Angola and Sao Tome and Principe begin talks

Luanda – Angola and Sao Tome and Principe are due Monday to start official talks aimed at boosting bilateral cooperation in several areas.

To that end, Foreign Minister, Téte António, arrived in the city of Príncipe Monday to take part in the “Eighth Session of the São Tomé and Príncipe/Angola Bilateral Commission.

According to the programme, the two countries will sign several legal instruments with a view to strengthening and extending their cooperation in several areas of common interest.

Angola and Sao Tome and Principe formalized their cooperation in February 1978, through the General Agreement on Friendship and Cooperation and the Joint Bilateral Commission, created in January 1980.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Head of State arrives in Luanda

Luanda – The President of the Republic, João Lourenço, arrived, this Sunday, in Luanda, after having participated, in Malabo, Equatorial Guinea, in two extraordinary summits of the African Union (AU).

At the 4 de Fevereiro International Airport, the Head of State was welcomed by the Vice President of the Republic, Bornito de Sousa, among other personalities.

President Joao Lourenço chaired the working sessions of the two summits which addressed humanitarian issues in Africa and terrorism and unconstitutional changes of Government.

In Malabo, the Angolan Head of State met his Liberian counterpart, George Weah, to strengthen cooperation between the two countries.

At the closing session, the Angolan statesman was awarded the title of Champion of Peace and Reconciliation in Africa by the AU.

The title is the fruit of the efforts that Angola has been undertaking, mainly through the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR).

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Le sommet mondial pour la réduction des risques de catastrophe débute à Bali, en Indonésie, afin de renforcer la résilience mondiale face aux catastrophes

BADUNG, Indonésie, 28 mai 2022 /PRNewswire/ — L’Indonésie et le Bureau des Nations Unies pour la réduction des risques de catastrophes (UNDRR) accueillent la septième session de la Plate-forme mondiale pour la réduction des risques de catastrophes (PM2022) à Bali, en Indonésie, du 23 au 28 mai 2022, comme l’a indiqué le ministère des Communications et de l’Informatique de la République d’Indonésie.

President Joko Widodo (right) with UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed

Il s’agit de la première plateforme mondiale depuis le début de la pandémie de COVID-19. C’est également la première fois qu’elle se tient dans la région asiatique.

La Plateforme mondiale est le principal forum mondial multipartite qui évalue et examine les progrès réalisés dans la mise en œuvre du Cadre de Sendai pour la réduction des risques de catastrophe (2015-2030).

L’événement de cette année est un forum important car il donne l’occasion à tous les pays de faire le point sur les progrès accomplis et d’accélérer la mise en œuvre du cadre de Sendai dans le contexte de la pandémie de COVID-19.

Dans son discours d’ouverture, S.E. le président indonésien Joko Widodo a rappelé la nécessité pour toutes les nations de faire face aux risques de catastrophe sans négliger le développement durable. « Aujourd’hui, à la Plateforme mondiale pour la réduction des risques de catastrophe, l’Indonésie propose au monde un concept de résilience durable comme solution pour atténuer toutes les formes de catastrophes, y compris les pandémies », a déclaré le président Widodo.

La vice-secrétaire générale des Nations unies, S.E. Amina J. Mohammed, a souligné l’urgence d’agir rapidement pour renforcer la résilience mondiale aux catastrophes. Le rapport phare de l’ONU sur l’évaluation mondiale, qui a été publié le mois dernier, a tiré la sonnette d’alarme sur le fait que l’humanité était dans une « spirale d’autodestruction », avec le potentiel d’atteindre 560, ou une moyenne de 1,5 catastrophe de moyenne ou grande échelle par jour, d’ici 2030 sans une révision radicale de la façon dont le risque est géré et financé. Ce constat est particulièrement pertinent pour la région Asie-Pacifique, où les catastrophes coûtent en moyenne 1,6 % du PIB par an, soit plus que dans toute autre partie du monde.

« Au cours des trois prochains jours, nous aurons une occasion unique d’examiner les meilleures options politiques pour passer du risque à la résilience et de prendre des mesures importantes pour que la reprise après le COVID-19 nous remette sur la voie d’un avenir sûr et durable », a déclaré Amina Mohammed.

Deux dialogues de haut niveau sur l’accélération de la mise en œuvre mondiale du cadre de Sendai et des objectifs de développement durable ainsi qu’une table ronde ministérielle sur le défi posé par l’urgence climatique figure parmi les principaux points à l’ordre du jour de la première journée de la plate-forme mondiale.

Environ 7 000 délégués représentant des organisations gouvernementales et non gouvernementales de plus de 185 pays membres et observateurs participent à cette conférence.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1827371/antarafoto_pembukaaan_gpdrr_250522_wpa_4.jpg

Pandemic Has Lingering Toll on Smaller National Spelling Bee

Dev Shah’s dream of returning to the Scripps National Spelling Bee ended in a soccer stadium, of all places.

On a cool, windy February day with occasional rain showers, Dev spent five miserable hours spelling outdoors at Exploria Stadium, the home of Major League Soccer’s Orlando City club, ultimately finishing fourth in a regional bee that he was forced to compete in for the first time.

“My regional was hard enough to win when it wasn’t encompassing Orlando,” said Dev, a 13-year-old seventh grader. “The fact that it’s basically representing a third of Florida, that was stressful, and I started studying extra, but it didn’t work out in the end, unfortunately.”

While the National Spelling Bee is back — fully in person at its usual venue outside Washington for the first time since 2019 — Dev’s experiences illustrate how the pandemic continues to affect kids who’ve spent years preparing to compete for spelling’s top prize. Schools and sponsors have dropped out of the bee pipeline, regions have been consolidated and the bee has fewer than half the spellers it had three years ago.

“There is a sense that COVID marks a significant break between the bee that used to be and the spelling bee that is now,” said Grace Walters, a former speller who coached the 2018 champion and three of the eight 2019 co-champs. “And I don’t know if that’s a bad thing or not, but I’m trying to keep a positive attitude about it.”

Another huge change: Cincinnati-based Scripps broke with longtime partner ESPN and will broadcast the competition on its own networks, ION and Bounce. Actor and literacy advocate LeVar Burton was hired as host and will interview spellers and their families backstage, and last year’s champion, Zaila Avant-garde, will be part of the broadcast as an analyst.

Scripps had 245 regional sponsors in 2020 for the bee that was ultimately canceled because of the pandemic. That number is down to 198 for this year’s bee, which runs from Tuesday to Thursday.

“Many of our sponsors who are still with us, even, have expressed the concerns and the challenges brought forth by the pandemic,” said J. Michael Durnil, the bee’s executive director. “Some of our sponsors realigned what their missions were and maybe the bee didn’t fit. Maybe they lost person[al] power and had to rethink their core business and the bee was not part of it. There’s been a great reset in a lot of areas.”

Newspapers historically sponsored most regional bees, but as the print media business cratered, the sponsors became a hodgepodge of companies, nonprofits and government entities. Polk County Tourism and Sports Marketing, which sponsored the regional bee that Dev won in 2020 and ’21, was among those that dropped out. That forced Dev to travel two hours from his home in Seminole, Florida, to Orlando, where the open-air competition dragged on as judges shivered.

“They even switched to vocabulary for like 20 minutes and they realized that we kept getting them right, so they switched back to spelling,” he said. “You know, you start losing your concentration after like five hours. You start losing your stamina.”

Pro sports franchises have filled the sponsor void. The NFL’s Carolina Panthers hosts a massive regional bee that sends four spellers from North Carolina and two from South Carolina. The Tennessee Titans do the same for most of their state. And Scripps ran five of its own regional bees for children who lived in places with no sponsor.

Scripps is encouraging sponsors of larger regions to send multiple children to the bee. The price tag for sponsoring one speller is $3,900. For two, it’s $7,500, and for three, it’s $10,000.

The drop in sponsors isn’t the main reason the bee is smaller this year. The 2018 and 2019 bees had a wild-card program designed as an alternative pathway to the bee for spellers in tough regions. Karthik Nemmani, a student of Walters’ and a wild card from the talent-rich Dallas area, won the bee in the program’s first year.

But in 2019, more than half the 562 bee spellers were wild cards, many of them younger children who weren’t competitive at the national level. Scripps had planned to scale back the program in 2020. Then the bee’s longtime executive director departed and her replacement, Durnil, scrapped the wild cards altogether.

“It got dinged as a pay-for-play kind of opportunity, which is at odds with the mission and the heart of the bee, quite frankly,” Durnil said.

That leaves this year’s bee with 234 spellers, all of whom qualified on merit. There are plenty of familiar faces. Akash Vukoti, a 13-year-old from San Angelo, Texas, who initially qualified as a first grader, is competing for the fifth time. Fourteen-year-old Maya Jadhav of Fitchburg, Wisconsin, and 14-year-old Harini Logan of San Antonio, Texas, are each making their fourth appearances.

Spellers age out of the competition when they reach ninth grade, meaning those who qualified as sixth graders in 2019 never got to experience another “Bee Week.” Only the top 11 spellers competed in person last year in a mostly empty arena at Walt Disney World.

“It’s a privilege, I think, for all the eighth graders in the 2022 bee to get to have that opportunity that the last two years, we didn’t have,” Harini said. “Getting to experience that as our finale, we’re very, very fortunate for that.”

Source: Voice of America

Weather’s Unwanted Guest: Nasty La Nina Keeps Popping up

Something weird is up with La Nina, the natural but potent weather event linked to more drought and wildfires in the western United States and more Atlantic hurricanes. It’s becoming the nation’s unwanted weather guest and meteorologists said the U.S. Western states megadrought won’t go away until La Nina does.

The current double-dip La Nina set a record for strength last month and is forecast to likely be around for a rare but not quite unprecedented third straight winter. And it’s not just this one. Scientists are noticing that in the past 25 years the world seems to be getting more La Ninas than it used to and that is just the opposite of what their best computer model simulations say should be happening with human-caused climate change.

“They (La Ninas) don’t know when to leave,” said Michelle L’Heureux, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration forecast office for La Nina and its more famous flip side, El Nino.

An Associated Press statistical analysis of winter La Ninas show that they used to happen about 28% of the time from 1950 to 1999, but in the past 25 winters, they’ve been brewing nearly half the time. There’s a small chance that this effect could be random, but if the La Nina sticks around this winter, as forecast, that would push the trend over the statistically significant line, which is key in science, said L’Heureux. Her own analysis shows that La Nina-like conditions are occurring more often in the last 40 years. Other new studies are showing similar patterns.

What’s bothering many scientists is that their go-to climate simulation models that tend to get conditions right over the rest of the globe predict more El Ninos, not La Ninas, and that’s causing contention in the climate community about what to believe, according to Columbia University climate scientist Richard Seager and MIT hurricane scientist Kerry Emanuel.

What Seager and other scientists said is happening is that the eastern equatorial Atlantic is not warming as fast as the western equatorial Atlantic or even the rest of the world with climate change. And it’s not the amount of warming that matters but the difference between the west and east. The more the difference, the more likely a La Nina, the less the difference, the more likely an El Nino. Scientists speculate it could be related to another natural cycle, called the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, or it could be caused by human-caused climate change or both.

“At this point we just don’t know,” L’Heureux said. “Scientists are watching and I know, are actively studying. But it’s really important because of regional conditions. We need to get this right.”

La Nina is a natural and cyclical cooling of parts of the equatorial Pacific that changes weather patterns worldwide, as opposed to El Nino’s warming. Often leading to more Atlantic hurricanes, less rain and more wildfires in the West and agricultural losses in the middle of the country, studies have shown La Nina is more expensive to the United States than the El Nino. Together El Nino, La Nina and the neutral condition are called ENSO, which stands for El Nino Southern Oscillation, and they have one of the largest natural effects on climate, at times augmenting and other times dampening the big effects of human-caused climate change from the burning of coal, oil and gas, scientists said.

“They really have a very, very strong” effect, said research scientist Azhar Ehsan, who heads Columbia University’s El Nino/La Nina forecasting. “So a third consecutive La Nina is not at all a welcome thing.”

He said the dangerous heat in India and Pakistan this month and in April is connected to La Nina.

The current La Nina formed in the late summer of 2020 when the Atlantic set a record for the number of named storms. It strengthened in the winter when the U.S. western states drought worsened and in the early summer of 2021 it weakened enough that NOAA said conditions were neutral. But that pause only lasted a few months and by early fall 2021 La Nina was back, making it a double dip.

Normally second years of La Nina tend to be weaker, but in April this La Nina surprised meteorologists by setting a record for intensity in April, which is based on sea surface temperatures, Ehsan said.

“These are very impressive values for April,” L’Heureux said. Still, because La Ninas historically weaken over summer and there are slight signs that this one may be easing a bit, there’s the small but increasing chance that this La Nina could warm just enough to be considered neutral in late summer.

La Nina has its biggest effect in the winter and that’s when it is a problem for the West because it’s the rainy season that is supposed to recharge area reservoirs. But the western states are in a 22-year megadrought, about the same time period of increasing La Nina frequency.

Three factors — ENSO, climate change and randomness — are biggest when it comes to the drought, which is itself a huge trigger for massive wildfires, said UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain. Without climate change, La Nina and bad luck could have made the drought the worst in 300 years but with climate change it’s the worst in at least 1,200 years, said UCLA climate hydrologist Park Williams.

La Nina “is a pretty important player; it may be the dominant player,” said Swain, who has a blog on western weather. “It could be responsible for one-third, maybe one-half of the given conditions if it is pronounced enough.”

“It’s much less likely that the Southwest (U.S.) will see at least even a partial recovery from the megadrought during La Nina,” Swain said.

La Nina “amps up your Atlantic storms” but decreases them in the Pacific, said Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach.

It’s all about winds 10 to 12 kilometers above the water surface. One of the key factors in storm development is whether there is wind shear, which are changes in wind from high to low elevations. Wind shear can decapitate or tip over hurricanes, making them hard to strengthen and at times even stick around. Wind shear can also let dry air into hurricanes that chokes them.

When there’s an El Nino, there’s lots of Atlantic wind shear and it’s hard for hurricanes to get going. But La Nina means little wind shear in the Atlantic, making it easier for storms to intensify and do it quickly, said University of Albany hurricane researcher Kristen Corbosiero.

“That’s a really huge factor,” Corbosiero said.

“Whatever is the cause, the increasing incidence of La Ninas may be behind the increasing hurricanes,” MIT’s Emanuel said.

Some areas like eastern Australia and the arid Sahel region of Africa do better with more rain during La Nina. India and Pakistan, even though they get extra spring heat, also receive more needed rain in La Ninas, Columbia’s Ehsan said.

A 1999 economic study found that drought from La Nina cost United States agriculture between $2.2 billion to $6.5 billion, which is far more than the $1.5 billion cost of El Nino. A neutral ENSO is best for agriculture.

Columbia’s Seager said even though there may be some chance and some natural cycles behind the changes in La Nina, because there’s likely a climate change factor he thinks there will probably be more of them.

Source: Voice of America

Oil tax revenue set at Kz 2.6 billion

Luanda – Oil tax revenues totalled 2.6 billion kwanzas, from January to April of this year, with the export of 138.5 million barrels of oil (bbs).

The rise in oil barrel prices on the international market continues to have a positive influence on the country’s accounts.

Compared to the same period of 2021 (January to April), there was an increase in revenues of 1.2 trillion kwanzas, during which more barrels of crude oil were exported, totalling 141.6 million barrels, but at an average sale price of US$57.56, well below the figures recorded this year.

From January to April 2021, oil tax revenues totalled 1.4 trillion kwanzas.

In the four months of this year, 2022, the barrel of oil was sold at an average price of 94.89 US dollars, according to consolidated data from the Special Taxation Directorate (DTE) published in the official website of the Ministry of Finance, to which ANGOP had access.

The revenue of the national concessionaire alone was 1.4 billion kwanzas, of the total amount collected, based on the value declared by it after deduction of 5%.

Of the 25 blocks operated, Block 17 was the one that performed best when it exported 44.8 million barrels, followed by Block 32, with 18.6 million, Block 15, with 17.2 million, Block 15/06, with 13.3 million, Block 0 A Cabinda, with 11.5 million and Block 18, with 8.6 million barrels.

The sources of revenue, according to the tax returns submitted to the General Tax Administration (AGT) by the oil companies, including the National Concessionaire, were the Tax on Oil Income (IRP), on Oil Production (IPP) and on Oil Transition (ITP).

Oil production in Angola still remains above 1.1 million barrels per day.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

UAE leads Angola’s Top 10 foreign investment

Luanda – The United Arab Emirates leads and is currently the Top 10 in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in Angola, with US$351.7 million.

Of the 48 countries that invest in Angola registered by the Agency for Private Investment and Promotion of Exports and Imports (AIPEX), totaling USD 2.7 billion, with 234 projects, followed by the Top 10 list comes the United Kingdom, with 283.1 million US dollars, with 8 projects under execution, from 2018 to March 2022.

According to the AIPEX report to which ANGOP had access, China remains in third position, with an investment of US$225 million, with 24 projects undergoing, Germany in fourth position with US$93.6 million, with four projects.

