ANGOLA PREDICTS 1.6 PERCENT OIL +GAS GROWTH BY 2022

Luanda – Angolan government expects a real growth of 1.6% for the oil sector, including gas, while for the non-oil sector the projections points to an increase of around 3.1% by 2022

The production in 2020 was deemed negative standing at 8.3%, and this year, so far, it is 6.2%.

The oil sector, including oil and gas production, has been experiencing successive declines in recent years.

According to the Report on the Budget 22, the sector is expected to reach an average daily oil production of 1 147 9 barrels, against the current 1 140 4 barrels.

After all, the annual oil+gas production could reach 553.2 million barrels.

The Executive foresees that the levels of uncertainty characteristic of the oil sector will remain, thus forecasting the reference price of oil at USD 59 per barrel, against the current USD 39 of the 2021 State Budget.

This price, according to the Report on Budget 22, is considered conservative, as the Executive is striving to improve the country’s macro-fiscal programming.

As for the next few years, some uncertainties still revolve around the price of this commodity.

This uncertainty is confirmed by the divergence of opinions on the trajectory of the price of a barrel of oil in the international market for 2022.

The US Energy Information Administration (EIA-US) forecast, in October of this year, 2021, the average price of a barrel in 2022 to be USD 71.91, Goldman Sachs at USD 80, Batclay’s Bank at USD 77.

The forecast of the OECD-Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, until October this year, hovered at USD 65, while for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) the expectation was USD 63.04.

Morgan Stanley appears with the forecast made in the month of September of the oil price, for 2022, to be fixed at USD 85, and the World Bank at USD 60, according to the projection made in the month of April of this year, 2021 .

For diamonds, within the framework of the macroeconomic assumptions that were at the basis of the elaboration of the State Budget 22, a production of 10.5000 carats is expected, at an average price of 184.6 per carat, against 9.1 million carats in 2021.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

MPLA MILITANTS TOLD TO GET READY FOR POLITICAL SHOWDOWN

Moçâmedes – The MPLA militants were today, Friday, instructed to be prepared and strengthened for the political struggle, taking advantage of the XII Provincial Conference for collective reflection on the challenges that lie ahead.

The challenge came from the first outgoing MPLA secretary in Namibe, Archer Mangueira, at the opening of the XII Ordinary Provincial Conference on Balance and Renewal of Mandates.

He said that this is the central axis of the programmatic plan that is proposed to the new direction of the party in the province, which today will be supported by the 549 delegates to this political event.

For this reason, the politician called the militants’ attention to reinforce the consultation work with the communities, in order to find specific solutions to the problems they face.

On the other hand, he considered the Provincial Conference as the culmination of the revitalization process of the party in Namibe, through rejuvenation and equal participation between men and women”.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

US AMBASSADOR HIGHLIGHTS CONSOLIDATION TIES WITH ANGOLA

Luanda – Outgoing US ambassador to Angola Nina Maria Fite Friday in Luanda considered “very positive” the engagement of the governments of both countries in consolidating cooperation relations in various fields.

The US diplomat stressed the two countries’ commitment after an audience granted by the Angolan Head of State João Lourenço, ahead of her four-year term in Angola.

She said that Angola and US had a good engagement in the President João Lourenço’s term in the health fields, with stress to the programmes related to the fight against malaria, HIV/AIDS and Covid-19”.

As for the fight against the Covid-19 pandemic, Nina Faite said that her country has so far donated 3.4 million doses of vaccine, assuring that the US is available to continue cooperating with Angola in this area.

Regarding economic cooperation, she said that the two countries have implemented partnerships to fight corruption in Angola.

“I take the image of Angola as a country that is growing and we desire its growth in the future, with a view to achieving social and economic development”, she underlined.

Nina Faite said that Angola has been carrying out serious and tough measures in its economy through the package with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and, for this reason, she believes in satisfactory results in the coming years.

Regarding Angola’s contribution to the search for peace and political stability in Central Africa, with particular emphasis on the Central African Republic (CAR), the ambassador praised the efforts of the Angolan statesman, as president of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR ).

