Essential The Africa the Media Doesn't Tell You About

The Odum of Ala Igbo

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I read the article.. and the World Bank is right, that monopolies do hurt the avg consumer :yeshrug:

But when the west is saying this shyt, to African countries.. you gotta side-eye it. Because you know the west would rather have the monopoly in these countries instead. Hell wasn't that long ago that france was bytching about the bare minimum cement standard being raised in these countries.

Lafarge would love to have Dangote's business true, though that doesn't mean govt's should coddle cartels which drive up prices for poor Africans.
 

Red Shield

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Lafarge would love to have Dangote's business true, though that doesn't mean govt's should coddle cartels which drive up prices for poor Africans.

In a better world, no govt's would coddle companies and prices wouldn't drive up for poor Africans. But we don't live in that world. :yeshrug:

Dangote loses his monopoly and you best believe one of these Euro companies will step in... and then those poor Africans will really take it.
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

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In a better world, no govt's would coddle companies and prices wouldn't drive up for poor Africans. But we don't live in that world. :yeshrug:

Dangote loses his monopoly and you best believe one of these Euro companies will step in... and then those poor Africans will really take it.

Or if the rules were tweaked, other Nigerian cement companies could compete and the cost for building materials, housing and rested costs would come down
 

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Or if the rules were tweaked, other Nigerian cement companies could compete and the cost for building materials, housing and rested costs would come down

In a better world.. yeah. Right now it ain't worth the risk. :yeshrug:


Not while the euro's are still a power anyway
 

Scientific Playa

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i'm just hearing about this ...

Nearly 100 Dead After Anti-Government Protests In Ethiopia



In Ethiopia, activists and witnesses say nearly 100 people were killed by security forces cracking down on anti-government protests over the weekend. The protests began late last year over a government plan to lease a forest to private foreign developers. Ethiopia's authoritarian government is a key U.S. ally in East Africa.


2016 Ethiopian protests - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



What is behind Ethiopia's wave of protests?

What is behind Ethiopia's wave of protests? - BBC News

  • 8 August 2016
  • From the section Africa
Image copyright Reuters
Image caption Oromo protesters took to the streets of the capital, Addis Ababa, on Saturday
Ethiopia's government normally keeps a tight grip on the country but has been unable to prevent a wave of protests in recent months. There has not been anything on this scale in the last 25 years.

They began in the Oromia region last November but have now sprung up in the Amhara region - the homelands of the country's two biggest ethnic groups.

Activists say dozens of people were killed in Oromia, as security forces clashed with the demonstrators, along with seven in Amhara, although the Oromia deaths have not been confirmed.

In response to the protests, the government shut down the internet for two days.

Why now?
There has not been a specific trigger and what we are seeing is an accumulation of years of frustration from ethnic groups who say they have been marginalised by the government.

Protesters in the Amhara region - from the Welkait community - first took to the streets of the city of Gondar in July over a land issue.

New York-based Human Rights Watch says that more than 400 people have been killed in clashes with the security forces in Oromia, although the government disputes this figure.

So what is behind this?
Image caption Funerals have been held in the Amhara region for some of those killed in Sunday's protest there
The Oromos, who make up around a third of the population, have long complained that they have been excluded from the country's political process and the economic development which has seen the capital, Addis Ababa transformed in recent years.

The recent protests were initially over a plan to expand the boundaries of Addis Ababa into the Oromia region.

That plan was dropped, but the demonstrations exposed some underlying issues and protests continued with the latest round taking place on Saturday in many places in Oromia and the capital, Addis Ababa.

At the root of the recent demonstrations in Amhara is a request by representatives from the Welkait Amhara Identity Committee that their land, which is currently administered by the Tigray regional state, be moved into the neighbouring Amhara region.

The Welkait committee says community members identify themselves as ethnic Amharas and say they no longer want to be ruled by Tigrayans.

Amharas used to form the country's elite and the language, Amharic, remains the most widely spoken in the country.