The list also includes France with an investment of USD 36.8 million, with 3 projects, followed by Belgium with 24.5 million, with 2 projects, Hong Kong with USD 20.5 million and two projects, Portugal with USD 19.2 million with 45 products, Eritrea with 12 million and Switzerland with 10 million dollars, appearing on the bottom of the Top 10.

By sector of activity, projects with foreign direct investment are linked to mining, financial activity, telecommunications, civil construction, education and health, tourism, fishing, agriculture, commerce and industry.

The investments and the implementation of the projects allowed the creation of more than 34.005 jobs for nationals and 2.800 for expatriates.

From 2018 to March 2022, Angola summed US$5.5 billion in domestic, mixed and foreign capital investments, with a total of 469 projects.

Of this total, the country has an internal investment of around 32.36% (USD1.7 billion), 48.72% foreign capital and 18.89% mixed.

Research has shown that the prospects of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) for global FDI in 2022 are positive, and it is unlikely that the growth rate recorded in 2021 will be repeated.

This United Nations body believes that international funding for projects in infrastructure sectors will continue to drive this growth.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

ECCAS highlights importance of Malabo summit

Malabo – The president of the Commission of the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS), Gilberto Veríssimo, on Saturday in Malabo, Equatorial Guinea, highlighted the importance of the Summit on Terrorism and Unconstitutional Change of Governments in Africa.

In statements to the press, the Angolan diplomat at the service of ECCAS said that the event will allow African leaders to find the reasons of the political and military instability in several regions of the continent.

Gilberto Veríssimo expressed concern over the increase in cases of coups d’état in Africa and terrorist actions, which hinder the continent’s socio-economic development.

“The Heads of State and Government are concerned to know why this situation has worsened and to find joint solutions,” he said.

He said that, in many cases, the conflicts arise because the populations do not feel their problems are solved and always seek a way to express dissatisfaction, hence the unconstitutional change of regimes, associated with terrorism.

The ambassador praised the efforts made by the Angolan authorities in the search for peace and stability in the continent.

At the summit that ended this Saturday, the President of the Republic, João Lourenço, was designated “champion for peace and reconciliation.

As for ECCAS, it is a community created in Libreville, Gabon, in December 1981, and became operational in 1985.

The common aim of the community is to promote cooperation and self-sustainable development in the region.

Members of ECCAS are Angola, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Sao Tome and Principe and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Former soldiers benefit from self-employment kits

Cazenga – At least fifty six former soldiers in the municipality of Cazenga, received, this Saturday, business creation kits, composed of 52 two-wheel motorcycles and four “Food Yeto” stoves.

The delivery of the kits is part of the promotion of self-employment to about 300 people, within the scope of the Local Development and Poverty Fight Program of the Municipal Administration of Cazenga.

The vice-governor of Luanda for the Political and Social sector, Dionísio da Fonseca, said that one of the main tools of combating poverty is the consolidation of the process of reintegration of former militaries, whereas 862 having already been assisted in the province out of the 1.224 planned in the 2017/2022 five-year period.

For the Cazenga administrator, Tomás Bica, the delivery of the kits responds to the concern of all needs for them to participate in economic and social development.

The beneficiaries António Pedro Dombele and Maria Garcia, on behalf of the others, expressed their joy, considering it a “welcome gesture”, for helping to promote self-employment and overcome financial issues, to improve families living quality.

The delivery of the goods was witnessed by the representative of the Institute for Social Reintegration of Former Soldiers (IRSEM), Alcide da Costa, traditional authorities, community members, among others.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Covid-19: Cunene carries out massive vaccination in rural areas

Ondjiva – The Cunene Provincial Health Office will promote, from next week, a massive vaccination campaign of the rural population against Covid-19, to bring closer the expected target number of 729,883 people.

So far, in the province, of the number to be reached, 346,335 people have already taken the 1st, 2nd and booster dose of the AstraZeneca, Sputnik, Sinopharm and Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

Since the outbreak of the disease in the country, Cunene has registered 1,846 cases, of which 1,790 recovered and 56 deaths.

The information was provided, this Saturday, to ANGOP, by the supervisor of the Expanded Vaccination Program in Cunene, Serafina Ndapandula, having mentioned, on the occasion, that they will reinforce the mobile teams in the rural areas of the six municipalities.

She explained that it is intended to immunize the majority of people during the campaign that will have the support of the World Health Organization, World Vision and the Program of the Population Service International (PSI).

Source: Angola Press News Agency