Angola -US relations

Angola and the United States established formal diplomatic relations in 1993.

The energy sector is at the center of economic relations between both countries.

The American Ex-ImBank has a credit line to support US exports to Angola.

The United States-Angola Chamber of Commerce is dedicated to promoting trade and investment between the two countries.

Fight against corruption

The US supports Angola in fighting corruption through various initiatives, including the Treasury Department’s programme, launched in March 2019, to improve the country’s ability to implement the anti-money laundering and terrorist financing regime (AML /CFT).

Economic cooperation

US companies have significant investments in Angola, especially in the energy sector. ExxonMobil, Halliburton, Baker Hughes, Caterpillar, Chevron, Cummins, TechnipFMC and Tidewater are all represented in the country.

In 2019, a consortium led by Chevron announced plans to invest more than $2 billion in exploring new offshore natural gas fields and increasing production from existing fields.

The US Ex–ImBank signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Angola in April 2019 to explore guarantees of up to US$4 billion in support of US exports to the country.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

NSAKU NVUNDA REMEMBERED AS FORERUNNER IN RELATIONS WITH HOLY SEE

Mbanza Kongo- The minister of State for the Social Sector Carolina Cerqueira Friday in Mbanza Kongo, northern Zaire province, described Dom Emanuel António Nsaku Nvunda as the forerunner of the relations between Angola and the Vatican State.

Carolina Cerqueira remembered Nsaku Nvunda, who died at the age of 33, as a noble man, politician, diplomat and intellectual of great wisdom.

Speaking at the inauguration ceremony of the bust of this diplomat, the official said that “Negrita” is the architect of the current good relations between the Angolan government and the Catholic Church, forged over five centuries of evangelisation and sealed with the agreement signed on July 8, 1997.

She recalled that this prince of Kongo was buried with state honours in the Basilica of St. Mary Major, in Rome, by order of Pope Paul IV.

First African ambassador to the south of the Sahara at the Vatican, representing the Kingdom of Kongo, “Negrita” arrived in Rome in 1608, already dying, as a result of various adventures experienced during the trip by caravel that lasted four years.

According to the minister, the relationship with the Holy See is characterised by mutual respect, understanding, cordiality and cooperation in various fields, as part of agreement signed recently with the Vatican State.

Carolina Cerqueira highlighted the inauguration of the bust in Mbanza Kongo, stressing that it also serves to honour this historical figure from Angola and Africa, aiming to recover his memory.

“This ceremony represents a national tribute to one of the most outstanding historical figures of the Angolan Nation, with a view to recovering his memory”, she stressed.

This project, she said, responds to a concern of the Angolan head of State, João Lourenço, aimed to honour the unavoidable figure of Dom António Manuel “Negrita” so that his name is perpetuated in the historic city that saw him born precisely 446 years ago.

The minister stressed that the tribute to Nsaku Nvunda is the recognition of cultural diversity in the context of Angola, which is based on elements forged over generations and that give meaning to the collective identity, from whose shared memories the Angolan nation rises.

On the occasion, she appealed to the Angolan youth to get to know and deepen their knowledge of historical facts represented in places of memory in this city that she considered necessary for the maintenance of the country’s history and contemporary reality.

To her, the fact that Mbanza Kongo is the center of the expansion of Christianity in Central and West Africa and a reference within the framework of international diplomacy, the bust adds a value that will arouse the interest of tourists and scholars.

Dom António Manuel Nsaku Nvunda, as she said, was also the second non-European ambassador to the Vatican.

The ceremony was witnessed by the provincial governor, Pedro Makita Armando Júlia, the minister of Culture, Tourism and Environment, Filipe Nzau, the bishop of the diocese of Mbanza Kongo, Dom Afonso Vicente Kiazikua, the secretary of State for Culture, Maria da Piedade de Jesus.

