UNGA 80: What Africa Must Demand
22/09/2025As leaders converge at the United Nations headquarters in New York for the 80th session of the General Assembly, the air is thick with expectation. Representatives of all 193 UN.
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As leaders converge at the United Nations headquarters in New York for the 80th session of the General Assembly, the air is thick with expectation. Representatives of all 193 UN.
In 2025, regulation sits at the intersection of accelerating technology and fragile public trust. Globally, nations have moved beyond debating whether to regulate digital platforms, artificial intelligence, data flows and.
In 2025, CNBC and Statista unveiled their list of the world’s top 300 fintech companies, and African firms earned a rightful place among the names shaping the future of financial.
The global transition to a green, electrified future is not merely a race to develop new technologies; it is a fundamental restructuring of global resource supply chains. At the heart.
In recent years, each time African leaders took the podium United Nations General Assembly, their words reverberated with unusual clarity. They were not the muted appeals of a continent long.
The worldwide architecture guiding national climate action is straightforward in principle but complex in practice. The Paris Agreement sets the temperature limit, well below 2°C and pursuing 1.5°C, and requires.
Climate change is reshaping the global energy landscape, and East Africa is uniquely positioned to lead the charge toward a sustainable future. With vast geothermal reserves, the region holds the.
India’s state-owned refining giant, Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), has quietly made a strategic adjustment in its global procurement, favouring West African and Middle Eastern crude over U.S. barrels. The move,.
Kenya’s automobile sector has staged a remarkable recovery in 2025, emerging as a bright spot in Africa’s broader industrial landscape. After two years of contraction, the country’s vehicle assembly industry.
The United Nations’ Office of the Special Adviser on Africa (OSAA) has consistently underscored a simple but consequential message: home-grown school-feeding is not charity; it is a strategic, high-return instrument.