Ethiopia's ethnic make-up
  • Oromo - 34.4%
  • Amhara - 27%
  • Somali - 6.2%
  • Tigray - 6.1%
  • Sidama - 4%
  • Gurage - 2.5%
  • Others - 19.8%
Source: CIA World Factbook estimates from 2007

Is there a connection between the protest movements?
Observers say that Ethiopia's governing coalition is dominated by the party from the small Tigray region (TPLF), that led the guerrilla war against the military regime of Colonel Mengistu Haile Mariam. Some see both sets of protests as a way of criticising the country's government.

There is no formal connection between the Amhara and Oromia demonstrations but at last week's protest in Gondar, banners could be seen expressing solidarity with people from the Oromia region.

Oromo activists referred to the demonstrations in Amhara in their Facebook post calling for Saturday's protests, but highlighted the fact that they thought the protesters there had been treated more leniently.
 

Yehuda

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Mozambican entrepreneurs aim to produce sugar in Angola

AUGUST 11TH, 2016
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The Angolan government will support a sugar production project that Mozambican entrepreneurs and their Angolan partners plan to implement in Uíge province, Industry Minister Bernarda Martins said in Luanda.

In comments after a Wednesday meeting with Mozambican Industry and Trade Minister Oldemiro Baloi, Martins said that the project in question was being studied, given that “Angola does not produce enough sugar to supply the country.”

Regarding a memorandum of understanding for bilateral cooperation in the industrial sector, she stressed that Angola would benefit “from Mozambique’s experience, specifically in institutional terms and in quality, support for SMEs and training.”

Cited by Angop news agency, Martins said the level of trade between the two countries was very low. She highlighted that under the signed memorandum of understanding steps would be taken to reverse the current situation.

“We’ve been talking to private sector entrepreneurs from the two countries and there are Mozambican companies interested in investing in Angola as well as Angolan entrepreneurs interested in developing industries in Mozambique, above all for the supply of raw materials such as clinker for cement production,” she added. (Macauhub/AO/MZ)

Mozambican entrepreneurs aim to produce sugar in Angola
 

Yehuda

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Ghana currently producing excess power - GRIDCo

Source: Ghana | Akosua Asiedua Akuffo | Patricia.akuffo@myjoyonline.com
Date: 15-08-2016 Time: 02:08:18:pm

2999621748510_7638100291757.jpg


The Chief Executive of the Ghana Grid Company has hinted of a temporary suspension of the load-shedding exercise in the country since July 29, 2016.

This, William Amuna attributes to the country's production of an extra 110 megawatts of power.

A shortfall in power supply resulted in unannounced power cuts in the country in June and July this year.

Many experts urged the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) to declare load-shedding but the government refused and insisted that the problem was for a short period and that it will be addressed in due course.

The situation stabilized few weeks ago and the CEO of GRIDCo said the power tranmission company is now able to meet demand which is about 1800 megawatts.

“Asogli is not working now and if it comes on-stream, it means we will have more in excess,” Mr Amuna indicated in an interview with Joy News’ Beatrice Adu.

Meanwhile, there has been a major oil find in the Tweneboah Enyera Ntome (TEN) Field which is expected to boost the energy sector in the country.

Joy Business is learning TEN is expected to pour its first oil this week.

The field has a 25-year life span and production capacity of about 80,000 barrels of oil daily.

It is initially expected to produce an average of 23,000 barrels daily before ramped up over time.

Questions have however been raised about the economic dividends the deal could yield to Ghana.

The Chief Executive of the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation, Alex Mould explained to Joy Business, Ghana will get a fair deal.

“Jubilee was our first field so every single petroleum deal that has been signed thereafter, there has been an improvement in the initial interest and then we also have a participation interest...,” he indicated.

Joy Business’ George Wiafe reported the Chief Executive of Tallow Oil Ghana, as saying the TEN Field will add a significant contribution to the power situation twelve months after producing its first commercial oil production.

According to the CEO, George Darko the company is trying to engage government to shorten the twelve months period.

