Three young scientists to represent South Africa in China

Three young learners from South African schools will travel to China to showcase research projects on agriculture, environmental sustainability and food safety at the 2025 Beijing Young Science Creation Competition.

Marlhuné Bezuidenhout from Hoërskool Secunda in Mpumalanga, Naftal Khoza from Ennerdale, and Khushi Lall from Tyger Valley College in Pretoria have been selected to represent South Africa at the 2025 Beijing Young Science Creation Competition in China. Their research addresses critical challenges in agriculture, environmental sustainability, and food safety, as announced by SABC News on March 20, 2026. The students qualified through the Eskom Expo for Young Scientists, which promotes such international opportunities. Eskom Expo Executive Director Parthy Chetty highlighted the benefits, stating: “It allows them to collaborate with other learners from other countries on common research but it also opens up new avenues to further their studies, further their research and these kind of collaborations is only possible through these science fest, so it does open doors for these learners.” This event provides a platform for global collaboration beyond local school or university systems in South Africa.

Relaterede artikler

14th Global Korea Awards ceremony honoring multicultural youth, with grand prize winner Selma Naciri on stage surrounded by diverse winners and officials.
Billede genereret af AI

14th global korea awards honor multicultural youth

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

The 14th Global Korea Awards, hosted by The Korea Times, celebrated multicultural youth on November 27, 2025. Grand prize winner Selma Naciri highlighted the event's focus on bridging cultures. Officials and judges emphasized an inclusive future for Korea's diverse younger generation.

An open letter published on International Day of Education urges South African scientists to actively engage with students to improve stagnant STEM marks, despite a record-high matric pass rate of 88%. The piece highlights declining maths and physics performance and calls for visibility and storytelling to inspire future innovators.

Rapporteret af AI

In the Masterclass Series under the Nurturing Future InnoTech Talent Project, seven leading national-level scientists shared cutting-edge technology and discoveries with 3,800 students from 16 schools and tertiary institutions over two weeks in September, plus a special forum at the Hong Kong Palace Museum. Topics included AI, spaceflight, archaeology, new energy, and ocean carbon science. The project is funded by the Institute of Philanthropy and The Hong Kong Jockey Club Charities Trust, organized by the China Soong Ching Ling Foundation with The Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups as strategic partner.

The Mangaung Metro education district in South Africa's Free State highlights how sports can shield children from social ills like drug abuse and gangsterism. District Director December Moloi emphasized nurturing learners' talents for potential careers in sports. This comes amid a donation of table tennis equipment to a local school.

Rapporteret af AI

A youth project tackling online gaming addiction and a sports-tech startup took top honors on Wednesday at the EGYPES 2026 Youth Impact Ceremony, hosted by Shell Egypt and the Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources. The event recognized winners from Shell’s NXplorers and Intilaaqah programs.

In an exclusive interview with Capital newspaper, China's Special Representative on African Affairs, Liu Xianfa, outlined the strengthening ties between China and Africa. President Xi Jinping sent his 14th consecutive congratulatory message to the African Union Summit, praising African unity and pledging deeper cooperation. China announced plans to extend zero-tariff treatment to 53 African countries starting May 2026.

Rapporteret af AI

The University of the Witwatersrand has opened a new research centre to transform speculation about Africa's underground treasures into solid data, potentially boosting exploration investments. Launched in November 2025, the African Research Centre for Ore Systems Science aims to bridge the gap between outdated estimates and actual mineral deposits. This initiative comes amid discussions at the 2026 Mining Indaba on revitalizing Africa's lagging exploration sector.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis