MoU to stimulate aeronautical cooperation between SA and Algeria

2nd December 2014 By: Keith Campbell - Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

South Africa’s Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) and Algeria’s University of Blida have agreed to set up a Joint Centre of Excellence (JCoE) for aeronautics research. The agreement takes the form of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed at the recent International Exhibition of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) in the North African country.

The South African Department of Science and Technology (DST) and the Algerian Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research (MHESR) are facilitating the JCoE. The initiative will broaden the bilateral science and technology cooperation agreement between the two countries (an objective of the DST) and strengthen Algeria in the sphere of aeronautics (desired by the MHESR).

“Outside of South Africa, there are really no other significant aeronautics research capabilities and facilities in Africa,” noted CSIR Defence, Peace, Safety and Security unit acting Executive Director Major-General (South African Air Force, retired) Des Barker. “Algeria’s equivalent Science and Technology Department understands the requirement for Africa to take ownership of its aeronautics research requirements and are delighted to close the African aeronautics research chasm through collaboration with South Africa.”

Areas of possible cooperation include (in alphabetical order) aeroelasticity, aero acoustics, aircraft structures, avionics and ground systems, computational methods, flow control, gas turbines, hypersonic flow, optronics, radar, space technologies, stores integration, UAV technologies and wind tunnels. The JCoE will incorporate knowledge transfer, by means of staff exchanges, joint seminars and workshops, postgraduate student programmes (including co-supervision of postgraduate students resulting in joint publications) and joint development programmes.

The MoU was signed at the end of the recent three day exhibition, held as part of the 60th anniversary celebrations of the start of the Algerian Revolution (on November 1, 1954). The exhibition was under the patronage of the President of Algeria and facilitated by the country’s Director General of Scientific Research and Technological Development.

In addition to Algerian universities and other institutions and agencies (including the National Defence Ministry), the exhibition was attended by scientific and research institutions and universities from Brazil, France, Germany, Russia, Spain, Tunisia and the UK as well as South Africa. Barker gave the keynote address at the event and the CSIR also made a number of other presentations, as well as undertaking a flight demonstration of its Indiza mini-UAV.