New administration under Samia Suluhu gives hope after 5 years of hopelessness

New administration under Samia Suluhu gives hope after 5 years of hopelessness

Tutatoa takwimu za asilimia ya uzalishaji wa umeme kutoka kwenye mabwawa ya maji siku za usoni ili kuhodhi hoja yetu watu waanze kufikiri siyo kujidhalilisha wao wenyewe mitandaoni na kuongelea mambo kama wajuaji wakati hawajui lolote lile!
 
Huu ndiyo ukweli wetu!

Hatuna mahakama bali hiki ni kitengo ndani ya CCM
 

Attachments

  • PSX_20230925_124615.jpg
    PSX_20230925_124615.jpg
    94.1 KB · Views: 1
Financing climate goals may add misery to poor nations because they are too overdependent on foreign help which has neocolonial strings attached.

Why Bretton Woods are the lending institutions? Ask yourself if not to pile more debt over our creaking shoulders in the name of addressing global warming


Sending these funds as equity rather than debt would reduce the risk for poorer nations, tying foreign investors to renewable-energy projects over the long term, finance officials say. But that means more risk for institutional investors, an unwelcome prospect for them. Big money managers such as BlackRock worry about sudden policy changes in a developing nation that could wipe out their investment. Legal systems lack the independence to stand up to a government that might seek to expropriate a project.
 

Attachments

  • PSX_20230926_003134.jpg
    PSX_20230926_003134.jpg
    159.1 KB · Views: 1
“We’re asking a handful of developing countries to go through a green transformation that is faster than anyone has done before and faster than it might be natural for their economies to do,” said Avinash Persaud, an economist who is the climate envoy of Barbados. “So they’re going to have to import some capital—not all, maybe not even half, but a significant amount.”
 
Sending these funds as equity rather than debt would reduce the risk for poorer nations, tying foreign investors to renewable-energy projects over the long term, finance officials say. But that means more risk for institutional investors, an unwelcome prospect for them. Big money managers such as BlackRock worry about sudden policy changes in a developing nation that could wipe out their investment. Legal systems lack the independence to stand up to a government that might seek to expropriate a project.
 
The volatility of developing world currencies is a major problem. Renewable-energy projects in developing nations often have to raise debt denominated in dollars or euros to attract foreign investors. Foreign shareholders of these projects often negotiate deals with local utility companies to be paid in foreign currency.
 
But large obligations in foreign currencies have been one the key ingredients of financial crises of the postwar era. An abrupt devaluation of a country’s currency would stress its entire energy sector, officials and economists say. A decision by the Federal Reserve or other rich-world central banks to raise rates could send poorer nations’ borrowing costs soaring—as happened since the Fed started raising rates last year.
 
“International capital flows are often feast or famine,” Persaud said. “This long-term foreign-exchange guarantee mechanism may help to reduce some of the currency volatility.”
 
Developing-world officials and economists say that this proposal and a handful of others under discussion would unlock more equity financing for green energy. That would help distribute the risk away from poorer economies and avoid inflating the debt burdens of countries that would struggle to repay.
 
But if there was any doubt about the extent of the ‘danger’ Nkrumah was referring to, it is the treachery of Kenya’s Ruto against Africa that is making it abundantly clear. This man is perhaps the biggest political swindle of Africa’s recent history, a neocolonial puppet masquerading as a pan-African to advance imperial interests across Africa. How is that so? One might have asked a year ago, but not today. It is now as clear as day, that Ruto is so deeply wired into the Imperial Western architecture, and is at the forefront of advancing Western interests in Africa.
 
Tunakushauri nenda polisi ukaandikishe maelezo vinginevyo tutadhani unatafuta kiki hadi pale kitakapoumana
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_20230925_222159_Parallel Space.jpg
    Screenshot_20230925_222159_Parallel Space.jpg
    141.7 KB · Views: 1
Tanzanian economy managed by incompetent minds!

Even poorer Mozambique is now our energy refuge!


How low can we go before we say enough is enough!
 

Attachments

  • IMG-20230926-WA0034.jpg
    IMG-20230926-WA0034.jpg
    34.5 KB · Views: 1
The power struggle within the CDM signify a much wider undertow pummelling long held political ambition of unseating CCM from her perch held since independence.
 
For many years we have warned Mbowe is the weakest link because he loves money above anything else
 
And, when the highest bidder comes knocking he is too happy to surrender
 
There are many areas of conflict roiling the Chadema vortex but we constrain ourselves to three critical variables: subsidy, theft and presidential flag bearer.
 
While Mbowe was a key kingpin to dismiss Covid-19, he was persuaded to receive government subsidy flowing from illegal earnings as far as they were concerned
 
Back
Top Bottom