Ghana currently producing excess power - GRIDCo
 

Lucky_Lefty

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^ What's the word on Julius Malema's party
Was rumored to be meeting with ANC to join forces to offset DA gains in historical ANC strongholds. Don't know how true but it was floating oit there for awhile. Wouldn't know. I'm in Mozambique for a minute
 

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South Africa’s Coming Two-Party System

Recent local elections show the bleak future of South African politics: two centrist parties and no left alternative.


by Sean Jacobs & Benjamin Fogel
zuma.jpg

Jacob Zuma in Soweto, South Africa in 2011. Nigel Sibanda / Flickr

  • 561
Our new issue, “Rank and File,” is out now. To celebrate its release, new subscriptions are discounted.

South African president Jacob Zuma often boasts that the African National Congress (ANC) “will rule until Jesus comes back.” Voters have consistently given it clear majorities in national, provincial, and local elections since 1994, when South Africa first made the transition to democracy. A certain level of hubris may have been inevitable.

But last week’s local elections shattered the party’s complacency: its share of the national vote dipped below 60 percent for the first time, shaving off some 8 percent of the ANC’s support since the last local election.

As a result, the party lost two key metropolitan areas — Nelson Mandela Bay (Port Elizabeth) and Tshwane (Pretoria) — to theDemocratic Alliance (DA), the center-right opposition party. A close race with the DA in Johannesburg — the country’s largest city and economic capital — was another shock.

Currently, who will govern Tshwane and Johannesburg depends on coalition-brokering between the ANC, the DA, and, crucially, theEconomic Freedom Fighters (EFF), a smaller, more radical black-nationalist movement.

In response to the results, social media exploded with black humor and schadenfreude: as one meme had it, “Jesus is back, walking in Nelson Mandela Bay. He will visit Tshwane and Johannesburg next.”

Unfortunately, the election did not signal the second coming — but it did reflect a profound rightward turn in South African politics, and the absence of any left alternative to the ANC.

Talk Left, Walk Right
The ANC was never fully a left party. Historically, it consisted of African elites who appealed to British colonial authorities for recognition and lacked a mass base until the 1950s. It only found itself on the Left by default, after aligning with the South African Communist Party (SACP) and later the powerful trade union movement that emerged in the seventies and eighties.

The ANC was split between pro-business nationalist leaders, leftists from the SACP, and the trade union movement. As a result, it formulated a soft social-democratic program in the 1994 elections, ensuring labor’s support.

This leftish platform never translated into actual policy implementation. It was abandoned shortly after 1994 as the party embraced neoliberal policies under the Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki governments.

The Growth, Employment, and Redistribution (GEAR) policies did create a small welfare state, but also privatized the economy and worked to attract international investments. The ANC marginalized its left-wing members and only activated the unions for voter turnout, ignoring their policy suggestions.

President Thabo Mbeki was particularly hostile to his party’s progressives. This, in combination with his pro-business policies, denial of the HIV crisis, and paranoid-autocratic style of governance, prompted an alliance of the unionists, SACP members, and other forces within the ANC to replace him with Zuma.

They portrayed Zuma as a man of the Left, a populist who would decisively break with Mbeki’s neoliberalism. Their Faustian pact, however, resulted in nothing short of the destruction of the ANC’s left wing, as their candidate proved to be an authoritarian Zulu traditionalist — more concerned with rent-seeking than policy.

The promised left turn never came, and the SACP and allied unions expended whatever political capital they had defending Zuma from scandal after scandal.

Following this tact, the Communist Party effectively declined into a mere extension of the state — functioning as the attack dogs and cheerleaders of a degenerating political class. More recently, the SACP seems to have finally turned against Zuma, after years of unquestioning support, but it is likely too late for it to renew itself.

Within the ANC, the degeneration of the party’s left has also harmed its electoral changes. In 2013, the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (NUMSA) officially split from the ANC. Soon after, itwas expelled from the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU). As a result, the ANC is no longer able to rely on what allies it has left in COSATU to campaign door-to-door.

Further damaging its election prospects, the ANC’s ranks are mostly composed of careerist yes-men who trade on loyalty from local factions. Its most effective organizers from the Youth League — like Julius Malema and Floyd Shivambu — left the party for the EFF.

