Dr Amelia Hilgart is talking about the recently-published African air quality dataset developed in partnership with Zindi, created using a model developed by Zindi users as part of a 60-hour hackathon earlier this year. As a data scientist at the uLwazi Node of the South African Earth Observation Network, Hilgart’s job is to collect, collate and share data like this to inform local government decision-making in the complex field of global change.
“We can’t decouple climate change from climate policy and good governance, which is in turn tied to active democracy, education, public health, and so on,” Hilgart explains. “For instance, climate change could cause drought, which reduces food security and impacts the economy. With less water for sanitation, we see an increase in disease and public health burdens. We must think about the system as a whole and how the pieces fit together in order to actually make progress.”
Build it and they will come
It was in looking to fill in missing data gaps that Hilgart stumbled across Zindi’s early efforts at an air quality prediction model using publicly-available Sentinel-5P satellite data. Zindi competitors had created the model as part of a #ZindiWeekendz hackathon during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, in recognition of the fact that air quality data across Africa is poor to non-existent.
“We know that air quality has a significant negative impact on public health outcomes, especially around respiratory diseases like asthma or indeed, COVID-19,” says Jonathan Whitaker, data scientist at Zindi and lead on the project. “So we challenged our community to build a machine learning model to fill in the gaps on air quality in African cities and towns. And they delivered brilliantly.”
Zindi verified and streamlined the winning models, and published them under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license, inviting anyone who wanted to use them to get in touch. SAEON saw the potential in this model and the data it produced, and reached out.
From model to dataset
Whitaker was joined by Yasin Ayami, Zindi Ambassador for Zambia, and following guidance from SAEON, the two of them developed the preliminary model and used it to make predictions of historical air quality in African cities. SAEON has now shared datasets for Africa and South Africa on their Open Data Platform as well as on partner sites like Africa GeoPortal and Esri’s Living Atlas project. SAEON also ensured that the dataset has a doi (digital object identifier) so that it is searchable through tools like Google’s dataset search engine.