Climate change

The Honoris network of institutions is coming up with innovative ways to create positive impact for the environment while also making a valuable impact in their communities.

NILE University Of Nigeria, Solar installation

Starsight Energy, the leading African Commercial and Industrial solar power provider, completed an 876-kWp solar installation for the Nile University of Nigeria campus in Abuja. This project will deliver reliable clean energy to power the university’s buildings for more than two decades, ensuring the university has the infrastructure needed to continue to serve Nigeria’s higher-education students.

Nile University and Starsight’s solution comprises of two solar installations that allow for flexible switching from grid power for maximum efficiency. These systems are projected to prevent over 14,888 tons of CO2 emissions over the project’s lifetime.
It is through projects such as this that the Honoris network meets its goals of providing world class education in institutions that do their part to make a positive impact in society through their actions.

MANCOSA: The Infinity Green Legacy Garden project

In August 2020, MANCOSA won the first South African Virtual Design Thinking Challenge, hosted by Impact Week which is a non-profit program that promotes innovation and entrepreneurship skill progression in developing and emerging economies as a foundation for sustainable growth by establishing sustainable business models using Design Thinking.

Following research into the challenges faced by the communities in South Africa amidst COVID-19, the MANCOSA team proposed a solution of a sustainable feeding program whereby educators, mothers and pupils would create urban agricultural initiatives on school premises to provide nutritious meals. Surplus produce may be sold, traded or bartered.

Université Centrale: Plant trees

UNIVERSITÉ CENTRALE of Tunisia has launched the operation “Plant trees: One student = one tree”.
Through this action, UNIVERSITÉ CENTRALE marks its desire to develop the intrinsic qualities of its students to make them the leaders of tomorrow, able to build a better Tunisia in all fields and on all levels.
This ecological action is part of Honoris’ Corporate Social Responsibility strategy and involves students from the group’s various schools to instill in them societal values, respect for the environment, and responsibility for the environmental legacy that we must leave to future generations.

The mission of the UNIVERSITÉ CENTRALE is to make students active members of society, defenders of ecology and Tunisian flora while developing their sense of citizenship.
Each student present has planted a tree and it now bears his name. In addition to the care they will have to give to their trees, students will organize periodic maintenance actions in order to preserve and perpetuate this green space.

EAC Morocco: More than a simple link

The Casablanca School of Architecture and Landscape (EAC), the Association de l’Espace Mohamed Abdou (AEMA) and the French Institute of Casablanca (IFC) have unveiled the winners of the “More than one simple link ”, the objective of which is to re-establish the historic link between the Palmier district and the Parc de la Ligue Arabe.

“This is a project which aims to promote the principle of a pedestrian bridge spanning Boulevard Zerktouni which is also a new way of crossing offering an elegant transition between Square Mohamed Abdou and Parc de la Ligue Arabic”, said a joint statement from the EAC and IFC.
Participants were invited to propose a crossing over the boulevard, promoting urban quality and freedom of movement for pedestrians and cyclists, which is “more than a simple link”. In response to this call for ideas, 8 professional projects and 16 student projects were received.

EMSI and MUNDIAPOLIS UNIVERSITY: Renewable Energy

In the global efforts to fight climate change and develop smart cities, the ECOLE MAROCAINE DES SCIENCES DE L’INGENIEUR (EMSI) in Morocco, has focused interventions on finding alternate methods for renewable energy.

The University was inspired to design a smart house that is self-sufficient, modular, well insulated and cost effective. The brief caters for African and Moroccan conditions with a goal to be self-sufficient in terms of power generation and to ease the financial burden on consumers energy costs. Mundiapolis designed a house that can be built in any African country with good potential for solar energy. The research is perfectly suited to the goals of sustainable development. There are two objectives: Smart Cities (future buildings, the use of renewable energy) and Health (Hospital Management).