Owerri, two Elect-Elect students, Isaac Uchechukwu and Ifeanyi Ebulue designed a device to prevent us from touching our faces while in Lagos, the LASU Dept of Computer Science developed a Coro self-test App just as some researchers from the Federal University of Technology Akure developed a positive pressure ventilator, which is a variant of mechanical ventilator, while in Bauchi, Engineers from Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University invented automatic ventilators, disinfection chambers and software apps for screening and treatment of coronavirus and Lassa fever. At individual levels, Engr Ibrahim Aledu of NSE, Apapa fabricated a respiratory machine while Dr Dayo Olakunlehin, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and founder of LigandCorp invented the D-Box, a cheap, portable, easily deployable, easy to use and rechargeable battery-powered ventilator, which cost $300 while the conventional ones cost in the neighbourhood of $30,000.
Dr Olakunlehin &
his D-box
He has just been nominated for the Royal Academy of Engineering Prize Usman Dalhatu, a 200L student of Mechanical Engineering of ABU Zaria produced the Respire-19, an E-Vent automatic ventilator while Jerry Mallo, a Jos-based fabrication engineer produced a ventilator. Other inventors include Kaduna Poly( Plant to produce medical oxygen from air), Cadnetwork Enterprise(Rapid Trace, an app for contact tracing, physical distance enforcement, crowd control and self testing, National Biotechnology Development Institute( RNASwift extraction kit, which would expand our testing capacity and reduce cost by up to 500%); Diversay Solutions( Full body disinfection tunnel); Nigerian Defense Academy( Smart Disinfection Chambers), Nigerian Air Force( Emergency ventilators); Lagos State Government( an educational radio station), UNN(a contactless digital hand-cleaning machine that uses sensor to monitor body temperature, dispenses hand sanitizer, detergent and water); Glisten International Academy, Abuja( a robot that can interface between doctors and patients, as well as deliver drugs to patients) and the Nigerian Institute of Medical Research at Yaba(a molecular test kit). Lets I forget, I also ‘invented’ one small 250-page textbook: Project Writing, Presentation and Defense: A hands-on Approach. It was 100% invented during the Tripple Lock era.
By the way,12 Nigerian banks earned N133bn from e-payments in the first 9 months of 2020 because the banks were locked up and their customers were locked in and even when the doors were opened, many decided to stay safely away. That is also one of the dividends of Coro!Our scientists have proved that they are equal to the tasks, though I do not know the extent to which governments and our corporate giants are involved. However, I don’t want what happened to Biafran inventions to happen to these ones. In the spirit of providing solutions, Government should establish a clearing house to track all these inventions, get them refined, tested and up to the market, patronize them intentionally (not accidentally) and support further research in these areas. I don’t want Ministry of Health and Ministry of Science & Technology to fight over the ownership of these inventions. Our private organizations, including CACOVID should support these inventions as a CSR agenda while some should get involved as strategic investment University research outputs are funded and commercialized as has been shown with vaccines in which Oxford( AstraZeneca) and Yale (Pfizer)universities and many others have featured permanently. Our own Dr Ogbuagu of Yale is FULLY involved.
Human-faced robot
It is interesting that new global problem can be solved while old local problems are roaming free and festering. OOU, Ronu!
ReplyDeleteWow..thank you sir. always looking forward to read from your wealth of knowledge.
ReplyDeleteAdversity is the mother of inventions, that is why my people say " iya o je o, o lo gbon, ta ni tisa re?" which literally means: you have never suffered yet you claim to be smart /wise, who is your teacher?
ReplyDeleteI congratulate you sir for keeping the flag flying these 24 months. More power to your elbows!
I look forward to more educating, historical, entertaining, and inspiring shots from the Oracle this new year. Happy anniversary!
E. Taiwo Olatunji
Ph.D student
OOU, Ago Iwoye.
Beautiful piece. It has always been an interesting read. Congratulations to you sir on the anniversary. We pray for more grace as we continue to look forward to reading from you. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteWow 😊👏👏👏 Keep the good work going Sir
ReplyDelete