U.S. Allows Hunters to Import Some Elephant Trophies From African Countries

After set­tling a law­suit filed dur­ing the Trump admin­is­tra­tion, the Fish and Wildlife Ser­vice grant­ed six per­mits to bring ele­phant parts into the coun­try. It may approve more in the com­ing months. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser­vice informed some hunters last month that it would allow the import of six ele­phant tro­phies into the…

African countries respond to global inflation [Business Africa] | Africanews

In Africa, gov­ern­ments are step­ping up their efforts to mit­i­gate the impact of the Rus­sia-Ukraine cri­sis on their cit­i­zens’ wal­lets. Accord­ing to UNCTAD data, no less than 25 African coun­tries import more than a third of their wheat from Rus­sia and Ukraine; 15 import more than half and two coun­tries, Benin and Soma­lia, import 100%. So how is Africa try­ing to lim­it the impacts of this crisis?
Ghana presents robust dig­i­tal econ­o­myGhana has recent­ly embarked on the trans­for­ma­tion of sev­er­al pub­lic ser­vices. An iden­ti­ty card serves as a bio­met­ric pass­port and tax iden­ti­fi­ca­tion num­ber. In this way, the coun­try intends to mobilise domes­tic rev­enue and pros­e­cute all those who evade tax­es before the end of the year. This dig­i­tal pol­i­cy, which affects all sec­tors, should be a response to finan­cial exclu­sion and the pre­dom­i­nance of the infor­mal sector.
Burun­di cof­fee sec­tor strug­gles to rebound­In Burun­di, cof­fee accounts for near­ly 40% of export resources, and sup­ports 8 mil­lion Burun­di­ans. With the fail­ure of the pri­vati­sa­tion of the sec­tor, the state has been run­ning the sec­tor since 2019, but pro­duc­tion fig­ures remain low, drop­ping from 34,000 to 6,000 tonnes for the 2021–2022 grow­ing sea­son. Cof­fee grow­ers’ dis­con­tent is grow­ing, as well as the lack of trace­abil­i­ty of all actors involved in the sector.

Africa’s five teams going to the Qatar World Cup confirmed — Futbol on FanNation — Sports Illustrated

The five African nations head­ing to Qatar for the 2022 FIFA World Cup were con­firmed on Tues­day night. Cameroon, Moroc­co, Tunisia, Ghana and Sene­gal will rep­re­sent CAF in the first ever November/December World Cup. All five qual­i­fiers booked their places at Qatar 2022 by win­ning two-legged play­offs. Those play­offs turned out to be large­ly close affairs as…

Can African oil producers help the world end reliance on Russian Oil and Gas?

