Search Results for: Mozambique
10 results out of 132 results found for 'Mozambique'.
Climate change spreads infectious diseases worldwide

The UK is by no means an exception to this trend. A recent study from the University of Plymouth concluded that the most dangerous climate-change linked threat to Britain’s environmental health could be vector borne diseases (such as Leishmaniasis – carried by the sand fly) which could spread to new areas because of warming temperatures.…
MOZAMBIQUE LOOKS TO EXPORT LNG
BY GEORGE STONE
MOZAMBIQUE expects to start exporting liquefied natural gas (LNG) in 2018 after major gas finds by Milan-based Eni and American firm Anadarko Petroleum in the waters of the Rovuma basin in the north of the country. The finds mean Mozambique is on course to be a leading LNG supplier to Asia, particularly Japan and rival the region’s leading gas exporters Nigeria and Angola.…
CLIMATE CHANGE INCREASES SHIFTS INFECTIOUS DISEASES WORLDWIDE
BY ALYSHAH HASHAM
AS negotiators at the recent United Nations climate change conference in Cancun wrapped up their work, one problem concentrating minds enough to secure a partial deal was the spread of disease on the coat-tails of global warming. Infectious diseases are spreading to regions where they were previously absent, driven by warmer temperatures and changing rainfall patterns.…
CLIMATE CHANGE INCREASES SHIFTS INFECTIOUS DISEASES WORLDWIDE
BY ALYSHAH HASHAM
AS negotiators at the recent United Nations climate change conference in Cancun wrapped up their work, one problem concentrating minds enough to secure a partial deal was the spread of disease on the coat-tails of global warming. Infectious diseases are spreading to regions where they were previously absent, driven by warmer temperatures and changing rainfall patterns.…
TRADE BENEFITS LOOM FOR TOBACCO SECTOR IF WORLD TRADE ORGANISATION GRASPS DOHA NETTLE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
SIGNIFICANT benefits to tobacco and tobacco product companies will present themselves if a deal on the long-running Doha Development Round is clinched next year at the World Trade Organisation (WTO). And some diplomats at the WTO’s base in Geneva are asking if agreement is not reached next year, whether the current negotiations will be scrapped.…
CONFERENCE SPREADS OIL AND GAS GOOD PRACTICE TO AFRICA
BY KEITH NUTHALL
AN OIL, Gas and Mining Linkages Africa Roundtable conference organised by the International Finance Corporation, of the World Bank, has allowed around 50 international hydrocarbon industry (and mining) companies to offer good practice to African clients and suppliers.…
EUROPE PLOTS NEW BID TO SOLVE HIV VACCINE CHALLENGE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union (EU) is pumping Euro 11.9 million into a new international effort to create a vaccine that destroys HIV completely in patients. The five year (2010-2015) CUT’HIV project is being coordinated by the Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, and also includes Finland’s FIT Biotech Oy Ltd, Germany’s Geneart AG, and other university researchers from Britain, Germany, Spain, Peru and Mozambique.…
SOUTHERN AFRICAN KNITTING INDUSTRY STRUGGLES - ALTHOUGH MAURITIUS IS BRIGHT SPOT
BY ALISON MOODIE
THE SOUTHERN African knitwear industry has taken a serious knock over the past decade. Tough Chinese competition, a global recession and as regards the regional powerhouse South Africa – an overvalued currency – these are just some of its problems.…
BIOFUELS PRODUCTION INCREASES IN EASTERN AFRICA
BY WACHIRA KIGOTHO
EAST Africa is developing as an important source of biofuels and biofuel feedstock, with governments keen to attract foreign direct investment for this potentially strategic rural development option.
Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Sudan, and Tanzania are countries where foreign companies are competing to acquire land for biofuel projects.…
AGOA PROGRAMME KEEPS AFRICAN TEXTILES AFLOAT 10 YEARS LATER
BY ALISON MOODIE
SUB-SAHARAN Africa is still struggling to make its way in the global textile and clothing industry – but companies are convinced that without the USA’s African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) the outlook would be bleaker. One decade ago this May, this tariff preference programme was launched by the US: it gives qualifying African countries zero tariff exports for the huge US market – and statistics show that the sub-Saharan textile and clothing industry has benefited.…