Skip to content. Skip to navigation

ICTP Portal

Sections
You are here: Home words Newsletter backissues News 103 News from ICTP 103 - Commentary
Personal tools
Document Actions

News from ICTP 103 - Commentary

commentary

 

ICTP's Aeronomy and Radiopropagation Laboratory has given a face-lift to an old technology, helping to advance the communication revolution in Nigeria.

 

Radio Ahead

 

In our fast-paced electronic world, technologies with an 18-month shelf-life are often considered aging equipment--just one step from a museum showcase or even the dustbin.
Yet, sometimes even half-century-old communication technologies can help power today's communication revolution.
That's exactly what's happened in Nigeria, where radiopropagation technologies, the same technologies that first brought news and music to our homes more than 75 years ago, have helped to usher in the use of email and the internet--all with the assistance of ICTP's Aeronomy and Radiopropagation Laboratory that launched the effort with the ICTP Scientific Computing Section.
"Satellite technologies require an infrastructure beyond the resources of countries like Nigeria and other developing countries," explains Sandro Radicella, head of the Laboratory. "And while cable is more manageable, it is still expensive. Moreover, once cable fibre is put into the ground, it's not only difficult to maintain but virtually impossible to replace without severe disruptions and costs--distinct liabilities when software technologies, system applications, and individual and institutional demand are changing so rapidly."
That's where the propagation of radio waves and equipment that can receive and transmit these waves comes into play. And that's why ICTP's Aeronomy and Radiopropagation Laboratory has been aggressively pursuing this strategy for the past several years.
"ICTP research and training activities in this field actually began in 1989," explains Radicella. "At the time, we provided research and training solely for such conventional uses as voice transmission and reception."
Radicella adds that "We began to shift gears--or, should I say, dials--in the late 1990s when we realised that radiopropagation technologies held enormous potential to jump-start the use of email and the internet in the developing world. We thought that our embrace of radiopropagation technologies could help address some of the difficult problems of access that were contributing to the North-South digital divide."
For Radicella and his colleagues, turning to radio waves as a primary technology for advancing the communications revolution was like taking an old coat out of your closet and matching it with a new scarf to give the coat renewed style and flair.
With the help of ICTP Associates Emmanuel Efiong Ekuwem and Gabriel Olalere Ajayi, the Centre's Aeronomy and Radiopropagation Laboratory conducted an extensive survey of universities and research institutes in Nigeria to determine which would be the best candidate to test their strategy.
The choice for the initial effort was Obafemi Awolowo University in Ile-Ife, Nigeria, largely because it already had a group of faculty members who had participated in the Centre's radiopropagation activities and thus enjoyed the prerequisite training, skills and contacts to assume local responsibility for this effort.
The impact proved both immediate and dramatic. The pilot project that began in Obafemi Awolowo University soon spread throughout Nigeria's teaching and research community. Today, the system reaches literally thousands of scientists and scholars. More recently, it has also helped farmers, meteorologists and medical practitioners link electronically to the broad flow of data and information now passing through the nation's universities and research institutes.
"Indeed the ultimate importance of this initiative," notes Ekuwem, who participated in the Centre's earliest workshops on radiopropagation for electronic communications, "lies not just with the ability of university students and faculty to communicate quickly and efficiently with one another. Rather, the system's true and lasting value lies with the global connections that students and faculty now have with like-minded associates and colleagues via the internet."

Ekuwem

Emmanuel Efiong Ekuwem


Ekuwem has tapped this interest by establishing his own radiotechnology and application business--Teledom International--located in Ile-Ife. The business has become the largest and most profitable of its kind in Nigeria.
Ekuwem's personal achievement has enabled him to illustrate another measure of the programme's success by contributing US$3000 to the ICTP School on Radio Use for Information and Communication Technology that took place this February in Trieste. This marks the first time that a private firm has provided direct financial assistance to an Aeronomy and Radiopropagation Laboratory activity. In fact, it is one of the few times that ICTP has received a donation from a private company in the developing world.
"Ekuwem's contribution," says Radicella, "not only provides a welcomed boost to our activities' budget but also serves as a valuable signal that what we are doing has helped improve the lives of students and researchers throughout Nigeria--both in intangible and tangible ways."

For additional information about ICTP's Aeronomy and Radiopropagation Laboratory, please contact rsandro@ictp.trieste.it or fax +39 040 224604.

Back to Contentsbackarrow forwardarrowForward to Features

Home


Powered by Plone This site conforms to the following standards: