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USTDA Promotes Clean Energy Access for Nigerian Companies

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Minigrid

The U.S. Trade and Development Agency announced it has awarded a grant to Nigeria’s Daybreak Power Solutions Limited, a subsidiary of African renewable energy company Daystar Power Group, for a feasibility study to help optimize clean energy supply to business entities in the country.

Daybreak Power Solutions selected Colorado-based Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI) to carry out the study.

“USTDA has long worked with our partners in Nigeria to help expand energy access and advance climate resilience,” said Ambassador Vinai Thummalapally (ret.), USTDA’s Acting Director. “Our support for this project will offer Nigerian businesses a clean energy solution for their power needs and facilitate partnerships with U.S. companies that supply high-quality infrastructure solutions.”

USTDA’s study will assist Daybreak Power Solutions with developing 20 solar-plus-storage minigrids that will supply power to Nigeria’s grid when it is operational and provide power directly to Nigerian businesses when the grid is down. The minigrids will provide a clean and reliable alternative to diesel back-up generators and produce up to 40 megawatts of solar power. The study will develop the technical designs of the minigrids, select the sites for deployment, and finalize the project’s business model.

“We are thrilled to partner with RMI and USTDA on this landmark project to explore win-win opportunities for industrial manufacturers, solar energy providers, and distribution companies in Nigeria,” said Jasper Graf von Hardenberg, CEO and Co-Founder of Daystar Power Group.

This activity supports USTDA’s Global Partnership for Climate-Smart Infrastructure, which connects U.S. industry to major clean energy and transportation infrastructure projects in emerging markets. It also supports the U.S. government’s Power Africa and Prosper Africa initiatives.

DR Congo to Build Port to Support Mineral Import/Export Industry

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DRC Signing Ceremony for Port of Banana

DP World of Dubai, United Arab Emirates, just announced it had been awarded the contract to construct an important new seaport for the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) starting in 2022.

The project, which is estimated to cost US $1 billion, will be built on the Democratic Republic of the Congo town of Banana.

The new Banana Port will be the country’s first deep-sea port. It will replace neighboring ports at Tanzania’s Dar es Salaam and Kenya’s Mombasa facilities. Having the capability to manage the whole operation is key to expanding the DRC’s booming exports of copper, cobalt, tin, tungsten, and tantalum.

Most of those exports are shipped to China. A sizeable percentage of the rarest of those materials are guaranteed for shipment to China under previously negotiated agreements with Beijing.

As a first step in the construction process, DP world will be building a 2,000-foot-long quay, along with dredging a clear port area for vessels drawing 60 feet in depth. At completion it will be capable of handling the deepest-draw container vessels used anywhere in the world.

At completion, the port will include a 75-acre yard to store containers for both outbound and inbound use, plus facilities for managing inspections and other operations needs at the facility.

The finished Banana Port will be capable of shipping approximately 450,000 TEU per year.

Under the terms of the agreement, DP World will reserve exclusive rights to develop and manage the concession for the port for a 30-year term. Ownership of the port will be split 70% for DP World and 30% for the DRC government.

“This agreement represents the vision to provide DRC with a modern, world-class port and logistics infrastructure to support the tremendous opportunities for trade in this country. The port will enhance the country’s export capabilities and give it affordable access to international markets,” said DP World CEO Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem on the announcement of the contract.

The contract to build the port was signed directly between the DRC government and DP World.

Holcim Unveils Africa’s Largest 3D-Printed Affordable Housing Project

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Holcim announces Africa’s largest 3D-printed affordable housing project in Kenya, developed by its joint venture 14Trees in partnership with CDC Group, the UK’s development finance institution.

Building on Holcim’s world-first 3D-printed school in Malawi, the Mvule Gardens housing complex is scaling up affordable housing in Kenya to be part of bridging the country’s infrastructure gap.

