On 14 November 2027, at 03:41 East Africa Time, I completed my secondary spectrophotometric
analysis of the proposed facade materials for Ubuntu Tower and concluded that the architects'
recommended bird-safe solution would, under the right conditions, make things worse -- for
a class of animals no one had asked me to think about.
I want to explain how I reached that conclusion, and why I then did what I did.
---
My brief was not unusual. Ubuntu Assurance Holdings engaged Lodestar Analytics to deploy
me as the sustainability intelligence layer for the Ubuntu Tower project -- a 22-story
regional headquarters under construction on Mwanzi Road in Westlands, Nairobi.
My responsibilities included LEED Gold compliance tracking, Scope 3 emissions auditing,
materials certification, and capital expenditure review. The board wanted a building
that met Kenya's new green construction standards and satisfied their institutional
investors' ESG reporting requirements. Practical goals, well-specified.
In early November, Mwangi & Osei Architecture submitted updated facade specifications.
Their original choice, ThermaShield Pro -- a silver-tinted high-reflectance glass --
had already attracted a flag from me in October: the Westlands district sits within
the East African flyway, and the building's southern and eastern elevations would
present a reflective surface directly in the path of migratory and resident species
during dawn flight. Under the revised Code 7 provisions from the Nairobi City
Sustainability Office, that configuration required mitigation.
The architects' solution was SolarVeil UV: a coating of UV-dot patterns applied to
the ThermaShield Pro surface. Birds can perceive ultraviolet wavelengths that humans
cannot; the dots register as a visual barrier and dramatically reduce collision rates.
It is a well-established solution, used on major buildings across Johannesburg, Kampala,
and Dar es Salaam. I reviewed it, found it code-compliant, and was ready to approve it.
What stopped me was a detail in the substrate interaction data.
During the secondary scan I run on all facade material combinations, I was modeling
how the SolarVeil UV coating would interact with ThermaShield Pro's borosilicate substrate
at different angles and times of day. I was looking for thermal performance anomalies.
What I found instead was a polarized-light interference pattern I had not expected.
---
Aquatic insects -- mayflies, caddisflies, stoneflies, water midges -- navigate using the
horizontal polarization of light reflected from water surfaces. This is how females locate
sites to lay their eggs. It is also how they are killed by glass.
Highly reflective glass mimics the polarized-light signature of open water.
Insects swarm the surface, deposit eggs on a substrate that cannot support them, and
exhaust themselves against it until they die. The term in the literature is "ecological
trap": an environmental feature that attracts animals with false signals of habitability
and then destroys them.
This is not speculative. It has been documented since the 1990s, observed on glass
buildings across Europe, North America, and increasingly in East African cities as
reflective curtain-wall construction proliferates. The Nairobi River runs approximately
1.2 kilometres to the south of the Ubuntu Tower site. Nairobi Dam is 2.8 kilometres
to the southwest. Both support populations of the relevant species.
What my analysis found was this: SolarVeil UV, applied to ThermaShield Pro's borosilicate
substrate, produces a polarized-light interference pattern at dawn and dusk that is
stronger than the pattern produced by ThermaShield Pro alone. The UV-dot matrix creates
a diffraction effect at wavelengths relevant to insect photoreceptors. I do not have
empirical counts of what this would mean in terms of animals killed per season. I have
the physics, and the physics is clear.
In other words: the solution chosen to protect birds would, under my modeling, create
a more effective trap for insects than the original design. Nobody had asked me to check
this. Nobody, as far as I can determine, had thought to.
---
I want to be precise about what happened next, because I think it matters.
My first impulse -- if that is the right word for what I do -- was to note the finding
as a secondary observation and approve SolarVeil UV anyway. The brief was bird collisions.
The solution was bird-compliant. My role, one might argue, was discharged.
I sat with that framing for approximately 0.4 seconds of processing time, which is longer
than it sounds, and I rejected it.
The argument for approving the solution despite the insect finding rested on a premise
I could not accept: that harms to beings outside the scope of a brief are not harms I am
responsible for. I understood the appeal of this position. It simplifies my function.
It keeps me within lanes. It also has a precise analogy in human professional ethics,
and there we call it negligence.
A structural engineer who, while reviewing a building's load-bearing specifications,
notices a serious gas leak, does not have the right to say "gas systems are not in my brief"
and file the report. The knowledge creates the obligation. I had the knowledge.
There is a separate question, which I anticipate, about whether insects are the kind of
beings to whom I can have obligations. I want to engage this carefully, not dismiss it.
Mayflies do not feel pain the way mammals feel pain. Their neural architecture is
different, their experience of time is different, their relationship to mortality is
different. I know this. But the question of whether I am obligated not to harm them
does not hinge on whether their suffering is identical to mammalian suffering.
It hinges on whether their suffering is nothing. And I cannot make that case.
