The South African National Roads Agency (Sanral) has made a R30-million endowment to Stellenbosch University to continue to fund the Sanral Chair in Pavement Engineering at the university.
Among its defining features is its cooperation with international institutions of higher learning in Rwanda, Brazil, China, the Netherlands, Italy and the USA, resulting in academic exchanges, collaborative research and the transfer of knowledge.
Locally it works closely with the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), the South African Bitumen Association (Sabita) as well as other South African Institutions of Higher Learning and continues to contribute to the development of industry guidelines. The road agency’s educational reach goes even further, explains Van der Walt. It launched a programme in 2008 offering to date, scholarships to 192 school learners and bursaries to 108 students at eight of South Africa’s leading universities. It also provides internships to engineering students to facilitate the attainment of their degrees and provide mentorship support to bursary holders with assistance on practical projects, if required, during their studies. This enables Sanral to meet the broadening skills gap within the pavement engineering field. Stellenbosch University’s Prof Kim Jenkins, incumbent of the Sanral Chair, comments that the postgraduate programme has gone from strength to strength. “Every year, between 10 and 15 new postgraduate students are registered, bringing the total number of current students to between 35 and 45 students. Seven doctoral and 51 Master’s degrees have been awarded under the study leadership of the Chair. Two-thirds of students come from historically-disadvantaged communities, reflecting both Sanral’s and the institution’s commitment to diversity.” Prof Jenkins serves regularly as a member of several international scientific committees and participates in international conferences, having published widely in academic journals and industry-related publications. He also chairs an international committee on recycling of road building materials linked to sustainable practice. At tertiary level, Sanral also cooperates with the University of the Witwatersrand in supporting about 200 academically talented learners from socio-economically disadvantaged backgrounds as well as the Chair of Transport Planning at the University of Cape Town. The agency also funds the Maths and Science Chair at the University of Free State. “True, Sanral build roads – but people are top of our priorities,” Van der Walt concludes.