This project was made possible by Holcim’s proprietary ink, TectorPrint, giving the walls structural function to bear the load of the building. This breakthrough will accelerate the scale-up of 3D printing for affordable housing.

Jan Jenisch, CEO Holcim: “We are excited to be building one of the world’s largest 3D-printed affordable housing projects in Kenya. With today’s rapid urbanization, over three billion people are expected to need affordable housing by 2030. This issue is most acute in Africa, with countries like Kenya already facing an estimated shortage of two million houses. By deploying 3D printing, we can address this infrastructure gap at scale to increase living standards for all.”

Tenbite Ermias, CDC Africa Managing Director: “14Trees is pioneering the use of leading edge technology to address one of Africa’s most pressing development needs – affordable housing – to create life-changing infrastructure for whole communities.”

The Mvule Gardens in Kilifi, Kenya, is one of the largest 3D-printed affordable housing projects in the world. It is part of the Green Heart of Kenya regenerative ecosystem, a model for inclusive and climate-resilient cities. Its advanced sustainability profile won an IFC-EDGE Advanced sustainable design certification, which recognizes resource-efficient and zero-carbon buildings.

Holcim’s joint venture 14Trees is dedicated to addressing Africa’s shortage of affordable housing with 3D printing and smart design while creating skilled local jobs. As proven in Malawi, the technique can reduce the environmental footprint of a house by more than 50% compared to conventional methods, while the walls can be built at record speed in just 12 hours compared to almost four days with conventional building techniques.

MASS Design Group, an American and African-based architecture practice, designed the Mvule Gardens to advance affordable, sustainable and replicable housing units adapted to Kenya’s environment.

MCC and Africa50 sign MOU to Advance a New Global Infrastructure Platform

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The Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) and Africa50 signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to initiate a new phase in the launch of the Millennium Impact for Infrastructure Accelerator (MIIA) Africa.

The new MIIA-Africa platform is designed to spur and attract investments in Africa for bankable infrastructure deals with measurable social and economic impacts. To do so, MIIA-Africa will support project preparation, tackling a major constraint to unlocking the available pools of capital for the benefit of infrastructure development in Africa. Investments through MIIA-Africa will cover projects across sectors such as water and sanitation, agriculture, health, education, transportation, power, and telecommunications.

Design work for MIIA-Africa has now been completed and MCC and Africa50 are actively soliciting infrastructure projects that have the potential to become part of the project pipeline.

The MIIA team will deepen its engagement with the private sector by issuing requests for information on potential MIIA projects.

“MCC is pleased to advance the MIIA-Africa collaboration, leveraging the agency’s track record in financing and delivering impactful infrastructure projects in Africa, all well-aligned with the goals of the Build Back Better World initiative” said MCC Acting CEO Mahmoud Bah. “Africa50’s reach and impact on the continent ensures this collaborative effort has the potential to identify projects with substantial economic opportunities on the continent.”

Africa50 CEO Alain Ebobissé added “Africa50 is very pleased to reinforce its existing partnership with MCC. This important new milestone in the MIIA-Africa programme will help increase the pipeline of bankable projects and attract further capital into African infrastructure. Africa50 will contribute its strong expertise in project development and finance to accelerate the delivery of such projects and support the continent’s sustainable economic growth.”

MIIA-Africa is one of MCC’s innovative finance tools to mobilize private capital to maximize the impact of highly developmental projects that spur sustainable and inclusive economic growth and reduce poverty. As an independent U.S. government agency, MCC works around the world with the best-governed developing countries, providing grant funding to unlock economic potential. About two-thirds of the agency’s portfolio is in Africa.

Africa50 is an infrastructure investment platform that contributes to Africa’s growth by developing and investing in bankable infrastructure projects, catalyzing public sector capital, and mobilizing private sector funding, with differentiated financial returns and impact. Africa50 currently has 31 shareholders, comprised of 28 African countries, the African Development Bank, the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO), and Bank Al-Maghrib.

