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4 the state of science in south africa
C H E M I S T R Y
Industrial Research (CSIR) and some of the subsequently the National Institute for
country’s outstanding research emanated Metallurgy (NIM)) and the Nuclear Energy
from it. Equally important, the laboratory Corporation of South Africa (Necsa) (previ-
was a nursery for university academics, and ously the Atomic Energy Board (AEB)). The
many university professors, most of them research carried out by Mintek is, not sur-
now retired, started their careers at the prisingly, very focused and in line with the
NCRL. Similar to the universities, the CSIR mandate of the organisation; the research
underwent a radical rationalisation process has a more developmental and less fun-
in the late 1980s brought about by financial damental bias, but all the same some out-
constraints that forced it to increase its in- standing achievements have been made.
come from the private sector and to bring The focus of the research programme at
it closer to meeting the developmental and Necsa is biased towards physics and engi-
societal needs of the country. This necessi- neering, but does include some work on
tated a paradigm shift from a ‘blue skies’ ap- radiochemistry and fluorine and uranium
proach to research to one of relevance, and chemistry.
one in which the CSIR needed to play an
integrated role in the national science and Many industrial organisations in South Af-
technology strategy. This structural change rica employ chemists but purely in a qual-
resulted in the formation of totally new di- ity-control capacity. Probably the only
visions, such as Processing and Chemical exceptions to this have been AECI (previ-
Manufacturing Technology and Food Sci- ously African Explosives and Chemical In-
ence and Technology within the CSIR and dustries), Sentrachem and Sasol. Both AECI
the effective closure of the national labo- and Sentrachem have ceased their research
ratories such as the NCRL and the National operations, however, the former as a conse-
Physics Research Laboratory (NPRL). Clearly quence of major financial constraints and
this structural change had a major impact the latter as a consequence of the company
on the fundamental research output of this being taken over by Dow Chemicals. Sasol
country. However, recent policy shifts re- has gradually increased its research output,
sulting from the ‘Beyond 60’
2
vision at the and today is a major employer of research
CSIR have been accompanied by a new ap- chemists. A more detailed account of its
proach, in which research programmes re- contribution to South African science is
main relevant but have again become more provided below.
fundamental in nature.
Until relatively recently, technikons had
Two other statutory bodies which employ essentially no, or a very limited, research
research chemists are Mintek (previously ethos. The National Research Foundation
the Council for Mining Technology and (NRF) has addressed this situation by in-
2
The Beyond 60 vision aims to strengthen and transform the CSIR’s S&T base so as to refocus on scientific research as the core of
the organisation.
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