Akinsanmi Wins Schlumberger Foundation Award
Carnegie Mellon University's Eyiwunmi Akinsanmi has received a prestigious Fellowship award from the Schlumberger Foundation.
Akinsanmi,
25, who is studying for a Ph.D. in the Department of Engineering and Public
Policy (EPP), has become a fellow of the Faculty for the Future and
was awarded
a grant of up to $50,000 for the next three years for developing tools
to solve
the energy and development needs of Sub-Saharan Africa.
"I
am both excited and honored to receive this award. It means I get to
focus my
research on developing countries like I've always wanted," said
Akinsanmi,
whose Nigerian mother has been her greatest inspiration. Her mother
taught
English at an all-girl public school in Lagos, Nigeria where Akinsanmi
and her
three sisters studied.
Akinsanmi
said her research project ultimately will take her back to Nigeria where
she
wants to help solve the lighting problems currently suffered by millions
of
people with intermittent access to the electric grid. "I can still
remember
studying by a kerosene lantern and all the challenges that presented,"
she
said. "I also hope through my Ph.D. to better understand opportunities
for
reviving the local manufacturing industry in Nigeria and reducing our
nation's
economic dependence on profits from oil."
"Eyiwunmi
is a star student with a deep passion to make change in Africa," said
Erica
Fuchs, an assistant professor in EPP at Carnegie Mellon. "The expertise
in
photonics, manufacturing and the social sciences that Eyiwunmi is
building into
her Ph.D. will give her a powerful toolkit with which to make change."
"Carnegie
Mellon's unique interdisciplinary atmosphere is the perfect place for me
to
explore these research thrusts, and the new fellowship grant is a great
resource to help me meet my goals," said Akinsanmi, co-founder of
Nigerians-for-Change, a non-profit foundation that focuses on providing
educational opportunities for underprivileged children.
The
Schlumberger Foundation for the Future fellowships are awarded to women
academics in science and engineering from developing and emerging
countries to
encourage more young women to pursue scientific disciplines. Launched by
the
Schlumberger foundation in 2004, Faculty for the Future has grown to
become a
community of 142 women from 43 countries.