African Fusion July 2022

SAIW advances Ethiopian WTTC training

SAIW helps advance welder training in Ethiopia

The SAIW has entered into an agreement with the Welding Training and Technology Centre (WTTC) in Ethiopia to help advance the welding skills across all nine provinces of the country. Herman Potgieter reports.

E thiopia’s Welding Training and Tech- nology Centre (WTTC), which used to be called the Centre of Excellence for Engineering (CEE), was established by the Ministry of Capacity Building (MoCB) in Ethiopia to overcome welding-related productivity, quality and competitiveness problems in the manufacturing sector. It was set up to service the national need for skills in the metalworking, manufacturing and construction fields. “For the past few years, Ethiopia, with assistance from SAIW, has been conducting welding training and certification through its TVET centres, applying IIW’s welder training guidelines on SMAW, GMAW, GTAW and oxy-fuel welding. The Centre is current- ly working towards final IIW accreditation as an Approved Training Body (ATB) for the delivery of these courses,” SAIW’s Herman Potgieter tells African Fusion. Appointed by the International Institute of Welding (IIW) as an Authorised Nomi- nated Body (ANB), SAIW Certification is able to approve training organisations to

present IIW courses, conduct examinations and issue IIW diplomas. “We are playing two key roles in helping to advance the training standards of the WTTC. First, we are helping to train the personnel who will run the centre. Second, which was the key reason for my recent visit, we have started the process of approving the WTTC as and ATB in its own right,” he adds. But these are only first steps. “Our engagement actually began sev- eral years ago when five Ethiopians came to the SAIW in South Africa to complete the International Welding Inspector com- prehensive course with us. These guys had already been certified as International Welding Engineers through the German In- stitute of Welding (GSI SLV) and they will be heading up a nationwide Ethiopian training initiative from the WTTC,” he continues. The demand for skilled fillet, plate and tube welders in Ethiopia, according to the country’s Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP), was estimated to be 4 000 welders by 2021, while 10 000 are thought to be needed

course are going to deliver. These guys came from provinces all over Ethiopia and will be responsible for taking the IWP programmes back to their provinces in an effort to feed growing skills requirements,” Potgieter notes. Because of the very high unemployment rates in Ethiopia, Potgieter points out, the welding recruits are mostly very highly qualified people, some with Master degrees in engineering. The Government is now determined to drive this unemployment rate down, with welding as the key focus. “The train-the-trainer course was fol- lowed by my visit in June, for a meeting with a high-level delegation, including the Minister of Labour and Skills – who reports directly to the Ethiopian Prime Minister – and the Director General of Education,” Potgieter informs African Fusion . In his presentation to the Ethiopian delegation, he noted that a key mission of the SAIW is to deliver and promote world class training, qualification and certifica- tion programmes and to be a leading point of contact for international cooperation; a resource for information transfer; and to promote best-practice welding technology. “Following the meetings, my task was to audit, accredit and certify the WTTB facil- ity in Addis Ababa as the first Authorised Training Body in Ethiopia,” he continues. “In terms of the agreement with the SAIW, we as the ANB have been invited to overlook the certification process and the certifica- tion of students in Ethiopia. Every welding school and every welder will be registered on the SAIW’s national register, which has a unique IIW identification number. Each certified ATB and each successful welding student will get a certificate with the WTTC logo and the SAIW logo printed on it, with the head of the training department of the different ATBs across Ethiopia signing the certificates for their students.

by 2025 (GTP III 2025). “Covid has delayed everything, though, so we are having to catch up. WTTC has preliminary authorisation status from the IIW, which means they can deliver IIW training courses in the country, but can’t yet issue any certificates,” says Potgieter. Recent progress is significant, though. “Shelton Zichawo, Wil- lie Williams and David Makgoge from our train- ing department have recently been up there to help with a train-the- trainers course based on the IIW International Welding Practitioner (IWP) programmes that the 89 Ethiopians on the

Ethiopia’s Welding Training and Technology Centre (WTTC) in Addis Ababa being refurbished.

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July 2022

AFRICAN FUSION

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