How we can stop Africas scientific brain drain Kevin Njabo

So many of us who care
about sustainable development

and the livelihood of local people

do so for deeply personal reasons.

I grew up in Cameroon,

a country of enchanting beauty
and rich biodiversity,

but plagued by poor governance,
environmental destruction, and poverty.

As a child, like we see with most children
in sub-Saharan Africa today,

I regularly suffered from malaria.

To this day, more than one million people
die from malaria every year,

mostly children under the age of five,

with 90 percent occurring
in sub-Saharan Africa.

When I was 18, I left Cameroon

in search of better
educational opportunities.

At the time, there was
just one university in Cameroon,

but Nigeria next door
offered some opportunities

for Cameroonians of English extraction
to be trained in various fields.

So I moved there,

but practicing my trade,

upon graduation
as an ecologist in Nigeria,

was an even bigger challenge.

So I left the continent

when I was offered a scholarship
to Boston University for my PhD.

It is disheartening to see that,

with all our challenges,

with all the talents,

with all the skills we have
in Africa as a continent,

we tend to solve our problems

by parachuting in experts
from the West for short stays,

exporting the best
and brightest out of Africa,

and treating Africa as a continent
in perpetual need of handouts.

After my training at Boston University,

I joined a research team

at the University of California’s

Institute of the Environment
and Sustainability

because of its reputation
for groundbreaking research

and the development
of policies and programs

that save the lives
of millions of people the world over,

including in the developing world.

And it has been shown

that for every skilled African
that returns home,

nine new jobs are created
in the formal and informal sectors.

So as part of our program, therefore,
to build a sustainable Africa together,

we are leading a multi-initiative
to develop the Congo Basin Institute,

a permanent base

where Africans can work in partnership
with international researchers,

but working out their own solutions
to their own problems.

We are using our interdisciplinary
approach to show how universities,

NGOs and private business

can partner in international development.

So instead of parachuting in experts
from the West for short stays,

we are building a permanent
presence in Africa,

a one-stop shop for logistics, housing

and development of collaborative projects

between Africans
and international researchers.

So this has allowed students like Michel

to receive high-quality
training in Africa.

Michel is currently working in our labs

to investigate the effects
of climate change on insects, for his PhD,

and has already secured
his post-doctorate fellowship

that will enable him
to stay on the continent.

Also through our local help program,

Dr. Gbenga Abiodun,
a young Nigerian scientist,

can work as a post-doctoral fellow

with the Foundation
for Professional Development

in the University of Western Cape
in South Africa

and the University of California
at the same time,

investigating the effects
of climate variability and change

on malaria transmission in Africa.

Indeed, Gbenga is currently
developing models

that will be used
as an early warning system

to predict malaria transmission in Africa.

So rather than exporting
our best and brightest out of Africa,

we are nurturing and supporting
local talent in Africa.

For example, like me,

Dr. Eric Fokam was trained in the US.

He returned home to Cameroon,
but couldn’t secure the necessary grants,

and he found it incredibly challenging

to practice and learn
the science he knew he could.

So when I met Eric,

he was on the verge
of returning to the US.

But we convinced him
to start collaborating

with the Congo Basin Institute.

Today, his lab in Buea
has over half a dozen collaborative grants

with researchers from the US and Europe

supporting 14 graduate students,
nine of them women,

all carrying out groundbreaking research

understanding biodiversity
under climate change,

human health and nutrition.

(Applause)

So rather than buy into the ideas
of Africa taking handouts,

we are using our
interdisciplinary approach

to empower Africans
to find their own solutions.

Right now, we are working
with local communities and students,

a US entrepreneur,

scientists from the US and Africa

to find a way to sustainably grow ebony,
the iconic African hardwood.

Ebonies, like most African hardwood,
are exploited for timber,

but we know very little
about their ecology,

what disperses them,

how they survive in our forest
80 to 200 years.

This is Arvin,

a young PhD student working in our labs,

conducting what is turning out to be
some cutting-edge tissue culture work.

Arvin is holding in her hands

the first ebony tree that was produced
entirely from tissues.

This is unique in Africa.

We can now show that you can
produce African timber

from different plant tissues –

leaves, stems, roots –

in addition from generating
them from seeds,

which is a very difficult task.

(Applause)

So other students will take
the varieties of ebony

which Arvin identifies in our lab,

graft them to produce saplings,

and work with local communities
to co-produce ebony

with local fruit tree species
in their various farms

using our own tree farm approach,

whereby we invite all the farmers

to choose their own tree species
they want in their farms.

So in addition to the ebony,

the species which the farmers
choose themselves

will be produced
using our modern techniques

and incorporated into
their land-use systems,

so that they start benefiting
from these products

while waiting for the ebony to mature.

Today we are planting
15,000 ebony trees in Cameroon,

and for the first time,

ebony won’t be harvested
from the middle of a pristine forest.

This is the model
for our African hardwoods,

and we are extending this
to include sapele and bubinga,

other highly prized hardwoods.

So if these examples existed
when I was 18,

I would never have left,

but because of initiatives
by the Congo Basin Institute,

I am coming back,

but I’m not coming back alone.

I’m bringing with me Western scientists,

entrepreneurs and students,

the best science from the best
universities in the world,

to work and to live in Africa.

But we all need to scale up this local,
powerful and empowering approach.

So far we have half a dozen
universities and NGOs as partners.

We are planning to build

a green facility that will expand
on our existing laboratory space

and add more housing
and conference facilities

to promote a long-term
disciplinary approach.

I want it to offer more opportunities
to young African scholars,

and would scale it up by leveraging

the International Institute
of Tropical Agriculture’s existing network

of 17 research stations
across sub-Saharan Africa.

The tables are starting to turn …

and I hope they keep turning,

to reach several African nations

like Côte d’Ivoire, Tanzania and Senegal,

among the top fastest growing economies

that can attract several opportunities
for private-sector investment.

We want to give more opportunities
to African scholars,

and I long to see a day

when the most intelligent Africans
will stay on this continent

and receive high-quality education

through initiatives
like the Congo Basin Institute,

and when that happens,

Africa will be on the way
to solving Africa’s problems.

And in 50 years, I hope
someone will be giving a TED Talk

on how to stop the brain drain
of Westerners leaving your homes

to work and live in Africa.

(Applause)

Thank you.

(Applause)