A University of Guyana (UG) graduate, Lisa Dublin, along with Dr Dawn Fox, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Chemistry, have earned themselves the distinction of being the winners of the inaugural 2018-2019 Guyana Innovation Prize.
The total prize is US$10,000 and it will be presented to the winners at the Diaspora/Entrepreneurship conference in July.
According to a UG release, The Innovation Prize is not a research grant, but instead, provides pre-seed funding to commercially viable research in agro-processing and technology undertaken by students, alumni, and faculty of the University of Guyana.
The award sees promising research ideas being selected based on a competitive application process. Selected Innovation Prize Venture Fellows are then paired with mentors, both in and outside of Guyana, over a 12-month period, to help develop business plans and revenue models for commercially viable, scalable businesses.
The Prize is an initiative of the Guyana Economic Development Trust (GEDT) which is a US-based independent philanthropic organisation that incubates and supports start-up enterprises to boost the private sector of Guyana. The Trust’s aim is to advance the private sector and economy of Guyana by supporting innovative ideas that reflect the future of science and technology. The GEDT also partners with the Guyana Marketing Corporation to provide Innovation Prize Fellows with technical support, including market analysis, product-market fit, supplier sourcing and package design. This helps move the product idea from the laboratory to the shelves, homes and offices.
The winning team’s project is based on using processed coconut as a low-cost water filtration solution. The focus of the project is to optimise the production of granular coconut-shell activated carbon to produce a low-cost activated carbon that is effective in improving water quality.
According to Oslene Carrington, Chief Executive Officer of the GEDT, “through the fund, the Diaspora has an opportunity to give back to our society using a platform that is not connected to anything except a desire to see really great things happen.”. She emphasised that it is “… a desire to empower our university, a desire to empower our young people, and a desire to empower our intellectuals to develop new ways of doing things, things that will ultimately have our country thriving and successful”.
UG Vice-Chancellor Professor Ivelaw Griffith, lauded the initiative: “Major kudos to Ms Carrington and the Guyana Economic Development Trust for this powerful initiative, which is a major way to celebrate and incentivise Entrepreneurship and Innovation. Let me also extend congratulations to the winners – Senior Lecturer Dr Dawn Fox and alumna Lisa Dublin, who are innovation front runners. Professor Griffith further stated, “Ms Carrington approached me with the idea last year as a way to support Project Renaissance’s emphasis on entrepreneurship and innovation and to give back to her native land. The splendid work she and her team have done in the diaspora and in Guyana in bringing the idea to fruition is itself a powerful example of innovation. I deeply appreciate it.” The Vice-Chancellor also thanked the individuals at UG who were part of the collaboration that translated the idea into reality.
Dublin graduated from the University in 2017 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Chemistry, and is currently employed as a Laboratory Analyst in the Environmental Department of Guyana Goldfields. In 2017, she presented her undergraduate research project at the McNair’s Scholar’s Conference for Undergraduate Research in Florida. Her project focussed on developing cost-effective systems for water treatment using natural waste materials. She also participated in the Undergraduate Research Conference at UG in 2017 and 2018.
Dr Fox is also a graduate of the University of Guyana. Her overarching research interest is in converting local materials, especially waste materials, into value-added materials to solve environmental problems. She has extensive experience in characterising sorbents with microscopy and spectroscopy, water and wastewater treatment, and water quality analysis. In 2016, she co-founded a group called Women in Science & Engineering (WiSE), to support, empower and advocate for girls and women to pursue and flourish in STEM careers. In 2018 she became the first Guyanese to be awarded the Organisation for Women in Science for the Developing World – Elsevier Foundation Early Career Award for scholarship and research in the Physical Sciences.
The University disclosed that the duo were determined the winners ahead of four other University of Guyana graduates. The other applicants were: Rebecca Harris (Bachelor of Science in Chemistry minor in Biology) who endeavours to formulate a more natural, inexpensive product that can be used to fight against various fungal infections; Tandika Harry (Bachelor of Science in Agriculture), exploring the application of beeswax and cassava starch to extend the postharvest life of mangoes; Juanelle Marks (Bachelor of Science in Computer Science), with a focus on Computerized Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CCBT): Towards Unlearning Learned Helplessness and Shavon Sharif (Bachelor of Science in Agriculture and Forestry), who intends to explore the use of vinasse (waste) as an organic fertiliser on crops.