Research IS national security: Calling All African Nations: We dont lack innovation. We lack the will to keep it.

There is a story Africa is told about itself. It goes like this: we do not invent. We do not create. We consume what others build, adopt what others design, import what others manufacture. Our role is to provide raw materials and wait for technology to arrive from elsewhere.

This story is convenient—for those who benefit from it.

Because the truth is the opposite. Africa does not lack innovation. What we lack is the will to keep it.

The machine Nigeria built and forgot

In 2021, Nigeria’s Raw Materials Research and Development Council (RMRDC) did something remarkable. They developed and patented an automated rapier weaving machine for commercial Aso‑oke production. This was not a small achievement. The machine worked. It produced large quantities of fabric with more consistent results than handwoven Aso‑oke. The technical breakthrough was significant: they modified the conventional rapier head from single weft insertion to multiple weft insertions in a single shed. The RMRDC stated the project would “catalyse the establishment of automated weaving loom manufacturing industries in Nigeria with attendant huge investment and employment opportunities.”

That was 2021.

Today, there is no evidence the machine was commercialized. No evidence it was licensed to manufacturers. No evidence it was scaled. The patent exists. The prototype exists. But where are the Nigerian-made automated looms? Where are the jobs? Where is the industry that was supposed to follow?

This is not a failure of invention. It is a failure of will.

The mycelium Ghana showed the world

In Ghana, Zarouk Imoro developed something that should have made headlines across the continent. An environmental technologist, he created “Myco-Substitutes”—a system that uses fungi to treat faecal waste and produce mycelial thread as an alternative to cotton or synthetic thread, and fungal mycelia leather as an alternative to animal hide. The process is elegant: bacteriophages remove bacteria from faecal sludge; fungi feed on the remaining waste; toilet paper in the sludge acts as a carbon source for mycelial growth. Ten litres of sludge produces 500 grams of mycelia.

Imoro won the “One to Watch” award at the Royal Academy of Engineering’s Africa Prize. International attention followed.

But here is the question that no award can answer: has the innovation been patented? Not in Ghana, as far as the public record shows. Not internationally. The technology is visible, recognized, celebrated—and legally exposed. Anyone, anywhere, can replicate it, refine it, and patent it elsewhere. The knowledge may leave Ghana not because it was stolen, but because it was never protected.

This is not a failure of creativity. It is a failure of protection.

The pattern we refuse to name

These two cases—Nigeria’s abandoned loom, Ghana’s exposed mycelium—are not isolated. They are symptoms of a continent-wide pattern.

We fund research without funding scale-up. We celebrate innovation without securing ownership. We send students abroad on scholarships with no IP agreements, watch them develop patents in foreign institutions, and tell ourselves this is simply how the world works.

But it is not how the world works. It is how the world works for us.

Because other nations do not behave this way. Brazil, where Dr. Abdulrazak Ibrahim helped develop and patent a whitefly control technology, retained that patent because Brazilian public funding and infrastructure made it possible. The technology was developed on Brazilian soil, with Brazilian money, under Brazilian law. That is how research becomes national security.

Where is the African EMBRAPA? Where are the African research institutions with the capacity to host PhD students so they do not have to leave to access other facilities? Where are the patent offices funded to help innovators file claims? Where are the industrial policies that take a proven prototype and turn it into a factory?

We have the talent. We have the ideas. We have the prototypes. What we do not have is the system that turns invention into wealth.

The real deficit

The deficit is not in African minds. It is in African institutions.

Research without ownership is extraction. Innovation without industrialization is loss. Knowledge without protection is vulnerability. We are not losing because we cannot create. We are losing because we do not demand retention.

This is not a technical problem. It is a political one.

Governments fund roads, armies, and ports as infrastructure of sovereignty. Research is the same. A nation that does not fund its own research cannot set its own agenda. It cannot protect its own resources. It cannot develop its own industries. It cannot retain its own talent.

When we celebrate innovation that leaves, when we fund research without scale-up, when we send students abroad with no IP agreements, we are not supporting development. We are subsidizing extraction.

Where this leads

This series is not about why Africa lacks innovation. It is about why we allow our innovations to leave. It is about the systems—or absence of systems—that turn our knowledge into someone else’s asset.

In the next parts, we will ask harder questions: Who really owns what Africa creates? Why do we buy African expertise but not African technology? How did African textile knowledge build industries we do not own? And finally, what must governments do to build, protect, and retain what is ours.

But the first step is to stop telling ourselves the story that we do not invent. We do. We always have. The question is whether we will finally decide to keep what we make.


References

· Federal Ministry of Science and Technology, Nigeria. Raw Materials Research and Development Council (RMRDC) Automated Rapier Weaving Machine Project Report. Abuja: RMRDC, 2021.
· Imoro, Zarouk. “Myco-Substitutes: Fungal-Based Textile Alternatives.” Royal Academy of Engineering Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation, 2024.
· Ibrahim, Abdulrazak. “RNA Interference Technology for Whitefly Control.” EMBRAPA, Brazil. Patent filed 2018.
· Science Granting Councils Initiative. Policy Brief: Strengthening Science Granting Councils in Sub-Saharan Africa. 2025.
· African Union. Science, Technology and Innovation Strategy for Africa (STISA-2024). Addis Ababa: African Union, 2014

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