General Electric (GE) and the Africa Leadership University (ALU) have announced the kick-off of the 3rd cohort of the Africa Industrial Internet Programme (AIIP) which is aimed at equipping young Africans with skills for the fourth industrial revolution.
General Electric and Africa Leadership University have enrolled 35 students from 8 countries across Africa, drawn from Oil & gas, transportation, power, energy, manufacturing, healthcare, telecoms and aviation industries. Over the last two years, the rigorous training programme has graduated 64 students, of which 50 were fully sponsored by GE from a scholarship fund totalling US Dollars 500,000.
GE will give 10 full scholarships for
the current cohort.
Launched in 2018, the programme has empowered participants with essential skills for building applications for the Industrial Internet, which enables machine-to-machine communication that results in systems that can collect, analyze, and deliver data in real-time.
Commenting on the Programme, Farid Fezoua, President & CEO for
GE Africa said, “As a digital industrial company, it’s exciting to see how over the last two years the AIIP has developed an ecosystem of digital
engineers that utilise data science as an enabler for their work across industries, developing solutions for the most pressing
challenges. Our partnership with ALU for the AIIP is a testament of our
commitment to develop the next generation of leaders that will drive solutions
made in Africa for Africa in this transformative digital age.”
“African Leadership Group is thrilled to be partnering with GE to build a new generation of digital leaders for Africa” said Fred Swaniker, Founder of African Leadership Group, which includes African Leadership Academy, African Leadership University, and ALX. “We share GE’s passion for data, and what it can bring to the African continent and the world. By leveraging the power of data, today’s engineers can significantly improve the performance of high-tech industrial machinery and processes, thereby increasing the bottom line for companies. “
The Africa Industrial Internet Programme enables mid-career engineers to build new skills in data analytics, data science, data engineering and data visualization.
In
2019 five female candidates from Kenya, South Africa and Nigeria received the
Jay Ireland Africa Rising Scholarship for women in tech in honor of GE Africa’s
former CEO, Jay Ireland.
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