POWERCHINA contribue activement au développement et au bien-être des communautés locales en Afrique centrale et occidentale.

BEIJING, 21 décembre 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Ceci est rapporté par China Report ASEAN affilié à China Report :

« Construire des projets de qualité et se faire des amis dans le monde entier”, tel est l’objectif et l’engagement de POWERCHINA, le plus grand constructeur d’installations électriques au monde, dans ses activités à l’étranger. L’entreprise participe activement à la construction des projets « Belt and Road » et a étendu ses activités de construction aux pays africains. Outre l’amélioration des voies navigables, l’approvisionnement en électricité et la construction de routes et de ponts, l’entreprise s’est acquittée de sa responsabilité sociale envers les communautés locales sur les marchés d’outre-mer.

POWERCHINA contribue à la réalisation des objectifs de développement des Nations unies en créant des emplois grâce à de nouvelles infrastructures hydroélectriques, en développant les compétences de la population locale par le biais de formations, en fournissant une assistance en matière d’éducation et de soins aux orphelins, en construisant des hôpitaux et en donnant des médicaments. Ses efforts pour répandre l’amour et l’espoir en Afrique lui ont permis d’établir une amitié sincère avec les gouvernements et les populations locales.

Cultiver les talents locaux

La centrale hydroélectrique de Djibloho, que le gouvernement de la Guinée équatoriale qualifie de « projet des Trois Gorges de la Guinée équatoriale », répond à 90 % de la demande d’électricité du pays et constitue un moteur important de son développement économique. POWERCHINA a formé des employés locaux et les a aidés à acquérir des compétences. Une formation gratuite de deux mois en chinois a également été dispensée par l’entreprise pour faciliter la communication entre les opérateurs locaux et les ingénieurs chinois, et aider les employés locaux à mieux utiliser les équipements de l’usine.

POWERCHINA staff members take a group photo with teachers and students of a middle school during a volunteer activity in Abuja, Nigeria

Soins aux enfants

Au Cameroun, le bureau de POWERCHINA a une tradition qui fait chaud au cœur. Chaque année, autour de Noël et du Nouvel An, le bureau coopère avec les sociétés membres du groupe pour organiser des activités bénévoles dans les écoles et les orphelinats des zones situées le long des routes qu’il construit. Ils réparent les salles de classe et font don de papeterie aux enfants, et chantent et dansent avec eux pour célébrer la nouvelle année.

Selon Ngangoua Serge, représentant de POWERCHINA au Cameroun, l’entreprise se soucie des groupes défavorisés au Cameroun. Depuis qu’elle a commencé à opérer dans le pays en 2010, l’entreprise a organisé des activités de dons similaires chaque année, dans le but d’apporter de l’amour et du bonheur aux enfants dans le besoin.

Soutien médical

L’entreprise a également contribué à améliorer les conditions médicales locales dans les endroits où ses projets sont situés en construisant des hôpitaux et en faisant don de médicaments et d’installations.

Le nouvel hôpital de Niefang, un projet d’aide historique du gouvernement chinois dans le pays qui sera achevé par POWERCHINA d’ici 2022, renforcera le système médical dans le centre de la Guinée équatoriale et fournira des services médicaux de qualité aux habitants de la ville de Niefang et de ses environs.

Au Cameroun, l’entreprise a fait don de médicaments et d’équipements médicaux à un centre de santé publique près du site d’un barrage qui sera construit par lui. Les médicaments et les équipements médicaux, dont le besoin est urgent, ont considérablement renforcé la confiance du centre dans la lutte contre les maladies infectieuses et le sauvetage de vies.