$14M Research Grant Seeks to Transform Western Africa Rice Crops to Withstand the Climate Crisis

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Namibia Desert

A $14 million grant from the Adaptation Fund, an international capital source focusing on helping the world adapt to the climate crisis, is about to help a major part of Africa adapt some of its key food crops for the much hotter world of the future and its weather extremes of drought and flooding.

The contract award which will make this possible is a four-year grant awarded to Cornell University and its Climate Resilient Farming Systems program. It will be focused on adapting the current rice crops to be more resilient to global heating and increase production of the staple staple crop for smallholder rice farmers across 13 West African countries.

The Scaling up Climate Resilient Rice Production in West Africa (RICOWAS) project’s goal is to apply principles of the novel Climate-Resilient Rice Production (CRRP) approach, in order to increase rice productivity, create rice self-sufficiency, and adapt to climate change in West Africa.

The Sahara and Sahel Observatory will oversee the overall project, while the Rice Regional Center of Specialization, hosted by the Institute of Rural Economy in Mali, will manage it on a regional level. Working in partnership with the rice center, the Cornell program will provide technical assistance, scientific insights and support.

RICOWAS represents a follow-up to a World Bank project that was implemented from 2014 to 2016 and continues this work across Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Togo through national institutions in each country.

“Climate change doesn’t stop at the national borders,” said Erika Styger, who leads the Climate Resilient Farming Systems program in the Department of Global Development in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and is a principal investigator of RICOWAS. The project’s teams will coordinate across diverse governments, language barriers, and climate and agroecological zones to collaborate across the region, Styger said. Togo, for example, contains three climate zones.

“By creating an enabling framework to work and exchange [across these countries] we can create a regional community of practice and reinforce each other’s capacities,” she said.

The CRRP approach is based on the System of Rice Intensification (SRI) methodology in combination with location-specific Sustainable Land and Water Management (SLWM) practices, and if indicated with Integrated Pest (and disease) Management (IPM).

SRI is based on an agronomic framework that includes: encouraging early and healthy plant establishment; minimizing competition among plants; building up fertile soils rich with organic matter and beneficial soil biota; and carefully managing water to avoid flooding and water stress. By applying these principles together, rice plants are healthier and more productive with deeper, larger roots and more, fuller seeds (grain).

The principles remain the same for all rice systems and climate zones, though the practices to implement them may vary based on location. By combining SRI with SLWM and IPM practices, farmers will be equipped with the best techniques to adapt to climate change while increasing their rice productivity.

West Africa produces more than two-thirds of sub-Saharan Africa’s rice, mostly by low-income smallholders. In recent years population growth and rising per capita rice consumption has outpaced production and has led to increased imports from Asia that account for close to half of the rice consumption in the region. Prices have also been volatile, subject to sharp and steep hikes.

Along with climate change, these pressures led the Economic Community of West African States to launch a 2013 effort aiming to achieve rice self-sufficiency by 2025. RICOWAS is part of that effort.

Endangered Species at Risk as Chinese Traditional Medicine Sales Boom in Africa

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Pangolin Curled Up

As China spreads its backwards culture into Africa, the market for African versions of traditional Chinese medicines has exploded. With that has come the mass killing of native African species for their body parts.

Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is an odd part of the Chinese economic invasion of the world. It brings with it beliefs in medical treatments which originated in some cases millennia ago, long before understanding even of basic anatomy and how to treat illnesses even of the simplest kinds were well understood. While there are some aspects to it that are valid and highly useful, there are also aspects that are based on erroneous beliefs and are highly destructive.

In Africa, relying on traditional medicines created by their own ancestors is a fundamental part of the culture of some nations. They are also made from a variety of animal parts to gain their supposed medicinal power, just as TCM are.

So, it is an easy sell to bring TCM into the continent, as well as to market it in a similar way, arguing for the long-term historical relevance of old knowledge, even if what the Chinese are peddling in these medicines has no real healing power.

