European Union to lift oil sanctions against Libya

With Gaddafi removed from power in Libya, the European Union will lift sanctions against Libya.

European Union diplomats say sanctions against several Libyan ports, oil companies and more than a dozen other entities could be lifted as soon as Friday.

The EU’s 27 members reached a preliminary agreement Wednesday in an effort to help Libya’s National Transitional Council resume normal economic activity.  Diplomats say they expect a final agreement on Thursday.

France, meanwhile, has asked the sanctions committee of the United Nations Security Council to allow Paris to release more than $2 billion of frozen Libyan assets.

The sanctions committee has already approved similar appeals by Britain and the United States, releasing a total of more than $3 billion in seized Libyan assets to address urgent humanitarian needs.

The NTC (National Transition Council) will be able to raise revenue through the resumed selling of oil on international markets as it pivots from being an insurgency led coalition to a governing one that is held accountable. The ability to use oil revenue to fund and rebuild will be crucial.

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Germany’s non role in Libya

Here is a video report about previous post on Germany’s role or lack of one in participating with fellow NATO member countries in enforcing the no fly zone over Libya.

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After abstaining from voting for no-fly-zone over Libya, Germany rethinking involvement in Libya

After taking a hard stance in abstaining from a UN Security Council vote on a no-fly zone over Libya, Germany looks set to agree to send troops to Libya in a humanitarian role should the UN request it.

While joining Russia and China in abstaining, Berlin stood alone among Europe’s biggest powers in the vote last month, angering traditional allies France, Britain and the US by stating that it did not want German soldiers to participate in military intervention in Libya.

The German government even ordered its warships away from the North African nation’s coast in an effort to distance its forces from the international intervention that followed the vote.

The decision also caused controversy domestically with former Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer claiming that he felt “ashamed” of the German government’s “failure” to act. Other politicians across the political spectrum made public their fears that Germany had isolated itself internationally by abstaining and breaking ranks with the Western alliance.

It was even suggested by some that the German government wanted to avoid an unpopular military entanglement in the Middle East because of looming state elections, which both Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative alliance and the free-market liberal FDP party, the junior party in the coalition, performed badly in.

However, despite the political wrangling, surveys showed that a majority of the public backed Germany’s pacifist stance on Libya.

Germany will heed humanitarian call

Now, however, it seems that Germany is now ready to allow Bundeswehr boots on Libyan soil should the United Nations require an international humanitarian effort to evacuate refugees and protect aid workers.

“In the last cabinet meeting (on Wednesday) the basic readiness was expressed … that if a request were made to the EU, Germany would live up to its responsibilities,” government spokesman Steffen Seibert told reporters Friday.

The Tagesspiegel newspaper reported Friday that plans were also being discussed to reverse the decision on removing the German navy from the region and sending ships back to Libya to assist the European Union efforts to provide food and aid.

At the start of this month, the EU decided to set up a military mission to back humanitarian aid efforts in Libya, providing the UN requested it to do so within a four-month window. The UN has yet to signal its intent.

“If there was a request from the United Nations, we would naturally not shirk our responsibility,” Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle told a Bundestag debate on Friday.

Westerwelle is expected in Luxembourg on Tuesday to meet with EU foreign ministers to discuss the issue while NATO foreign ministers will travel to Berlin later in the week.

The German government is expected to reiterate its stance that German troops won’t be involved in any aggressive military operations if and when a plan is put before the Bundestag parliament for approval.

Christian Lindner, the general secretary of the FDP, told the Passauer Neue Presse newspaper Thursday: “We are ready to accept our responsibility in the humanitarian consequences of the war but the Bundeswehr will not intervene militarily in Libya.”

Philipp Missfelder, foreign policy spokesman for the parliamentary wing of Merkel’s conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) told the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper that Germany had a moral duty to get involved while, in the same article, his FDP counterpart Rainer Stinner said that Germany’s decision would hopefully end the questions surrounding Germany’s commitment to the NATO alliance.

Germany to re-enter the fold?