Le 29 janvier 2019, le bureau de la Guinée équatoriale de l’entreprise a aidé l’ambassade de Chine et l’équipe médicale chinoise dans le pays à réaliser une clinique gratuite au camp de l’entreprise pour la centrale hydroélectrique de Djibloho. La clinique gratuite organisée avec l’aide de POWERCHINA est un témoignage de l’amitié entre les deux pays et une manifestation de l’accomplissement actif des responsabilités sociales par les entreprises chinoises en Guinée équatoriale.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1711497/release.jpg

Blue California-FineCap™ Microencapsulation Platform Serves the Purpose

Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif., Dec. 21, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Blue California, the producer of natural science-based ingredients, provides FineCap™ a comprehensive microencapsulation technology platform, equipped with 20 microencapsulation technologies, to deliver active ingredients and satisfy our clients’ needs.

Microencapsulation is the process in which tiny particles of solid, liquid, or gas are packaged within a matrix to form a capsule. The capsule is coated with a protective layer to avoid degradation from exposure to environmental factors such as water, oxygen, heat, and light.

“Brands that seek to expand their products’ qualities and boost their product portfolios will find many benefits to the FineCap platform,” said Dr. Cuie Yan, vice president of encapsulation. “FineCap takes microencapsulation a step further by offering a variety of technologies and targeting customers’ specific needs in tackling active ingredients with unique characteristics, such as strong odor, taste or stability problems that challenge formulators.”

Microencapsulation systems have been widely used across multiple industries, including the pharmaceutical, food, supplement, personal care, and fragrance industries, for active ingredients like medicines, nicotine, flavors/fragrances, polyunsaturated fatty acids, probiotics, natural pigments, vitamins, antioxidants, etc. Space agency NASA also uses encapsulation technologies for spacecraft. The pharmaceutical industry uses microencapsulation often to control the release of active pharma ingredients (API).
Blue California has created the FineCap platform to serve customers’ growing demands for better performance of API, functional ingredients, dietary supplements, flavors, fragrances, cosmetics, and personal care products.

 

For example, FineCap protects API from degradation, unpleasant tastes or aroma, and maintains its efficacy, by controlling its release. FineCap enables flavors to thrive in food and beverages with integrity, intensity, and extended shelf-life.

In fragrances, FineCap guarantees brands to control the precise fragrance release rate, location, and duration. Personal care products benefit from FineCap by protecting the delicate top-notes and cosmetic actives from oxygen, moisture, temperature, and light deterioration. A more comprehensive look into the benefits that FineCap delivers in these product segments can be found here.

“Our comprehensive FineCap platform has been serving and supporting formulators looking to launch market-winning products with better qualities and shelf-life that consumers are seeking,” said Dr. Yan. “We’re enabling brands to quickly create products from innovative concepts, benchtop development, to pilot and full commercial manufacturing, with improved efficacy, taste, color, texture, and shelf life, along with vegan, organic, Kosher, or Halal certificate.”

 

The FineCap platform investment builds on Blue California’s 25-year legacy of producing botanical extracts and now natural flavors and fragrances and focuses on developing sustainable ingredients made through bioconversion or fermentation.

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About Blue California
Blue California is an entrepreneurial, science-based solutions provider and manufacturer of clean, natural, and sustainable ingredients used in food, beverage, flavor, fragrance, dietary supplements, personal care, and cosmetic products. For more than 25 years, Blue California has built a strong reputation for creating value in these diverse natural products and nature-inspired industries.

Attachment


Ana Arakelian
Blue California
+1-949-635-1991
ana@bluecal-ingredients.com

CUAMBA SOLAR PV and ENERGY STORAGE REACHES FINANCIAL CLOSE

MAPUTO, Mozambique, Dec. 21, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Globeleq, the leading independent power company in Africa and its project partners, Source Energia, a Lusophone Africa energy developer and Electricidade de Moçambique (EDM), the Mozambican national power utility, have reached financial close on the 19MWp (15MWac) Cuamba Solar PV plant with a 2MW (7MWh) energy storage system.

Globeleq - Powering Africa's Growth

The US$36 million project located in the Cuamba district, Niassa province (about 550 km west of the coastal town of Nacala) will supply electricity through a 25-year power purchase agreement with EDM. The project is the first IPP in Mozambique to integrate a utility scale energy storage system and includes an upgrade to the existing Cuamba substation.