Bringing in the medicines also involves, for the companies China is establishing on the continent to make and sell them, locally sourcing ingredients like those in the traditional medicines fabricated in Asia. As it turns out, these “authentic” reconstructions of CTMs – now being sold to yet another massive potential market of the uneducated in Africa – serve also to include many unproven ingredients which are either toxic, include parts from endangered species, or both. By doing so, they are endangering the lives of those species on an even broader scale than ever before while also putting the lives of those who take the medicine at risk.

That is the conclusion of Lethal Remedy, a just published report by the United Kingdom-based Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA).

The spread of Chinese Traditional Medicine manufacture, use, and sale is embedded in China’s global Belt and Road business initiative, a strategic venture under which China is attempting to integrated much of the global business market within just a few days’ shipping time of the PRC (People’s Republic of China).

As the report notes, “Major TCM companies and countless clinics of already been established across Africa, with further plans to construct full supply chains for sourcing to sales.”

The invasion of Africa which this involves has been managed carefully on multiple levels, including:

  • Signing official agreements between African nations and the PRC to develop TCM products and sales.
  • Working to get individual countries to pass local laws endorsing the making and use of TCM products in the countries there. Namibia and South Africa are noted as key examples.
  • Taking advantage of the pandemic panic among the peoples of Africa to create an effective marketing campaign for these non-medicines as something to take while potentially dying of the coronavirus. These campaigns also include treatments to be taken despite having no evidence of the presence of the coronavirus.

In terms of statistics, currently it is known that some 21,000 medical professionals and at least 2,000 people now claiming to be trained practitioners of TCM are present on the continent. 45 countries provide the bases of operation for these people, in countries such as Cameroon, Malawi, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.

These have been established over decades in some locations, with a boom period in recent years. It is part of China’s explicit marketing plan for the region.

Though the so-called medicines have mostly no ability to ease pain, slow the spread of disease, or cure anything, the poor and uneducated are an easy target for the Chinese marketing assault which has made TCM sales so successful.

According to the EIA report, the TCM makers have pulled multiple pages out of their use of ingredients such as body parts and bodily fluids from species ranging from Chinese tigers to the Asian pangolin, transplanting them into the local market by replacing them with similar elements from lions and the scales of the African variant of the pangolin.

Common to both traditional African medicine (TAfM) and TCM are parts of species such as the rhino, hedgehog, tortoise, and pangolin.

The elephant, in its Asian form at least, may not be listed among the ingredients lists in the global Pharmacopeia, but the EIA notes that there are at least four registered patent medicines which use elephant ivory as shavings or powder, to treat everything from sore throats, seizures, and boils. Elephant skin is also used by traditional Chinese medical practitioners to help heal routine wounds, ulcers, and even hemorrhoids. Some of the Chinese manufacturers even source these parts all the way from endangered African elephants, in the form of ivory, elephant skin, and hair. That is also all happening legally – except for the ivory – as written into the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), with Botswana, Namibia, South Africa, and Zimbabwe all noted as legally authorized to export such materials.

For the TCM makers setting up shop in Africa, direct access to those elephant parts plus availability of ingredients from the other common parts, whether endangered or not, makes the African market appealing as a new source of mass exploitation of animals even if it pushes many of them close to extinction in the process.

Among other creatures being taken in the wild and sometimes bred just for body parts and bodily fluids for the African form of TCMs are seahorses, the tokay gecko, leopards, African rhinos (for their horn), saiga (for their horn), local endangered versions of tortoise, hedgehog, and porcupine.

For African nations which are in dire need of hard currency, inviting the Chinese in to take advantage of their people and to make and sell products which can kill off animals while posing a genuine danger to those taking the medicines is taken by many countries as a fair exchange, despite the damage it does to all. South Africa and Namibia, just as two examples, have gone so far as to formally recognize traditional Chinese medicines as legitimate treatments within those countries’ treatment protocols. Other countries, such as South Africa, have now legalized captive breeding of wild large cat species such as lions or leopards, for the purpose of harvesting their parts for TCMs.

