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Namibia partners China to build largest solar power plant

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Namibia has announced a contract with two Chinese enterprises to develop the country’s largest solar power facility. The state-owned power operator, NamPower, announced on Monday.

The southern African nation imports electricity from Zambia and South Africa, but the project will add 100 MW to its 500 MW installed power capacity.

NamPower managing director Kahenge Haulofu said the plant will stabilise energy bill hikes, boost Namibia’s economy, and promote environmental sustainability.

KfW will fund 80% of the 1.4 billion Namibian dollar ($78.33 million) project, while NamPower will provide the rest from its balance sheet.

Businesses The power plant will be completed in eighteen months by China Jiangxi International Economic and Technical Cooperation Co. Ltd and Chint New Energy Development (Zhejiang) Co. Ltd, with commercial operations scheduled to start in the second quarter of 2026.

Namibia produces less than half of the energy it uses, and its domestic electrical supply has been unable to keep up with the country’s growing demand.

Namibia has long been dependent on imported electricity from neighbouring nations and South Africa (Eskom), but the country’s own economy has made it more difficult for South Africa to generate electricity domestically and export it.

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Musings From Abroad

US CDC issues second-highest Marburg travel advisory for Rwanda

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As a result of the Marburg disease epidemic in Rwanda, the United States government has announced that its agency will be issuing its second-highest level of travel advisory, advising citizens to avoid unnecessary travel. Rwanda is located in East Africa.

According to the US Department of Health and Human Services, the CDC will begin screening visitors who have visited Rwanda within the last 21 days before they enter the country.

The organisation advised travellers to Rwanda to take extra care when they visited the nation last week when it released its “level 2” travel advisory.

Since the first epidemic of the Ebola-like illness in Rwanda was discovered in late September, 46 cases and 12 fatalities have been documented. The death rate in Marburg might reach 88%.

Fruit bats carry the virus, which subsequently spreads to people who come into touch with the bodily fluids of infected people.

Rwanda has started to distribute vaccination doses against the virus, giving priority to those who are most at risk, healthcare staff who are most exposed, and those who have close contact with confirmed cases.

The first known outbreak of viral hemorrhagic fever in Rwanda was discovered in late September; to yet, 36 cases and 11 fatalities have been reported. The death rate in Marburg might reach 88%.

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Musings From Abroad

US ‘conflict minerals by disclosure rule’ has not lessened Congo bloodshed, monitor claims

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In a study released on Monday, a United States congressional watchdog stated that it had not discovered any proof that the conflict minerals disclosure rule implemented by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in 2012 had lessened bloodshed in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

 

According to a U.S. Government Accountability Office study, armed factions are still engaged in conflict over control of gold mines located in the country’s east.

 

It said that the regulation, which mandates that certain businesses disclose how they utilise gold, tungsten, tantalum, and tin, has probably had little impact on the bordering nations.

 

 

“GAO found no empirical evidence that the rule has decreased the occurrence or level of violence in the eastern DRC, where many mines and armed groups are located,” the report said.

 

 

“GAO also found the rule was associated with a spread of violence, particularly around informal, small-scale gold mining sites,” it said, adding that gold is the most difficult to trace, and easiest to smuggle, of the four minerals covered by the rule.

 

The top producer of tantalum in the world is Congo; both the US and the EU view it as a vital material.

 

The report further stated that “the SEC disagreed with some of GAO’s findings and raised concerns about some of its methodology and analyses.” According to the GAO, some of its modifications had no appreciable impact on its conclusions.

 

 

“As the agency noted in comments shared with GAO, SEC staff has serious concerns about the report, including that it makes assertions and reaches conclusions that rest on several erroneous factual assumptions, draws causal inferences that are not supported by GAO’s statistical analyses, and deviates significantly from the GAO’s previously issued reports,” the SEC said.

 

 

“GAO had not shared its final report with the SEC until today, so staff is reviewing it to determine if and how GAO addressed the SEC’s concerns,” it added.

Last year, GAO said that some U.S. companies buying minerals from Congo and its neighbours were failing to meet disclosure requirements.

 

The UN Security Council was informed on September 30 by Bintou Keita, the head of the U.N. mission in Congo, that M23 rebels in the east are making $300,000 a month in a zone they have taken over for coltan mining.

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