“I think the German decision is damage repair essentially,” Ulrike Guerot, head of the Berlin office of the European Council for Foreign Affairs, told Deutsche Welle. “The international isolation and harsh criticism was shocking for Germany.”

“It’s a move to show solidarity with the international community, Germany’s European partners and the transatlantic relationship so the pressure which is responsible for this shift has probably come from the international elites.”

“Germany doesn’t like to get involved militarily but it likes being isolated from the international community on key issues even less,” Dr. Henning Meyer, a German political expert at the Department of Global Governance at the London School of Economics, told Deutsche Welle.

Guerot said that the decision was a good ‘compromise’ internationally but also domestically, adding that the German people would be happy with a ‘humanitarian’ mission as long as there was no military engagement.

“Many people were concerned about German isolation with around 40 percent of Germans polled saying that they wanted Germany to engage or at least to support the UN resolution so I think people are waking up to the fact that humanitarian engagement by Germany would actually be a good thing,” she said. “Additionally it would benefit Germany as it would once again be embedded in international cooperation.”

The u-turn has already provoked an angry reaction from sections of the German opposition with the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the Green Party accusing the government of “flip-flopping” on the issue.

“One gets the feeling, they lack direction and they just toss a coin,” Agnieszka Malczak from the Greens said. “Depending on which way it goes, they make the decision. There is no real foundation, no basis and no common line.”

Meanwhile, during Friday’s Bundestag debate, the SPD’s Michael Groschek asked how Libyans were going to be protected without armed force being required while the Left party’s parliamentary group co-leader Gregor Gysi said it was a contradiction to send armed soldiers into Libya on a peace mission.

“The criticism of the government over Libya has to be seen in the context of the wider attacks the opposition have been mounting,” Meyer said. “There have been a number of u-turns of late, the most high-profile being on nuclear energy, but when it comes to the opposition’s stance on Libya, the SPD or Greens may have handled it better but they would not have done things much differently.”

The FDP’s Lindner rejected claims that the government was reversing its decision, adding that the humanitarian option had always been part of Germany’s stance and had even be announced by Westerwelle before the UN Security Council vote on Libya last month.

The questions, however, on how far protection of civilians by armed Bundeswehr troops may go remained unanswered.

One moment Germany is Europe’s most awkward critic of the air campaign to save Benghazi; the next it is first to put up its hand to volunteer forces, including the despatch of ground troops if necessary, to deliver humanitarian aid to Misrata.  Does this mean that we area about to see the return of German troops to North Africa for the first time since the defeat of Erwin Rommel’s Afrikakorps in the second world war? Possibly.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle left and German Chancellor Angela Merkel right

Germany’s motives behind abstaining from voting to enforce a no-fly-zone over Libya are understandable and credible and obviously rooted in Germany’s historical experience. However, that can only go so far and  from a strategic point of view, Germany’s abstention was a an unfortunate decision.

The crisis in Libya was unique opportunity that provided the West with a credible stance  for united action and It would have been better if Germany had chosen to be in some fashion part of it, even if not necessarily a direct military participant.

The more united the West is, the shorter the conflict will be. Because obviously Gaddafi and his associates want to prolong the conflict, create a stalemate and in some fashion remain in power. So it’s not irrelevant to the outcome how united the West is and how determined it is. I think if it is determined and if it applies its military efforts with some degree of firmness bearing in mind that the UN resolution permits all necessary actions I think the chances are that we will avoid a protracted conflict.

The only possible outcome that assures security for the Libyan people and their freedom of choice politically is an outcome that does not include Gaddafi or any of his associates as part of the political picture.

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Sweden joins participation in enforcing no-fly-zone over Libya

Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt

Sweden has joined NATO in helping enforcing the no-fly-zone over Libya.  Last week the Swedish parliament, the Riksdag, voted overwhelmingly in favour of Sweden sending JAS Gripen fighter aircraft to Libya to monitor a UN-backed no-fly zone.

The parliament voted through the proposal by a resounding 240 to 18, with five abstentions.

“Sometimes the risk of intervening is less than the risk of not doing so,” said foreign minister Carl Bildt in reference to concerns that the intervention could, in a worse case scenario, harm civilians.