The bust which honours Dom Nsaku Nvunda was erected in the square named after him, in the center of Mbanza Kongo, capital of the former Kingdom of Kongo and current Cultural Heritage of Humanity, since 8 July 2017.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

ANGOLA-COTE D’IVOIRE: COVID-19 PANDEMIC DISRUPTS PROJECTS

Luanda – The outgoing ambassador of Côte d’Ivoire to Angola Desiré Bosson Assamai said Friday in Luanda that the Covid-19 pandemic affected the implementation of several projects between the countries.

This was during an audience granted by the President of the Republic, João Lourenço, aimed to bid farewell to the head of State at the end of his mission.

The diplomat said that the pandemic “halted everything”, as there were several projects awaiting their implementation.

He mentioned, among others, the resumption of the air connection between the two countries and another in the field of agriculture, with well-advanced studies.

“The projects are still in the pipeline”, said the ambassador, who considered the friendly relations and cooperation between the countries excellent.

Angola and Côte d’Ivoire maintain relations in the political, diplomatic and cultural fields.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

COVID-19: OVER SIX MILLION PEOPLE VACCINATED IN ANGOLA

Luanda – At least 6.9 million people is the number of citizen vaccinated, up to Thursday, in Angola, said this Friday, the National Coordinator of the Expanded Vaccination Plan (PAV), Alda de Sousa.

The coordinator, who was speaking on the second day of the workshop for journalists on routine vaccination and Covid-19 vaccination, about “vaccines against Covid-19 in use in the country”, said that 5.0 million people had already been vaccinated with the first dose, 1.7 million with the second dose and 177.700 with the single dose.

Alda Sousa explained that 42 percent of people vaccinated are women and 58 percent are men.

“We can see that men are joining more the vaccination posts, taking advantage of the opportunity to appeal to women to do the same”, she stressed.

The goal, she continued, is to reach 15.7 million citizens, corresponding to 33.42 percent of the target audience.

Angola is using vaccines from AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Sputnik, Sinopharm and Johnson & Johnson.

In Luanda, vaccination is taking place at the Osvaldo Serra Van-Dúnem Police Science Institute, in the Special Economic Zone (ZEE), at the Paz Flor Tourist Centre, at the Mutu-ya-Kevela Primary School, at the Youth House, at the post. KK 5000, at the Ulengo Shopping Centre, at the University Campus, at the Port of Luanda, at Sequele, at Zango V and at Cidadela Desportiva Complex.

Health authorities expect to vaccinate 54 percent of the population, a total of 16.8 million individuals over 16 years of age.

In the country, 175 posts were created that administer the vaccines of AstraZeneca, sinopharm, Sptunik and Johnson& Johnson.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

COVID-19: ANGOLA REPORTS 903 RECOVERIES, 29 NEW INFECTIONS

Luanda – Angola reported 29 new confirmed cases of Covid-19 on Friday. The country also recorded one more coronavirus-related death and 903 recoveries in the last 24 hours.

As many as 873 recoveries occurred in Luanda, 17 in Benguela, 6 in Cuanza Sul, 5 in Huíla, 1 in Cabinda and 1 in Huambo.

The health authorities announced 14 new Covid-19 infections in the provinces of Luanda, 8 in Benguela, 4 in Cabinda, 1 in Cuanza Sul, 1 in Huambo and 1 in Huíla.

The new cases involves 17 men and 12 women, aged 2 – 64 years old.

The death occurred in the province of Huambo, according to the Covid-19 daily update report.

The country has a global tally of 64,612 infections, 1,719 fatalities, 57,493 recoveries and 5,400 active patients.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

Senior UNICEF Official in Zimbabwe Assesses Funded Projects

Belinda Kaziwisi of Mount Darwin, Zimbabwe, about 200 kilometers north of Harare, is among the Zimbabwean mothers seeing the benefits that have grown from money provided by UNICEF.

“What I see has changed for the better is that from when I got pregnant until up to the delivery of my child, I didn’t pay anything,” Kaziwisi said, her healthy baby in her arms. “When I delivered, I was given soap, cotton and other things for free. It was all nice compared with what used to happen before.”

With funding from UNICEF, the Zimbabwe government has hired health workers who encourage pregnant mothers in rural villages to seek assistance from the country’s health institutions to avoid complications.