Once operational, the Cuamba Solar plant will supply enough power for 21,800 consumers, and over the life of the project is expected to avoid the equivalent of more than 172,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions. First power is expected to flow in the second half of 2022.

The Emerging Africa Infrastructure Fund (“EAIF”), a member of the Private Infrastructure Development Group (“PIDG”) provided US$19 million in debt funding, with PIDG’s Viability Gap Funding (VGF) grant facility providing US$7million to enable an affordable tariff, fund essential grid upgrades and an energy storage system for EDM. CDC Plus, the technical assistance facility of CDC Group, has contributed a US$1million grant towards the battery energy storage system.

Olivia Carballo, a Director at Ninety One Ltd, the managers of EAIF, commented: “This is a pioneering project for EAIF and PIDG. We congratulate Globeleq, Source Energia, EDM and Mozambique on reaching a key milestone in deploying more solar technology to the northern grid, and on installing Mozambique’s first grid-scale battery energy storage system.”

Sarah Marchand, CDC Director, CDC Plus, said: “We are delighted to support one of sub-Saharan Africa’s first grid-scale battery energy storage systems through this grant for the battery storage system. In line with CDC’s ambition to catalyse more storage solutions across the continent, CDC Plus will also offer support to capture and disseminate learnings around the battery component’s operational, economic, and development impact.”

“With the ongoing challenges due to the pandemic, I am proud our team has achieved financial close, and we can begin building the first solar and energy storage facility in the country. We fully support the Mozambican Government in their initiatives to support the Paris Agreement and provide its citizens with reliable and clean alternative energy options,” added Mike Scholey, Globeleq’s CEO.

EDM’s Chairman, Marcelino Gildo Alberto said: “This project is a demonstration of EDM’s commitment to provide sustainable solutions to speed up energy access to Mozambicans. In compliance with the Government’s Five-Year Plan to introduce 200MW of renewable energy, EDM is at the forefront of the energy transition in line with the Paris Agreement.”

“We are very pleased to make another contribution to the Mozambique Energy sector and look forward to supporting the future growth of the industry in the country. Our thanks go to our project partners and funders for their unparalleled patience and commitment during the development phase,” said Pedro Coutinho, CEO of Source Energia

The project will require approximately 100 workers during construction, many of whom will be hired from the local community. The Spanish company Grupo TSK has been appointed as the project EPC contractor and will immediately commence mobilisation of its construction team. E22, part of the Spanish Gransolar Group, will supply the complete battery energy storage system. Globeleq will oversee the construction and operations of the power plant, supported by Source Energia.

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Cameroon Arrests Hundreds for Deadly Clashes that Displaced 100,000

Cameroonian authorities say troops have arrested hundreds of armed men blamed for communal violence in the northeast this month that displaced more than a hundred thousand people — most to neighboring Chad. Authorities say they also seized hundreds of weapons as well as cattle stolen during the conflict over scarce resources.

Cameroonian authorities say the military is conducting an intensive search to find and arrest additional armed men operating in Logone and Chari, along the northern border with Chad.

The governor of the Far North region, Midjiyawa Bakari, says military raids on hideouts in the area led to the arrests of several hundred men.

Speaking from the region’s capital, Maroua, Bakari said the men were believed responsible for much of the violence this month that displaced more than 100,000 people — most of them across the border to Chad.

He says besides the arrests, the military also seized several hundred weapons that the men were using to attack and kill civilians. Bakari says troops also seized 30 motorcycles that armed men from rival communities were using in attacks. He says more than 200 cattle stolen from ranchers have been recovered and will be handed over after investigations to determine their legitimate owners.

Clashes broke out on December 4 between ranchers and fishers over water resources, leaving scores dead and sending tens of thousands fleeing — most of them women and children.