Bildt underlined that Libya and north African countries are neighbors to the EU and what is currently happening there is having a very real impact in the form of refugees arriving in boats on European islands in the Mediterranean.

Bildt called for European solidarity to help EU partners aid the refugees fleeing war.

“Lampedusa is a part of the EU, just like Ven, Sicily and Crete, and as much as Öland and Gotland,” he said.

The vote clears the way for the Swedish air force’s first international deployment in 48 years.

Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt said Tuesday he would put to parliament the proposal of sending eight Swedish-built fighter jets, a transport plane and a reconnaissance plane to Libya, stressing Swedish jets would not be involved in ground strikes.

Sweden’s participation in the mission had received broad political support and the proposal was widely expected to pass.

Swedish Parliament, the Riksdag.

The only parliamentary group opposing the measure was the Sweden Democrats.

The party’s spokesperson Mikael Jansson warned against Swedish involvement ahead of Friday’s vote.

“What right to we have to take sides in a civil war through a one-sided bombardment,” he said predicting a long period of fighting and raised the prospect of clan warfare following a defeat for Muammar Qaddafi.

The Social Democrat foreign policy spokesperson Urban Ahlin meanwhile argued that the decision to support the mission sanctioned by the UN Security Council was an easy one.

“We respond when the UN calls for the protection of civilians, this is a Swedish tradition,” he said.

The Nordic country is not a member of NATO, although it has been in NATO’sPartnership for Peace programme since 1994 and participates in the alliance’sInternational Security Assistance Force (ISAF) force in Afghanistan with some500 troops.

This week all eight Swedish JAS Gripen fighters landed at Italy’s NATO military base in Siciliy and are now under NATO command. Sweden’s role will be limited to enforcing the no-fly zone over Libya and will not involve any ground strikes as demanded by the left-wing opposition.

The Saab JAS 39 Gripen (Griffin) is a lightweight single engine multirole fighter aircraft manufactured by the Swedish aerospace company Saab. Gripen International acts as a prime contracting organisation and is responsible for marketing, selling and supporting the Gripen fighter around the world. The aircraft is in service with the Swedish Air Force, the Czech Air Force, the Hungarian Air Force and the South African Air Force, and has been ordered by the Royal Thai Air Force.

The mission involving some 130 support troops will fly under NATO command and last three months at most.  Sweden would also provide “reconnaissance means” in a form to be decided.

Sweden is not a member of NATO, although it has been in NATO’s Partnership for Peace programme since 1994 and has contributed some 500 troops to the alliance’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) force in Afghanistan.

Sweden also took part in operations in Kosovo. Nevertheless Sweden’s air force has not been involved in action since it took part in a UN-mandated operation in the then Belgian Congo from 1961-63.

The Libyan operation will be the first combat tour for the JAS Gripen 39, produced by the Swedish defence group Saab.

Sweden’s Nordic neighbours Denmark and Norway are already taking part in Libyan air operations.

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European Union puts new sanctions on Ivory Coast’s Gbagbo

The European Union has added new sanctions on Ivory Coast under Laurent Gbagbo’s refusal to leave power.

The international community is adding to the pressure on defiant Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo as he tries to withstand a military assault by opponents.

The European Union on Wednesday banned its members from buying bonds or securities from the Gbagbo government or providing it with loans.

The legislation, passed by the European Union Council, makes exemptions for funds to be used for humanitarian purposes.

The EU previously adopted a travel ban and asset freeze against Mr. Gbagbo and some of his aides. On Wednesday, it added one individual to the list of people subject to those sanctions.

The EU, along with the United Nations, African Union, and West African bloc ECOWAS, has demanded that Gbagbo cede power to rival Alassane Ouattara, who most countries recognize as the winner of last year’s presidential election.

Laurent Gbagbo is being cornered and he has no one to blame but himself.  This whole tragic event could’ve have been avoided if Gbagbo gracefully left power when he lost the Presidential election late last year.  Ivory Coast used to be one of the Jewels of Africa.  Hopefully it will return to its glory days soon.

Last week the United Nations voted to sanction Ivory Coast.