“We encourage pregnant mothers to come to clinics,” said Letty Chindundu, one of the health workers. “We tell them: When you get to the third month of your pregnancy, please go to the clinic. Health workers there will tell you what to do. The journey to delivery of your baby becomes easy. Even your baby will be taken care of while in the tummy, since there are now so many diseases. If they do not come to clinic, the baby may be delivered with ailments. That’s how we encourage them to come to clinic — when they [become] pregnant.”

Dr. Tajudeen Oyewale, the UNICEF representative in Zimbabwe, said that having health workers in rural villages and funding the country’s health sector are paying off.

“[According to] the latest results of the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey, Zimbabwe has successfully halved the maternal mortality ratio in the last 10 years, and this is a combination of different efforts [by] everyone,” Oyewale said. “The challenges are real because the world is evolving. We did not [know] COVID was going to come. What is great about what I have seen is innovation. The problem comes, our people innovate.”

Dr. Aboubacar Kampo, UNICEF’s director of health programs, was a junior official in Zimbabwe for the U.N. agency when it launched the Health Transition Fund, a multidonor pooled fund to support the country’s barely functioning health sector, about a decade ago.

This week, Kampo has been in Zimbabwe to assess whether the fund has changed Zimbabwe’s maternal, newborn and child health systems. He said the fund was bearing fruit.

“I am very pleased with the progress which Zimbabwe has made in terms of providing health care to the entire population,” Kampo said. “It is not perfect. But I think Zimbabwe can be proud of the achievement made. I think you have fully functional health systems, in particular primary health care. What I have seen is an integrated system.”

Kampo, a Mali national, said Zimbabwe now has a fully functional health system in primary health care, a sharp contrast to what the nation had nearly a decade ago.

Source: Voice of America

Why US Consumers Pay Such High Prices for Prescription Drugs

Congressional Democrats this week proposed an addition to U.S. President Joe Biden’s climate and social spending legislation that would allow Medicare, the federal government’s health care program for older Americans, to negotiate with drugmakers over the cost of certain prescription medications.

U.S. consumers pay higher prices for prescription medications than almost any of their peers in the developed world, a fact that generations of politicians and advocates have struggled in vain to change. If passed, the proposal working its way through Congress would make a dent, though a relatively small one, in that long-standing problem.

The plan being discussed would give Medicare officials the ability to negotiate pricing on a sliver of the thousands of prescription medications on the market in the United States, beginning with about 10 drugs and capped at 20. Liberal members of Congress at first had hoped to grant Medicare authority to negotiate the prices of up to 250 costly drugs every year.

Though small, the number of drugs that would be covered by the proposal represents a disproportionate amount of the annual “spend” on drugs by Medicare patients.

A study by the Kaiser Family Foundation released this year determined that the 10 top-selling drugs covered under Medicare Part D accounted for 16% of net total spending in 2019. The top 50 drugs — representing just 8.5% of all drugs covered under the program — accounted for 80% of spending.

The top 10 drugs, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation include “three cancer medications, four diabetes medications, two anticoagulants and one rheumatoid arthritis treatment.”

Confusing system

Unlike many countries outside the U.S., where the government is able to negotiate drug prices and bring down the cost for a single national health care system, the landscape in the U.S. is highly fragmented. Most Americans with health insurance are covered by policies issued by for-profit companies in the private sector.

Americans 65 years and older are eligible for Medicare, which takes the place of a private insurer, but with some critical differences. For many years, Medicare did not offer prescription drug coverage, forcing Medicare patients to pay for medications out of pocket or seek third-party insurance coverage for their medications.

In 2003, Congress created Medicare Part D, under which private insurers offered medication coverage that met minimum requirements established by the federal government. While that program reduced costs for many seniors, cost-sharing provisions and design flaws mean that many recipients continue to face financially crippling bills for medication. A key reason is that each insurance provider must negotiate prices with drug companies individually, rather than using the bargaining power of the entire Medicare population to insist on lower costs.