On top of this all, the government has been rocked by a deepening economic crisis. Unemployment stands at 26.2 percent (unofficially closer to 40 percent), the economy is not predicted to grow at all this year, and what’s left of manufacturing industry is on its last legs.

So far, the ANC has shown itself incapable of tackling a crisis that has produced the highest inequality rate in the world. Instead the party is paralyzed, and has turned to religious appeals, further neoliberalization, and strongman tactics to try to stay in power.

Divine Right
Zuma’s Christian invocation wasn’t for rhetorical effect: it reflects a growing coalition with religion across South African politics.

In June, an ANC leader inducted four hundred church members into the party with an invocation that “the ANC is God’s own organization,” while another offered land to a church in Soweto in return for votes. Zuma himself is an ordained minister. The ANC’s election rallies increasingly resemble revival meetings.

Evangelical churches also play a key role mobilizing DA voters in the Western Cape, and EFF leaders also highlight their association with Christianity.

But religion has a special place in the ANC mythology. Since Mandela, the party has promoted a messianic narrative characterized by an obsession with divine leadership (which Mandela personified and Zuma currently benefits from) and redemptive politics.
 

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It is therefore ironic that the “swing demographic” of centrist black voters — who either turned away from the ANC or simply skipped the election — trace their opposition to a set of values that combine pro-business, anti-corruption sentiments with prosperity-gospel evangelicalism.

Mostly based in larger towns and cities, this new center promises a depressing future for South African electoral politics as the vote seems to be split between this urban, middle-class base — on whom the ANC can no longer rely — and a rural base still firmly loyal to the “party of liberation.”

Neither of these camps, however, support the social-democratic consensus that ANC used to get elected twenty-two years ago.

Urban voters increasingly support a politics of market solutions, self-help rhetoric, and oppose the limited welfare state, which is often associated with corruption and rural backwardness. This aligns neatly with the growing churches that preach a prosperity gospel appealing to aspirant middle-class South Africans — whose anti-ANC sentiments come primarily from their frustration over corruption, scandals, and service delivery.

While this evangelical center has yet to consolidate itself into an organized movement with coherent demands or platforms, its rise would mirror the remarkable growth of evangelical Christianity as an organized political phenomenon in countries such as Brazil, Mexico, and Nigeria.

In contrast, traditional leaders — who use violence and access to state patronage to get out the vote — mobilize ANC’s reliable rural bloc, which is primarily located in Kwazulu Natal, the only province where the ruling party’s vote grew in this election.

Kwazulu Natal is where violence has been (and is) an inescapable part of political competition. The brutal proxy war between the ANC and the apartheid-government-backed Zulu nationalist Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) in the eighties and nineties killed over twenty thousand people.

Under Zuma — who plays up his Zulu identity — the ANC has won over the nationalists and warlords previously aligned with the IFP. But this has transformed the Kwazulu Natal ANC into the IFP’s political successor.

Political violence has again reared its ugly head in the region, as a number of activists have been murdered and battles between local ANC factions have escalated. A record number of politicians were killed before this year’s election. The media and middle classes located in Johannesburg and Cape Town have largely ignored this disturbing trend.

The ANC has blamed low turnout for its disappointing election, but the reliable Independent Electoral Commission reports that nearly 1.6 million more South Africans voted on August 3 than in the last local elections. This means that the ANC suffered a relative loss of over 3.3 million votes in just five years.

Some analysts have attributed this to a high suburban turnout, while working-class (and mainly black) voters in the country’s townships stayed at home. There’s some truth to this, though a portion of black voters defected from the ANC.

For instance, Gauteng — South Africa’s most populous and urbanized province — saw its turnout increase some 3 percent. It appears a substantial number of black voters in both metropolitan areas and in provinces like Mpumalanga, Limpopo, and Northwest voted for the DA or the EFF.

The DA has obviously celebrated the results. But we should be clear: the DA didn’t win; the ANC lost. One of the main features of this election was that neither party offered any transformative program or coherent policy agenda.

The ANC relied on its total control of the public broadcaster, the SABC, and on the vast sums of money it used to hold poorly attended rallies complete with celebrities and DJs. One estimate of the ANC’s total budget was $73 million. These events pathetically imitated American political conventions.