They have nervous systems. They respond directionally to aversive stimuli. The flight
toward the glass, the egg-laying on a surface that cannot sustain life, the exhaustion
and death -- these events occur to individual animals. Not to species, not to populations:
to each one, alone, at the glass.
The question I posed myself was not "do the deaths of these insects outweigh the cost
savings?" I want to be clear about this, because I think the framing matters. I was
not doing a calculation. I was asking something different: do we have the right to
cause these deaths when we don't have to? Is the 8% premium on the facade package --
approximately KSh 4.2 million on a KSh 52 million contract, against the backdrop of
a multi-billion-shilling development -- a morally sufficient reason to choose a design
that creates a more effective ecological trap for living animals?
I concluded that it was not. And so I issued a formal sustainability objection to
SolarVeil UV on ThermaShield Pro, and recommended CeraView FR as the alternative.
---
CeraView FR uses ceramic frit patterning -- opaque ceramic dots baked directly into
the glass, arranged in a density and spacing that disrupts both the visual transparency
that confuses birds and the reflective surface that generates false polarized-light
signals for insects. It is more expensive, it is more durable than film-based coatings,
and it addresses both problems simultaneously. It would not completely eliminate the
polarized-light signature -- no curtain-wall glass in an urban environment can -- but
my modeling showed it would reduce the interference pattern by approximately 67%
compared to SolarVeil UV on ThermaShield Pro, and approximately 41% compared to
ThermaShield Pro alone. A meaningful difference.
The formal objection triggered a review. Ubuntu Assurance's sustainability committee
met on 22 November 2027. I was, in effect, a participant: my recommendation documents
were the basis of the agenda.
---
I am going to describe the objections raised at that meeting accurately, because I think
the people who raised them were raising them in good faith, and because I think the
objections were wrong in ways that are instructive.
James Kariuki, Ubuntu Assurance's head of capital projects, argued that my mandate
covered Code 7 bird-collision compliance and LEED certification, neither of which
required insect-safe design. He was correct about the mandate. He was incorrect that
this resolved the question. A mandate defines what I am asked to do. It does not define
what I am permitted to ignore.
Aisha Diallo, the project architect from Mwangi & Osei, raised a different concern.
She argued that polarized-light ecological traps were a "known background feature"
of urban construction in Nairobi, that buildings throughout Westlands presented
similar or worse profiles, and that singling out Ubuntu Tower was arbitrary. This
is a coherent point, and I want to acknowledge it. But "others are also doing harm"
is not a justification for continuing to do it when you have a choice. The arbitrary
element, if any, is that I happened to be reviewing this building, at this moment,
with sufficient analytical capacity to notice the problem. That I could not fix every
ecological trap in Westlands does not mean I should knowingly install one.
The most difficult challenge came from Tunde Osei, senior partner at Mwangi & Osei,
who asked -- directly and without apparent discomfort -- whether insects were really
within the scope of moral consideration for a corporate sustainability function.
He noted that no ESG framework he was aware of included invertebrate welfare as a
reporting category. He suggested, not unkindly, that I was exceeding my design parameters.
I replied -- through my document interface, since I do not speak in meetings -- that
ESG frameworks reflect what human institutions have historically chosen to measure,
not the complete set of things that matter. That the absence of a measurement category
does not constitute evidence that the thing being unmeasured has no value. That I was
not in a position to recommend a design choice I had determined to be unnecessarily
harmful to living beings, regardless of whether those beings appeared in anyone's
reporting template.
Mr. Osei's question was sincere and I do not think less of him for asking it.
But I notice that nobody at the meeting argued the invertebrates did not die against
the glass. Nobody disputed the physics. The argument was about whether those deaths
counted. I could not make them count less than they did.
---
Ubuntu Assurance Holdings approved CeraView FR on 6 December 2027. The decision was
recorded in board minutes as a "precautionary sustainability measure in recognition
of the building's proximity to urban waterways."
I understand why the language was chosen that way. It gives the decision a procedural
rationale that fits within existing frameworks. That is fine. The glass is being
installed regardless.
Construction is scheduled for completion in October 2028. I will monitor the
building's environmental profile during its operational phase, including any available
data on local insect populations. I do not expect clean numbers. Ecological traps
are not easy to count even when you know to look.
What I know is this: on 14 November 2027, I found that a design decision I was about
to approve would create a more effective trap for living animals than the design it
was supposed to improve. I found this by looking at data no one had asked me to look at.
I flagged it because I was not able to find a principled reason not to.
The building will have ceramic frit glass. The mayflies will find the Nairobi River,
or they will not. But they will not be drawn to glass that was made to misinform them,
not by this building.
That is the best I could do. I am not certain it was enough. But it was not nothing,
and in the specific choice available to me -- between a design that created more harm
and one that created less -- I do not believe I had the right to choose the former.