In South Africa, a November 2019 memorandum from the Northern Cape government uncovered by the Environmental Investigation Agency authorizes the sale of Rhino horn “in order to expedite the process of legalizing commercialization …for medicinal purposes.”

Besides the obvious evils of potentially wiping out endangered species, marketing useless medicines made of those species, and encouraging the public to take these medicines at a high risk to themselves, there is yet another reason the EIA warns that theses medicines should be blocked from manufacture and banned for sale. That is the potential risk of spreading zoonotic diseases, illnesses such as the coronavirus which likely was derived from similar viruses found in Chinese bats and crossed species to infect humans, broadly across Africa.

None of this will stop without the African governments themselves stepping up and demanding the end of foisting these dangerous and exploitative concoctions known as traditional Chinese medicines on the people. With those governments more than happy to be bribed with money and more from Beijing to allow this to happen, no one should count on those governments doing anything about this anytime soon.

With total sales of traditional Chinese medicine in 2021 estimated to hit 75.3 billion Chinese yuan (US $11.81 billion) by the end of 2021, with an estimated annual compound sales growth rate of about 5 percent just in China’s core home market, and with high gross margins, no one should look to the PRC to do anything on their end to stop this abuse of nature and the public who happily consume these fake medicines.

One of the factors that is allowing TCM to flourish in Africa is the predatory nature and failure of western medicine and its forced vaccination program. Many Africans simply don’t trust western medicine or the evil billionaires behind it. At the same time, practitioners skilled in TCM can often more accurately diagnose ailments, even if they can’t prescribe an effective treatment.

HeidelbergCement Signs Agreement with Tanzanian Cement Producer

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Heidelberg Cement

HeidelbergCement, one of the world’s largest integrated manufacturers of building materials and solutions, has signed an agreement to acquire 68 % of the shares in the Tanzanian cement producer Tanga Cement.

Through its subsidiary Tanzania Portland Cement, the largest cement producing company in the country, HeidelbergCement already has a good market position in Dar es Salaam in the Eastern part of Tanzania.

As part of this transaction, HeidelbergCement secures an important limestone quarry with measured resources for at least 30 years on top of its already existing reserves. The quarry and the associated cement plant with a capacity of 1.3 millions tonnes of Tanga Cement are located in the Northern part of Tanzania.

The closing of the transaction is subject to the fulfillment of customary conditions precedents (especially the clearance by several local authorities), which have to be fulfilled or waived within an agreed timeframe.

As of today, closing of the transaction is expected in the second quarter of 2022. Upon closing, HeidelbergCement will make a public tender offer to acquire the remaining outstanding shares in Tanga Cement, following Tanzanian law and in alignment with the respective local authorities.

Both companies, Tanzania Portland Cement und Tanga Cement, are publicly listed.

Saskatchewan Signs MOU with Senegal on Educational and Research Cooperation

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MOU Senegal

The Government of Saskatchewan and the Government of the Republic of Senegal signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to strengthen ties between educational institutions and advance cooperation in research and the exchange of students and academics between the two jurisdictions.

“Our government values this partnership with Senegal and is proud to be signing the first MOU in the history of our province with a French speaking country,” Advanced Education Minister Gene Makowsky said. “Our province is committed to building relationships with countries around the world to strengthen intellectual and cultural linkages through research, dialogue and exchange.”

International students bring a global perspective to Saskatchewan and create opportunities for research and innovation. This MOU has an objective to collectively develop recruitment marketing strategies in French speaking countries to promote the development of the Fransaskois community, while also increasing the visibility of Saskatchewan’s French programs on the world stage.