Arab Choua cattle ranchers and ethnic Mousgoum fishers accuse each other of trespassing and occupying each other’s land.

Bakari says most males who remained in the villages are involved in the fighting.

He would not give details on how many people have been killed in the clashes but said no government troops are among the casualties.

President Paul Biya last week dispatched to the area a delegation of lawmakers, ministers, religious leaders, and traditional rulers to negotiate a peace between the communities.

Retired army colonel Hamad Kalkaba Malboum was part of the delegation.

He says in areas where the clashes have stopped, they are asking villagers to return home.

“The president of the republic of Cameroon sent the mission [delegation] to tell people that they must be calm, the government will give instructions to rebuild what has been destroyed, and we need also to prepare the development of that region, which has also suffered Boko Haram [atrocities],” he said.

Boko Haram, an Islamist militant group from Nigeria, has since 2014 spread to neighboring Cameroon, Chad, and Niger, launching attacks that have killed more than 30,000 people and displaced two million.

Cameroon’s government is allocating $300 million to rebuild infrastructure the militants destroyed along the border.

The communal violence this month left several villages and markets burned to the ground.

Cameroonian authorities have asked people in the area who own weapons to hand them over.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees reports at least 85,000 Cameroonians have fled into neighboring Chad and 15,000 are internally displaced. But it says the real number could be much higher.

Source: Voice of America

African Scientists Slam CDC Recommendation on Johnson & Johnson Vaccine

Scientists and health advocates in Africa say they’re deeply disappointed by a statement from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine.

The CDC last week recommended the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines ahead of the J&J, because of concerns the J&J shot could, in rare cases, cause blood clots, or thrombosis.

The J&J vaccine is one of the most widely used in Africa, because it’s a single dose shot that doesn’t require ultra-cold storage. The South African health department has reassured people that the Johnson & Johnson vaccine is safe.

In a statement, the CDC said it was expressing a “clinical preference” for other vaccines over J&J.

“This updated CDC recommendation follows similar recommendations from other countries, including Canada and the United Kingdom,” the CDC said. Still, the CDC said “receiving any vaccine is better than being unvaccinated.”

But health authorities in Africa say the CDC recommendation has done “irreparable” harm to their vaccination efforts. They say that the CDC’s linking of the J&J vaccine with rare, but potentially fatal, side effects will spark widespread rejection of the vaccine on the continent, where other vaccines are mostly unavailable.

Fewer than 6% of people in Africa are vaccinated and the World Health Organization describes Africa as “one of the least affected regions in the world.”

“I’ve been inundated with calls from people saying, ‘You’re poisoning us’ and ‘We don’t want to take this’ and ‘We’re getting second-hand vaccines; we shouldn’t be getting the J&J, we should only be getting the Pfizer,’” said Barry Jacobson, president of the Southern African Society of Thrombosis. “The CDC, by putting out this statement, has made people scared about taking the J&J booster, and they shouldn’t be.”

South Africa’s top epidemiologist, Salim Abdool Karim, maintains J&J’s vaccine is safe.

“If you had to just look at, for example, thrombosis from cases of COVID-19, it’s far higher than from what we see from the vaccine,” said Karim, an epidemiologist at South Africa’s University of KwaZulu-Natal, who previously advised the South African government on COVID-19. “So there’s no question that this vaccine has a net benefit, even in the face of these side effects.”

The CDC recommendation followed the occurrence of a rare and sometimes fatal blood-clotting issue, called thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome, or TTS, that specifically affected the brain, in people who got the J&J vaccine.

“We’ve seen thrombosis occurring with all the vaccines,” Jacobson said. “But the fact of the matter is, if one gets COVID, the risk of thrombosis is massive. It’s a much greater risk of dying of thrombosis from getting COVID than from being vaccinated and getting a thrombosis, where the risk is miniscule compared to the other group.”

Jacobson was on the safety committee that oversaw one of the world’s biggest vaccine trials, when half-a-million health workers in South Africa received the J&J vaccine earlier this year.

