A new digital dawn as

Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 26 January 2026
📘 Source: Daily News Botswana

The Okavango Delta is often described as a ‘miracle of nature’, a luxurious and emerald maze of water pulsing through the heart of the Kalahari Desert. But for the researchers at the Okavango Research Institute (ORI), monitoring this UNESCO World Heritage Site has recently felt like trying to navigate a high-speed world with a broken compass. For years, the institute’s computers, the very engines required to process complex climate data and wildlife patterns, had grown sluggish and outdated.

“Our existing equipment has become largely unusable,” admitted ORI director, Dr Casper Bonyongo when he received a donation of eight high-end Geographical Information Systems (GIS) computers worth P400 000 recently from the US Embassy. This was not just a technical inconvenience, but a bottleneck for conservation. Without the processing power to handle large datasets, critical insights into flooding, fire dynamics and habitat loss remained locked behind frozen screens.

The GIS machines allow researchers to layer vast amounts of data including satellite imagery, rainfall records and animal migration paths, into high-resolution digital maps. “Graduates and researchers alike will greatly benefit from this enhanced capacity. We can now support complex simulations and sophisticated spatial modelling that were simply impossible before,” said Dr Bonyongo.

📖 Continue Reading
This is a preview of the full article. To read the complete story, click the button below.

Read Full Article on Daily News Botswana

AllZimNews aggregates content from various trusted sources to keep you informed.

[paywall]

For the students at the University of Botswana, this is not just about new hardware but about ‘future-ready’ skills. UB acting vice chancellor, Mr Dawid Katzke believes these tools will bridge the gap between classroom theory and the urgent, interdisciplinary research needed to protect one of the world’s most significant wetland ecosystems. While the technology is impressive, the sentiment behind it is deeper.

At the handover ceremony, Acting Minister of Higher Education, Mr Shawn Ntlhaile said the donation was a milestone in an enduring partnership between Botswana and the US. “It is a partnership built on a shared realisation. The challenges of the 21st century including climate change, disaster risk reduction and biodiversity loss, cannot be solved with 20th-century tools” Mr Ntlhaile said. US Ambassador, Mr Howard Van Vranken echoed the same sentiments, noting that the donation underscored the global importance of local research.

[/paywall]

📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by Daily News Botswana • January 26, 2026

Powered by
AllZimNews

By Hope