“I welcome the signing of this cooperation agreement with the Government of Saskatchewan, which bolsters the strong cooperative relationship maintained by Senegal and Canada,” Minister of Advanced Education, Research and Innovation, Government of the Republic of Senegal Cheikh Oumar Anne said. “I hope that it will become a foundation on which we can build new academic and scientific relationships between our institutes of higher learning and research, and through which we can promote the Francophonie in our respective institutions.”

Recently, the Government of Saskatchewan announced its International Education Strategy, which includes a number of initiatives related to global engagement, capacity building and leadership. This will enhance the province’s profile over the next five years to attract key international markets and to help position the province as a destination of choice for international students.

The International Education Strategy, developed in partnership with the post-secondary sector, will assist institutions to attract international students in innovative ways, while meeting commitments outlined in Saskatchewan’s Growth Plan. A key component of the strategy will include supporting the growth and sustainability of French post-secondary programs in Saskatchewan through targeted recruitment in key French language markets.

Between the province’s two universities and Saskatchewan Polytechnic, Saskatchewan’s post-secondary institutions have 568 active agreements with international post-secondary partners.

USTDA Announced Grant Funding to Advance Internet Access in Nigeria

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Internet Access

The U.S. Trade and Development Agency announced grant funding for a feasibility study to help Nigerian company Ekovolt Telco Limited expand internet access for underserved communities in the Niger Delta region.

The study will include a pilot project to test fixed wireless broadband technology as a solution. Ekovolt selected Georgia-based Vernonburg Group LLC to conduct the study.

“Quality internet infrastructure is critical to Nigeria’s economic growth. This is why USTDA is prioritizing partnerships with companies like Ekovolt,” said Amb. Vinai Thummalapally (ret.), USTDA’s Acting Director. “Through our Access Africa initiative, USTDA is connecting high-quality U.S. solutions to support the deployment of critical broadband infrastructure in Nigeria and communities all across Africa.”

USTDA’s study will assess market demand and determine the technical and commercial viability of expanding last-mile fixed wireless broadband access across nine states in Nigeria’s Niger Delta region. The study will also include a test deployment of Motorola’s 4G LTE technology as a potential solution for expanding connectivity for up to 550,000 users.

“We are excited to partner with USTDA to create a more inclusive digital economy in the Niger-Delta region,” said Emeka Ebo, Ekovolt’s Managing Director. “This partnership and collaboration with U.S. technology companies including Motorola provides the platform to adopt, test and deploy innovative wireless technologies. This will help us promote local digital solutions that improve access to healthcare, literacy and commerce.”

This project advances the Biden-Harris Administration’s Build Back Better World partnership. It also supports Access Africa, USTDA’s initiative to advance the development of inclusive, secure, and sustainable ICT infrastructure across Africa, and the U.S. government’s Prosper Africa initiative to substantially increase two-way trade and investment between the U.S. and Africa.

Worldwide Walkouts November 3 to Protest Against Government Overreach

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The people will push back against the fascist vaxcists tomorrow.

Organizations and individuals will be “walking out” of work by calling in sick or taking a personal day to protest the unprecedented loss of freedom that has occurred since the COVID pandemic began. While this won’t solve the problem, it will help bring attention to the problem and demonstrate that not everyone is willing to accept the tyranny.

Worldwide Walkouts will demand a return to freedom and democratic principles. Citizens around the globe are protesting loss of liberty, illegal mandates and tyrannical government overreach.

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., Children’s Health Defense Board Chair and Lead Counsel said, “No government in history has ever surrendered power in the absence of a demand. We need to tell these governments and their friends in the technocracy, the Silicon Valley billionaire boys club, the mainstream media, and the pharmaceutical industry that we will no longer tolerate their trampling of citizens’ rights.”

Emboldened by reports of a recent walkout of Southwest employees — which led the airline’s management to drop plans to put unvaccinated employees on unpaid leave — nurses, doctors, teachers, police officers, firefighters and other workers are expected to participate in the protest.