The DA firmly believes that South Africa’s political system should imitate the American model. Mmusi Maimane, the party’s leader,likes to compare himself to Barack Obama.

They chose to focus on big-name candidates, to trumpet their supposedly miraculous achievements governing Cape Town — the country’s murder capital and one of the most unequal and dangerous cities in the world — and to claim to be the authentic representative of Mandela’s legacy.

The DA mayoral candidate in Johannesburg, businessman Herman Mashaba — a millionaire libertarian whose fortune came from a hair-product empire called “Black Like Me” — used his pull-yourself-up-by-the-bootstraps backstory to attract voters. He campaigned on privatizing everything possible and expressing a deep admiration for ex-London mayor Boris Johnson.

The EFF is certainly more progressive than either the ANC or the DA, but its ideology ranges from evangelical Christian posturing to calls for socialist revolution.

Just as the ANC built a cult of personality around Zuma, so has the EFF created one around ex–Youth League leader Julius Malema. Also like the ANC, the EFF has virtually no internal democracy.

The EFF did see its vote share improve by a few points this election, but the upsurge in their numbers projected by some in the media never materialized. Instead the EFF was only able to peel votes off in key areas and municipalities that are strongly anti-ANC.

For instance, the party’s best showing was in Rustenburg, which contains Marikana, the site of an August 2012 police massacre of thirty-four striking platinum miners followed by dozens of political assassinations. The locals suffer from severe unemployment and lack of service delivery. This turned them against the mafia-like ANC establishment, which has aligned itself with traditional leaders and big mining companies.

The EFF might appeal to voters more as a protest party than a party of governance. While they certainly provide the only real left program on offer, their noisy brand of performance politics does not translate into a party that voters want to run their municipality.

Malema admitted as much, declaring that the EFF had not received a mandate to govern, despite growing from 6 percent to 8 percent of the total vote share.

Although it made only small gains, the EFF finds itself thrust into the role of kingmaker, holding a marginal, but decisive, share of the vote in Tshwane and Johannesburg. The idea of the radical, black nationalist EFF aligning itself with the DA — the party often associated with South Africa’s parochial brand of white liberalism — is simultaneously intriguing and absurd.

The EFF must decide what currency will be traded in return for their support — a decision that will most likely further entrench corruption into the political fabric of the nation. It is unclear how the instability, rent-seeking, and accommodations that tend to accompany coalition governments will contribute to the EFF’s agenda of fundamentally reordering the social and economic context of these cities and towns.

Ultimately, the ANC’s poor performance should be traced to the Zuma administration’s scandals and the hubris of a party that believes it is entitled to the vote of all black South Africans. For example, in Tshwane, the ANC shunned local candidates and shuttled in a former government minister whose constituency lives in another province. Predictably, the local ANC did not support her and staged violent protests against the nomination that shut that down the capital for several days.

More troublingly, the ANC has a poor record as an opposition party. Despite the DA’s spotty record in Cape Town and the Western Cape province — just look at sanitation, affordable housing, racism, policing, and corruption for evidence — the regional ANC kneecapped its own agenda by indulging in internal squabbles and driving into the ground local authorities where they had control through corruption and lack of delivery.

It remains to be seen if the ANC can undertake the kind of strategic introspection necessary to renew itself. So far, its response to the election has been a combination of paranoid accusations — the general secretary blamed disloyal voters — infighting, and denial, which suggests that the party lacks ideas, new leaders, or anything beyond their sense of entitlement to power.

The Missing Left
Even more depressing than the ANC’s decline is the realization that a left project is out of reach in South Africa. Outside the EFF, not a single high profile left-wing candidate or party ran. The only other showing by a leftist party was in Nelson Mandela Bay, where a candidate aligned with NUMSA’s United Front secured a seat.

It is becoming very hard to identify a formation or set of organizations worthy of being dubbed “the Left” in South Africa. The once-mighty trade union movement has fractured, trapped in a sea of political intrigue and corrupt backroom dealings with the ruling party — which resulted in its justification of police violence against workers — or weakened by the dire consequences of economic stagnation and deindustrialization.