‘Subsidizing R&D for the world’

For years, advocates for change have pointed out that drug companies set prices in the U.S. far above those in other countries in which they sell the same drugs. A study by the Rand Corporation this year comparing the U.S. with 32 other countries found that drugs cost on average 256% more in the U.S.

“American consumers are subsidizing the R&D for the world,” said Lovisa Gustafsson, vice president of the Controlling Health Care Costs program at the Commonwealth Fund, a think tank in Washington, D.C.

Compounding the problem is that Americans also shoulder a much greater share of the cost for their prescription medications.

“Patients in the U.S. face far higher cost-sharing than in a lot of other countries. So, just because they have insurance doesn’t mean that patients can actually afford the drugs that they need currently,” Gustafsson said. “There’s survey after survey showing that 20% to 25% of Americans can’t afford the drugs they’re prescribed by their physician, or split pills, or don’t get the prescription filled, because they just can’t afford it. And that’s even when they have insurance.”

Putting a lid on costs

An important element of the proposal before Congress is that it would place an annual cap of $2,000 on the co-payments that Medicare patients can be charged for their medications.

The prospect of a cap on out-of-pocket costs was well-received by many calling for reforms, such as AARP, a large advocacy group for older Americans.

“There’s no greater issue affecting the pocketbooks of seniors on Medicare than the ever-increasing costs of prescription drugs,” AARP CEO Jo Ann Jenkins said in a statement. “For decades, seniors have been at the mercy of Big Pharma. Allowing Medicare to finally negotiate drug prices is a big win for seniors. Preventing prices from rising faster than inflation and adding a hard out-of-pocket cap to Part D will provide real relief for seniors with the highest drug costs.”

Drug firms unhappy

PhRMA, a powerful trade group representing the pharmaceuticals industry, reacted unhappily to news of the proposal.

“If passed, it will upend the same innovative ecosystem that brought us lifesaving vaccines and therapies to combat COVID-19,” PhRMA President and CEO Stephen J. Ubl said in a statement. “Under the guise of ‘negotiation,’ it gives the government the power to dictate how much a medicine is worth and leaves many patients facing a future with less access to medicines and fewer new treatments.”

“While we’re pleased to see changes to Medicare that cap what seniors pay out of pocket for prescription drugs, the proposal lets insurers and middlemen like pharmacy benefit managers off the hook when it comes to lowering costs for patients at the pharmacy counter,” Ubl continued. “It threatens innovation and makes a broken health care system even worse.”

Industry claims exaggerated?

Numerous supporters of allowing the government to negotiate on drug prices claim that the industry’s insistence that it will stymie innovation is exaggerated.

One piece of evidence they point to is a study released by the Congressional Budget Office in August. The CBO created a model in which pharmaceutical companies were faced with the following scenario: A policy is put in place that reduces the return on their most profitable drugs by 15% to 25%.

The agency estimated that the impact would be a reduction of the number of new drugs coming onto the market by only one-half of 1% over the first 10 years of the new policy. That would increase to as much as an 8% reduction in the first three decades of the program.

Source: Voice of America

GOVERNOR CALLS FOR STRICT MANAGEMENT OF TREASURY

Huambo – The governor of Huambo province, Lotti Nolika, appealed, this Thursday, to the need for public officials to be guided by rigorous management of public funds and in accordance with the Law of Probity.

Lotti Nolika was speaking during the inauguration of the new administrator of Calenga municipality, Tomás Quessongo Chicunje, and his deputy, Ermelinda Nazaré Paulo Patrício.

The governor said it was important that the public administrators cultivate cohesion and unity in the institutions, as well as the responsibility to fully comply with the guidelines issued by the government.

She said that the focus of public management should be based, essentially, on solving the communities’ problems, focusing on economic and social growth.

The administrator of Calenga, Tomás Quessongo Chicunje, said he would work on the resolution of the social problems of the population, through the supply of drinking water and electricity, as well as encouraging agricultural production, livestock and fishing.

With an extension of 389.23 square kilometres, the Calenga commune has an estimated population of 52,118 inhabitants, with an average of 8,424 families, spread across 53 villages.

Source: Angola Press News Agency