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European Union Navy Task Force Puts Together Pirate Hijacking Surival Guide

The European Naval Force for Somalia has released a helpful brochure in the event that you find yourself captured by Somali pirates. The advice is here. (pdf) Among its many recommendations: 

Be aware that the ransom payment process is very stressful for the pirates and they may be more agitated than normal. Try to avoid contact with the pirates at this time. Confine yourself to established routines and behaviour patterns so as not to attract unnecessary attention on you. It may be some days after payment before you are released. Do not expect to be released immediately….Khat is a common drug used in the Somali region. If the pirates onboard your vessel use this or other drugs, you should be careful to avoid any confrontations whilst they are under the influence of such substances. You should not be tempted to take drugs, other than for legitimate medical conditions, whilst in captivity. The taking of drugs may offer temporary relief, however the negative effects of withdrawal symptoms and increased tension due to cravings could result in unnecessary violence from your captors.

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A new deal between the EU and Cameroon aims to fight illegal logging and help preserve the vast rainforest of Africa’s Congo Basin

 

Engineers of the Cameroonian Ministry of Forestry and Wild Life controlling a timber company in the Ambam region, Oct 2007

 

Cameroon and the European Union have reached a deal on transparency of exported wood products to the Eurozone market.

In the latest step toward fighting illegal logging, the European Union and Cameroon have signed an agreement to ensure shipments of wood products to Europe are licensed.  The deal is aimed at helping to preserve the vast rainforest of Africa’s Congo Basin.

Under the agreement, all timber products shipped to Europe are required by 2012 to carry licenses showing they have been legally harvested.

Cameroon is Africa’s largest exporter of timber products to Europe, and 80 percent of its wood exports head to the European Union.  It also is a member of the countries of the Congo Basin, which holds the world’s second-largest tropical forest, after the Amazon.

In remarks during the signing ceremony in Brussels, European development commissioner Andris Piebalgs outlined the larger issues at stake.  “It goes beyond just trade … it is more about sustainability of the whole planet.  It is a mechanism so comprehensive that I really believe this is a good example for others to follow.  And for us, as consumers, to think in a sustainable way.”

Under the deal, Cameroon will set up a national system to ensure timber production and sales are legal, not only to the European Union, but within domestic and non-European markets as well.

The forests of the Congo Basin are considered critical for biodiversity – and also in the fight against global warming.  Without restrictions, though, the international environmental group WWF says that by 2015, Cameroon and two other Congo Basin countries – the Central African Republic and Congo Brazzaville – risk having their so-called “old growth forests” completely razed in unprotected areas.

Geert Lejeune heads Africa programs at WWF Belgium.  “When you let a company into the forest, a primary forest, very often roads are opened and poaching can go on.  People can start cutting legally and illegally, and so we enter into a pathway of destruction.”

Lejeune praises the agreement between the European Union and Cameroon, but says other Congo Basin countries must reach similar agreements and the deals must ensure Africans living in these regions reap some of the benefits.

This is a place where good trade policy and good environmental policy intersect. Illegal logging depresses timber prices and damages the environment.  This is a unique opportunity for Cameroon  to strengthen cooperation with the European Union to better protect it’s's parks, forests and sensitive habitats from illegal logging.

It also helps to keep local communities who rely on forests for their livelihood locked in a cycle of poverty by reducing the income regional governments have to reinvest in their local economy and infrastructure.

Forest certification is a system of forest inspection and a means of tracking timber and paper through a ‘chain of custody’ – following the raw material through to the finished product.

The certification ensures that consumers know the products have come from forests that are well-managed – meaning they take into account both environmental and social principles and criteria.

Here is the official press release.

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Brussels Hosts High Level Meeting on Space Co-Operation Between European Union and African Union

The European Union and Africa Union held talks about Space co-operation.

The African Space Agency, the Pan-African University Institute on Space Science and the Future of Space Technologies and the Applications on the African continent, were at the center of discussion during the high level dialogue on space holding at the headquarters of the European Union Commissions in Brussels, Belgium.

The African Union Commission (AUC) was represented at this meeting by Mr. Jean-Pierre Ezin, Commissioner for Human Resources, Science and Technologies (HRST).

