Recently updated on April 9th, 2019 at 07:07 pm
AMINT Aerial Industries, has been shortlisted for the Airbus Bizlab global aerospace accelerator program in Hamburg, Germany.
Airbus BizLab is a global platform where start-ups selected from around the world work together to tackle specific humanitarian challenges. The program includes funding to cover expenses and the option of investment into the startup.
The six months program provides start-ups access to Airbus business and technical coaches, experts and mentors. Each program also includes a demo day with Airbus decision makers, venture capitalists, and industry partners.
AMINT Aerial Industries founder, Ndubusi Arinze Eze noted that the company’s ambitions were in line with achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG2) of the United Nations which include:
“Ending hunger, achieving food security and improved nutrition and promoting sustainable agriculture.
Not only do we have aerial robot that potentially could revolutionise arable farming on earth, with support from an organisation like Airbus through its Aerospace Accelerator Program, this technology can advance improvements in other industrial sectors from mining, exploration to the aviation industry itself.
The team at AMINT Aerial Industries hopes through this six months acceleration program, it can get to prototyping its first model for the African market. With the expert support from the structure, flight physics, performance and aerodynamic departments and the entire UAV team at Airbus Hamburg, the preliminary testing of the first specimen is anticipated in the second quarter of 2018.
The Airbus Aerospace Accelerator Program is an amazing opportunity for us, and will give us access to a world leading manufacturer, along with industry partners.”
AMINT Aerial Industries was founded in 2014 in Lagos, Nigeria. The company secured a provisional patent with the US Patent and Trademark Office for industrial drone they hope would help revolutionise arable farming in Africa and most other emerging economies struggling with undernourished populations.
The company’s first project, Agro-drone is currently in design and development stage.
Ndubusi Arinze Eze further noted that AMINT Aerial Industries have been working with smallholder farmers in states such as Lagos, Anambra, and Enugu. There have also been foreign partnerships in countries like Senegal and Peru, South America to grow ancillary revenue, and to improve their crop yields using aerial robots.