Aga Khan University Celebrates Student Innovation at Concluding Ceremony of President’s Challenge for Climate Solutions
The Aga Khan University (AKU) today hosted the closing ceremony of the 2024 edition of the AKU President’s Challenge for Climate Solutions, marking the culmination of a months-long competition that brought together student innovators from Pakistan, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania in a bid to tackle one of the world’s most pressing environmental issues: water.
Launched
in 2022, the President’s Challenge for Climate Solutions was born from AKU’s
conviction that students must not be bystanders in the fight against climate
change. This year’s theme – Every Drop Counts – inspired students to
develop practical, scalable ideas that address both water scarcity and excess,
as climate change increasingly disrupts global water systems.
“People
talk about the critical natural resources that the clean energy transition will
require,” said Dr Sulaiman Shahabuddin, AKU President and Vice Chancellor. “But
the most valuable and most urgently needed resource by far is human creativity
– the kind of creativity we are celebrating today. If our award winners are any
indication of what is to come, the Global South will enjoy its fair share of
future-defining innovation.”
The
winning entry, Dropwise Smart Irrigation, came from a team of students
in Tanzania who developed a solar-powered, automated irrigation system to
tackle water inefficiency in agriculture, where over 40% of irrigation water is
lost due to outdated practices. “It
wasn’t easy,” said one of the team members. “We juggled classes, proposals, and
setbacks with materials and many more. But we never gave up. Young people
aren’t just the future, we are the change happening now. One action, one
innovation, one drop at a time.”
The
first runners-up were from Kenya, whose project Pure Flow offers an
innovative, self-powered water purification and monitoring system designed to
tackle water pollution in rivers, lakes, dams, and oceans without the need for
expensive infrastructure.
The
second runners-up position was shared by two teams from Pakistan and Kenya. The
Pakistan team developed a Water Absorbent Mat and Filtration System
to conserve and recycle greywater from household drains, while the Kenya team
proposed Smart Aqua, an AI-powered, solar-driven precision irrigation
system that revolutionizes water management in agriculture.
In
addition to the University competition, high school students in Karachi took
part in a parallel competition, with innovative student ideas presented by 24
schools.
“AKU
as an institution is taking bold steps to address climate change,” said Miriam
Kugele, Director at AKU’s Environmental Office. “This includes taking
responsibility and reducing our emissions, working with partners and
incentivising suppliers to accelerate action, and working with our entire
university community to transform our daily habits. Climate change requires
from us both long-term thinking and pragmatic action today.”
Over
the past three years, the President’s Challenge has inspired hundreds of
students across AKU campuses to think boldly and act decisively on climate.
With creativity, passion and determination, these young changemakers are
proving that every drop – and every idea – counts.