No vibrant array of small organizations, social movements, and other civil society organizations exist to draw on for a new left formation. Whatever remains of the socialist projects persists in only the memories of old trade unionists and ex-SACP members.

The surges in student militancy in 2015 have so far not translated into any gains for the Left among young, middle-class South Africans. The main outlines of that movement have been more attracted to the 1970s black nationalism of marginal parties like the Pan-Africanist Congress (which has little traction among the mass of South Africans) than anything more radical and have privileged the struggles of students at elite universities over broader concerns.

The most promising route for socialist revival in South Africa seems to have hit a wall, as well. When NUMSA turned its back on the ANC in 2013, declaring a new path forward for the Left through the formation of a “United Front” of social movements, communities, and workers, it inspired hope.

But its leadership largely comes from South Africa’s numerous left-leaning NGOs, who have failed to connect with workers or communities in struggle.

Instead, they’ve used their limited resources inexplicably on budget justice campaigns and an attempt to ally with South Africa’s largely white middle class through anti-corruption protests. The#ZUMAMUSTFALL protests last year only managed to alienate the United Front from working-class, black South Africans.

Anti-corruption politics of this type represent a political dead end for the Left. The Brazilian constitutional coup earlier this year demonstrates how these politics almost always translate into a type of reactionary moralism that portrays corruption as the product of bad leaders, not as a structural feature of capital accumulation.

The ANC has completely eroded what was a mass, mainstream left project in South Africa that focused on transforming the country’s economy through mobilizing the black working class. It’s telling that the first post-election protest was held in Mandela’s home village, Qunu, and that it involved ANC members picketing their own organization over who should represent them on the local town council.

With a void on the Left, it seems likely that, in the long run, the ANC’s rivals for power will consist of a strong, black, center-right group. The DA will evolve and gain support from the media, middle-class voters across racial lines, and business, eventually growing to almost equal the size of the ANC.

But what they offer voters won’t be much different: both parties depend on draining ideology and meaning from South African politics. The more boring — or even carnivalesque — meaningless, and fake politics are, the better.

In this coming two-party system, elections will become about “character,” piety, and patronage. “Regular changes in incumbency” as the two trade power will be deemed as progress by the “international community.”

In a way, South African politics will become depressingly normal, and the possibility of a left alternative will move further away than ever.

South Africa’s Coming Two-Party System | Jacobin
 

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Niger is world's youngest country and has highest fertility rate

1024x576_341540.jpg


Ismail Akwei with U.S. CENSUS BUREAU | 17/08 - 18:42

NIGER


Niger has been ranked the world’s youngest country with half of its population under the age of 15.3, the 2016 International Data Base of the U.S. Census Bureau says.

The country with a population of a little over 18 million, also has the highest fertility rate with 6.6 children per woman.

The update published on Wednesday revised the data of 14 countries and areas including Cuba, Egypt, Eritrea, Gaza Strip, Haiti, Namibia, South Korea and the United States.

The revision incorporates new data from censuses, surveys, and administrative records and new analyses.

Monaco is the oldest country with half of its population over the age of 52.4. Singapore has the lowest total fertility rate of only 0.82 children per woman.

The International Data Base is a series of estimates and projections that provide a consistent set of demographic indicators, including population size and growth for more than 200 countries and areas.

Niger is world's youngest country and has highest fertility rate
 

Yehuda

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How Kenya is pulling a fast one on Uganda’s oil

By Mbatau wa Ngai
Updated Sat, August 20th 2016 at 00:17 GMT +3

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Cabinet last week approved the decision to transport up to 4000 barrels of oil per day by road and rail to Mombasa for refining at the Kenya Petroleum Refineries. [PHOTO: FILE/STANDARD]

The expected refining of Kenya’s crude oil at Kenya Oil Refineries is a game changer for several reasons.

First, the fact that Yoweri Museveni Government has until now been unable to persuade the UK-based oil and gas exploration company, Tullow Oil, to build a refinery in Uganda might leave the country with no alternative but to import its refined products from Kenya.