Unlock­ing Africa’s oil and gas poten­tial is now imper­a­tive against the back­drop of the war in Ukraine and the result­ing crude, diesel, and gas sup­ply crunch. This has ren­dered Euro­pean depen­dence on Russ­ian ener­gy unten­able, cre­at­ing a major oppor­tu­ni­ty for Africa to posi­tion itself as a cru­cial option to increase the sup­ply to the glob­al ener­gy mar­kets. How­ev­er, sig­nif­i­cant chal­lenges remain for the continent’s hydro­car­bon pro­duc­ers to sud­den­ly ramp up their pro­duc­tion due to infra­struc­ture, finance, and tech­nol­o­gy deficits.
Coun­tries with major LNG resources, such as Nige­ria, Ango­la, Libya, and Alge­ria, suf­fer from lim­it­ed and under­de­vel­oped pipeline net­works, refiner­ies, jet­ties, ter­mi­nals, and ports. Addi­tion­al­ly, incen­tiviz­ing for­eign invest­ment is often prob­lema­tized by a host of risk fac­tors, includ­ing polit­i­cal insta­bil­i­ty, local inse­cu­ri­ty issues and finan­cial insti­tu­tions shift­ing invest­ments from fos­sil fuels to renew­ables. Final­ly, secur­ing the lat­est tech­nol­o­gy to facil­i­tate local con­tent devel­op­ment has proven cost pro­hib­i­tive giv­en the reliance on for­eign intel­lec­tu­al prop­er­ty and the con­tin­u­al brain drain of key local human capital.
All the above issues will be dis­cussed at the 8th Africa Petro­le­um Con­gress and All the above issues will be dis­cussed at the 8th Africa Petro­le­um Con­gress and Exhi­bi­tion (CAPE VIII) tak­ing place from 16–19 May 2022 in Luan­da, Ango­la. The con­gress is orga­nized by the African Petro­le­um Pro­duc­ers Orga­ni­za­tion (APPO), the gov­ern­ment of the Repub­lic of Ango­la (for the first time), and AME Trade Ltd. The three-day event will be cen­tered around the theme of “Ener­gy Tran­si­tion: Chal­lenges and Oppor­tu­ni­ties in the African Oil and Gas Indus­try,” and assem­ble experts from the nation­al, region­al, and inter­na­tion­al ener­gy and oil and gas indus­tries to delib­er­ate the chal­lenges and oppor­tu­ni­ties of the ener­gy tran­si­tion and the future of the oil and gas indus­try in Africa.
CAPE VIII will unfold against the reces­sion of the glob­al pan­dem­ic that exac­er­bat­ed record pro­duc­tion declines across African hydro­car­bon pro­duc­ing coun­tries from 2020 to 2021. The annus hor­ri­bilis was com­pound­ed by under-invest­ment in explo­ration activ­i­ties, leav­ing sev­er­al of the continent’s biggest ener­gy play­ers strug­gling to cope with the post-lock­down surge in demand for hydro­car­bons. For­tu­nate­ly, APPO’s ambi­tion to estab­lish the con­ti­nent as an ener­gy hub regained sig­nif­i­cant head­wind with a stel­lar upstream devel­op­ment out­look for 2022 and beyond.
The con­gress will be the ide­al plat­form for Africa’s lead­ing oil and gas pro­duc­ers to con­front the fore­go­ing chal­lenges and engen­der solu­tions to max­i­mize its oil and gas resources. Amid the dri­ve by devel­oped economies towards decar­boniza­tion and net-zero poli­cies, attend­ing ener­gy stake­hold­ers will have the oppor­tu­ni­ty to rein­force the case for region­al inte­grat­ed sup­ply chains and pool­ing resources to lever­age the cat­alyt­ic pow­er of hydro­car­bons in a sus­tain­able manner.
Sup­port­ed by count­less multi­na­tion­als across the ener­gy val­ue chain and nation­al oil com­pa­nies, CAPE VIII will fea­ture illu­mi­nat­ing insight from a range of illus­tri­ous keynote speak­ers, who will mold the future land­scape of ener­gy in Africa and beyond.Source: AME Trade Ltd

Africa mostly quiet amid widespread condemnation of Russia — The Columbian

KAMPALA, Ugan­da — Ugan­dan Pres­i­dent Yow­eri Musev­eni recent­ly remarked that Russia’s war on Ukraine should be seen in the con­text of Moscow being the “cen­ter of grav­i­ty” for East­ern Europe.
His son, Lt. Gen. Muhoozi Kaineru­ga­ba, was more force­ful, declar­ing that most Africans “sup­port Russia’s stand in Ukraine” and “Putin is absolute­ly right!”
Amid a world­wide cho­rus of con­dem­na­tion, much of Africa has either pushed back or remained notice­ably qui­et. Twen­ty-five of Africa’s 54 nations abstained or didn’t record a vote in the U.N. Gen­er­al Assem­bly res­o­lu­tion ear­li­er this month con­demn­ing Russia.
The rea­son? Many nations on the con­ti­nent of 1.3 bil­lion peo­ple have long-stand­ing ties and sup­port from Moscow, dat­ing back to the Cold War when the Sovi­et Union sup­port­ed anti-colo­nial struggles.
Those rela­tions have tight­ened in recent years: As U.S. inter­est in Africa appeared to wane under Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump’s admin­is­tra­tion, Rus­sia — along with Chi­na — expand­ed its influ­ence, enlarg­ing its eco­nom­ic foot­print to include every­thing from agri­cul­tur­al pro­grams to ener­gy plants. In 2019, dig­ni­taries from 43 African nations attend­ed a sum­mit with Rus­sia, which also has become the dom­i­nant exporter of weapons into sub-Saha­ran Africa, accord­ing to the Stock­holm Inter­na­tion­al Peace Research Institute.