The dialogue under the chairmanship of the Vice President of the European Commission (EC) responsible for Enterprise and Industry, Mr. Antonio Tajani, took place in the presence of Mrs. Sabine Laruelle, Belgian Minister for Small and Medium size Enterprises (SMES), Self-employed, Agriculture and Sciences Policy. (SMES) and Mr. Jean-Jacques Dardain, Director General of the European Space Agency (ESA), Mr. Lars Prahm, Director-General of the European Organization for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT), amongst others.

Introducing the issue of the African Space Agency, Commissioner Ezin said, there are some lead African Union (AU) Member States such as South Africa, Egypt, Algeria, and Nigeria to mention a few, that have developed their own space related programmes and have proceeded to put up relevant infrastructures to manage these programmes. – “Some have even established their National Space Agencies”, he

Jean-Pierre Ezin

noted.

The Commissioner underscored the need for Africa to embark on an ambitious African Space Programme that addresses the challenges the continent faces in managing its natural resources and sustain its diversity. Adding that, the African Union Commission is proposing to establish an African Space Agency, as a coordinated and integrated singular pan-African platform to champion a well-define Africa’s strategic space programme.

With regard to the Pan-African University (PAU) Institute on Space Science, Commissioner Ezin said, “time has come to develop skills so as to achieve high level training and research throughout Africa and to bridge the technological gap between countries and regions within Africa and between Africa and other continents”. He explained that, consultations are underway to “set up the Space component of the Pan African University in Southern Africa in the coming months,” underlining that a stronger mobilisation of an international organisation or a European country is needed to identify the Lead Thematic Partner for the PAU Institute on Space Science. This Partner, he said, will play a lead role in coordinating partner support, in collaboration with the AUC.

For more information about Africa’s Space ambitions, here is a previous post on the topic.

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European Union Proposes Agriculture Trade Deal With Morocco

The European Union proposes agri-food trade deal with Morocco.

The European Union’s executive arm proposed a new trade deal with Morocco on Thursday, designed to extend duty-free trade in agricultural, food and fisheries goods between the kingdom and the 27-nation bloc.

The agreement — negotiated at the end of 2009 — would allow 70 percent of the EU’s agricultural exports to enter Morocco duty free within the next 10 years.

Exports of oilseeds and cereals from the EU would be duty-free within a decade, with the exception of common wheat and durum wheat, for which Morocco would apply improved rates.

European Commission officials said the deal offered particular advantages for EU exports of processed products and speciality foods, with Morocco’s burgeoning middle class creating a growth market for such goods.

In return the EU is offering improved market access for Moroccan goods such as unprocessed fruit and vegetables, which currently account for 80 percent of EU imports from the kingdom.

This includes increased duty-free access for up to 285,000 tonnes of Moroccan tomatoes, which sparked protests by Spanish tomato farmers against the deal at an EU-Morocco summit in Granada in March.

European agri-food and fisheries exports to Morocco were worth about 1 billion euros ($1.31 billion) between 2007 and 2009, the Commission said. Morocco sold about 2 billion euros worth of similar goods to the EU over the same period.

More market access to Europe will create employment and investment opportunities for Morocco. Morocco has more to gain from the proposed trade deal, especially from direct foreign investment right across from Europe. It should go ahead and sign the deal.

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Might Europe’s strive for energy independence from Russia be found in the Sahara?

German physicist Gerhard Knies thinks he’s found the answer to Europe’s long-term energy needs—in the Sahara. The WSJ reports that:

Dr. Knies’s idea seems quixotic in every other sense: Build dozens of solar plants across the North African desert and put thousands of miles of power cables under the Mediterranean Sea to carry the electricity produced to Europe. He says the plan could supply 15% of the Continent’s energy by 2050 at an estimated cost of €400 billion ($529 billion)—more than the gross domestic products of Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco and Tunisia combined.

“I see a solution, so the problem is solved,” the white-haired scientist says with an earnest shrug of his shoulders. “Of course, to implement it is something else.”