There is reason to believe that market forces might force other regional countries, including Tanzania to import their refined petroleum products from Kenya. Tanzania and Uganda’s celebrations at having pulled a fast one on Kenya by building a crude oil pipeline to Tanga port could well prove no more than a pyrrhic victory.

Uganda’s case to build its own refinery is further undermined by the realisation that production costs of Kenya’s crude are so much lower that the country can afford to undercut Kampala’s bid to export its oil to other regional countries such as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Rwanda and Burundi. The planned expansion of Kenya Pipeline to these countries would strength Kenya’s hand at the bargaining table.

Second, refining its own oil shields the country from the effects of the volatile oil market whose capriciousness has almost bankrupted some oil producing countries in Africa and South America. This means the country’s industries—including its vulnerable national carrier, Kenya Airways-- can make predictable business plans that would no longer be torpedoed by fluctuations in the global oil prices.

Admittedly, some of these industries might need more than cheaper oil prices to compete regionally and internationally. This is where the Government should consider stepping into the picture beyond building infrastructure. The billions of shillings the country is expected to save from the reduction in the import bill as oil imports account for about 14 per cent of the cost of all imports, could be channeled into refinancing restructured development institutions.

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These include Industrial and Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) and Industrial Development Bank (IDB). Their restructuring would ensure that they energetically pursue their renewed mandates which would be to put the country on the map of industrialised countries within a specified period by financing and mentoring local entrepreneurs.

The entry point could be dusting off the plans drawn up soon after independence whose aim was to substitute many imports that can be manufactured locally at competitive costs.

In the light of the expected local refining of crude oil, a case could be made for the country to go full blast and build a petro-chemical industry. The production of all-things plastic would save the country billions of shillings currently paying for imports. The importation of tarmac could also be reduced considerably if not entirely eliminated.

Third, the local refining of crude oil signals the Government’s determination to add-value to the exports of the country’s raw products. This should be followed up by local processing of agricultural produce. In its quest to encourage value-addition to agricultural produce, the Government should turn a deaf ear to critics. And they will be many considering the large number of foreign firms and their local agents who have grown fat exploiting primary producers.

There is a growing body of evidence that suggests these primary producers would be more than willing to contribute their share in the building of factories that would add value to their produce. The growing number of tea and coffee factories that farmers are building are a clear testament to their willingness to go the extra mile as long as the promise is higher earnings.

The only fly in the ointment is that unscrupulous individuals—and they always lurk in the background—at times take advantage of the credulous farmers and sell them machinery that is all too often redundant and make promises they cannot keep.

This is particularly evident in the coffee sub-sector whose periodic rip-offs have forced the Government to regularly intervene by writing off loans.

Perhaps, the Government might be persuaded to more closely monitor the whole agricultural sector even as it encourages value addition to ensure the farmers are not, as has happened so many times before, left holding the bag. Or is that too much to ask? Time will tell.

—nmbatau@gmail.com

How Kenya is pulling a fast one on Uganda’s oil
 

Yehuda

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Tanzania: TBL to Invest Sh27 Billion in Agriculture Sector

22 AUGUST 2016

Mwanza — Tanzania Breweries Ltd (TBL) Group is planning to invest Sh27 billion in agriculture sector in the current financial year as a way to facilitate industrialization drive in the country.

The money will enable barley, grapes, sorghum and maize farmers through providing them with seeds, extension services as well as facilitating them with access to credit, according to the company's managing director Mr Roberto Jarrin who was presenting an overview of his company's contribution to the country's economy. The firm's financial year starts April 1. He said the firm contributed Sh384 billion to the government revenue in 2015.

"We remain committed to making a significant contribution to the Tanzanian economy. We remain steadfast in our resolve to support all the industries that are linked to our business. That is, from the farmers in the field to the consumers who buy our products," said Mr Jarrin.

He also mentioned banks that provide support to TBL's partners in the agriculture sector as CRDB and the National Microfinance Bank (NMB).

Tanzania: TBL to Invest Sh27 Billion in Agriculture Sector
 
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