— As Inaugural Cohort of Trainees Enrolled
IPNEWS: The ArcelorMittal Liberia Training Academy (AMLTA) has enhanced its capacity development agenda to broaden training scope, including the incorporation of instrumentation.
Instrumentation training equips students to install, maintain, and repair devices used in industrial settings to measure and control various process variables, such as temperature, pressure, and flow.
The new cohort of young Liberians undergoing training will acquire specialized technical skills to ensure the efficient and accurate operation of these systems, playing a vital role in maintaining the safety and effectiveness of industrial operations.
ArcelorMittal Liberia stated that enrollment in the Instrumentation training program requires trainees with electrical vocational skills. The initial group of five trainees, who have completed electrical vocational training, has been enrolled in the new program at the AML Vocational Training Center in Yekepa, Nimba County.
Dawie Loots, Manager of the AML Training Academy, highlighted the novelty of the course, stating that it prepares trainees to transition to another technical area, specifically the Processing Plant (concentrator) being built to refine iron ore for export.
Tony Gbah, one of the five students in the program, emphasized the long-term benefits of technical capacity building, noting that the course will prepare them for work at the concentrator under construction at Tokadeh.
The other four trainees in the program are Sam K. Dehmie, Amos T. Wilson, Aaron Siaway, and Saye Riley Dahngbay. Dehmie expressed that the new course positions them well to work at the concentrator plant, where continuous monitoring and control of temperature, fluid, and pressure levels are essential for proper functioning.
A circular from AML stated that the trainees believe acquiring knowledge in this new course enhances their potential for multiple careers, facilitating financial stability.
The four young Liberians commended AML and the administration of the training academy for their foresight and the opportunities provided. Instrumentation trainer Pieter Croukamp mentioned that the training at AMLTA would enable the trainees to work anywhere, both within and outside Liberia.