What distinguishes Dr. Knies’s brainchild from a mere idealist pipe dream is the nominal backing of some of Europe’s biggest corporate names. Last summer, Munich Re,Siemens AG, Deutsche Bank and nine other mostly German companies formed a consortium called the Desertec Industrial Initiative to promote the alternative energy plan. For now, each company is contributing €150,000 to Desertec annually, just enough to open an office and pay a chief executive to chase additional backers.

“Within the next two years we’ll see exactly what regulations we need, what investment volume,” said Siemens CEO Peter Löscher. Should Desertec take off, Munich Re is willing to invest as much as €2 billion, said Peter Höppe, who leads Munich Re’s risk-research unit.

This might seem like a pipe dream. There are many questions about whether the wisest route to energy security is through an investment of hundreds of billions of dollars in foreign deserts.

Skeptics point to a map of proposed Desertec power plant sites stretching from Morocco to Egypt and up the eastern Mediterranean to Turkey. Along with dictatorships and war zones, the route crosses “resource nationalist” regimes such as Libya that could discourage investment, says Samuel Ciszuk, a Middle East and North Africa energy analyst for IHS Global Insight in London.

Hermann Scheer, a German parliamentarian and president of Eurosolar, a nonprofit group that promotes renewable power, has a litany of reasons to doubt Desertec, beginning with its technology: Solar thermal plants use mirrors to concentrate sunlight and create steam to drive turbines that generate electricity. Most require water for condensation and cooling—a scarce resource in the Sahara.

Desertec supporters say the plants could be built near the sea and incorporate desalination facilities to generate fresh water, but analysts say that could prove cumbersome.

“None of this is in the calculations,” Mr. Scheer says.

African nations might benefit economically, especially those that might host and station transmission lines that run all the way back to Europe.

energy analysts say Desertec’s sweep will probably give way to smaller projects near cities like Cairo, where the demand for electricity is skyrocketing. Some solar or wind-power facilities in Africa might be connected to Europe bilaterally.

In that respect, Desertec is already serving as a catalyst. In May, France—concerned that German corporate interests might dominate the initiative—announced its own project, called Transgreen, to build a network of high-voltage, direct-current cables that would be necessary to carry electricity generated in Africa to Europe.

This month, Desertec’s CEO, Paul van Son, a former Dutch utility executive, said Morocco had agreed to host Desertec’s first pilot project, a 500-1,000 megawatt facility that would combine solar thermal, photovoltaic and wind-power generation.

“Desertec really is not a joke,” Mr. van Son told attendees of a recent energy conference in Berlin.

The European Union this past June backed up plans similar to this, including the 400 billion euro Desertec solar scheme to turn sunlight in the Sahara desert into electricity for power-hungry Europe, to help meet a target of deriving 20 percent of that continent’s energy from renewable sources in 2020.  The EU is backing the construction of new electricity cables, known as inter-connectors, under the Mediterranean Sea to carry this renewable energy from North Africa to Europe.

Europe will import its first solar-generated electricity from North Africa within the next five years, European Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger said in an interview on Sunday.

The European Union is backing projects to turn the plentiful sunlight in the Sahara desert into electricity for power-hungry Europe, a scheme it hopes will help meet its target of deriving 20 percent of its energy from renewable sources in 2020.

“I think some models starting in the next 5 years will bring some hundreds of megawatts to the European market,” Oettinger told Reuters after a meeting with energy ministers from Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia.

He said those initial volumes would come from small pilot projects, but the amount of electricity would go up into the thousands of megawatts as projects including the 400 billion euro Desertec solar scheme come on stream.

“Desertec as a whole is a vision for the next 20 to 40 years with investment of hundreds of billions of euros,” said Oettinger. “To integrate a bigger percentage of renewables, solar and wind, needs time.”

The EU is backing the construction of new electricity cables, known as inter-connectors, under the Mediterranean Sea to carry this renewable energy from North Africa to Europe.

The Desertec consortium includes major European firms such as Siemens, RWE and Deutsche Bank. They are expected to seek public money for the project.

Here are some video reports on the project.


Here is a previous post about Solar energy in Africa.

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