That trial, called Sisonke, came to a temporary halt in April when the CDC paused use of the vaccine after six cases of TTS in the U.S. After analyzing more data, the CDC gave the green light to the shot, saying its benefits outweighed its risks.

Why the CDC would now, “out of the blue,” again link the J&J vaccine with this type of thrombosis, Jacobson said, is beyond him.

“The fact that the CDC came out and said that, it shows no insight into what we face in Africa, where there’s a problem with cold-chain storage and the fact that patients can’t get to more than one vaccine,” Jacobson said. “If you look at the true incidence, it’s one in 500,000 to one in a million. You have a higher chance of being struck by lightning.”

Source: Voice of America

Record High COVID-19 Infection Rate Hits Kenya

Kenya has reached an all-time high COVID-19 infection rate, with positive results in nearly a third of tests. Scientists believe the surge is fueled by the highly transmissible omicron variant of the coronavirus. But Kenya is also seeing a low rate of hospitalizations and deaths.

Kenya is battling a wave of COVID-19 infections greater than any since the coronavirus pandemic began in 2020.

The positive test rate has jumped from 6.5 percent to almost 30 percent in the past week.

The World Health Organization labels a country high risk if its positivity rate is more than 5 percent and advises affected countries to consider restrictions to limit the spread of the virus.

However, the head of research group Amref Health Africa International, Githinji Gitahi, says that many people visiting hospitals seeking coronavirus treatment do not need to be admitted.

“We have a lot of outpatient visits in the clinics, in the hospitals but largely outpatient, outpatient numbers have almost doubled but not hospitalization,” Gitahi said. “We are not seeing many hospitalizations, oxygen requirement, ICU-HDU as should have been expected, which indicates that maybe its earlier immunity in the bodies of those who are getting infected, vaccination plus early infection or just that the particular variant is mild and not causing severe disease.”

Some countries have reintroduced lockdowns to fight the spread of the omicron variant. But the East African nation has been reluctant to do so.

Dr. David Sang, an epidemiologist, says people have shown some laxity when following health protocols like wearing masks and frequently washing hands.

“I may not attribute it to the new strain. I think it’s more likely to be because people became complacent because for a longtime the level of transmission was very low,” Sang said. “They perceived that the disease was declining and their guard was not as important as before.”

In Kenya, wearing a face mask is mandatory, but these days the mandate is rarely followed or enforced.

Gitahi says the country will continue to have waves of COVID-19 until more of the population gets vaccinated.

“As usual, the wave will burn out and we normally see the wave taking about three-four weeks and then they get onto the decline,” Gitahi said. “This one is rising very rapidly which could also mean that it could also decline rapidly maybe two-three weeks. So, we expect that to happen but people need to get vaccinated so that we don’t end up with a surge in hospitalization in case it spreads out in areas of low vaccination.”

Out of the estimated 54 million people in Kenya, about 9 million have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, and only 3.6 million are fully vaccinated.

Source: Voice of America

UN Condemns Reports of Sexual Assaults on Peaceful Protesters in Sudan

U.N. human rights officials are calling on Sudanese authorities to investigate and bring to justice members of the security forces accused of sexually assaulting several women and girls during demonstrations held Sunday in the capital, Khartoum.

What began as a peaceful protest, allegedly quickly turned into a chaotic scene of sexual violence, harassment, and deadly force. U.N. human rights spokeswoman Liz Throssell says U.N. monitors in Sudan have received reports 13 women and girls were victims of rape or gang rape during a recent demonstration.

“We have also received allegations of sexual harassment by security forces against women who were trying to flee the area around the presidential palace on Sunday evening. Two protesters died after being shot, and around 300 others were injured, some due to the use of live ammunition, some hit by tear gas canisters or beaten by security forces, and others who suffered breathing difficulties from tear gas inhalation,” Throssell said.

Tens of thousands of people took part in demonstrations marking the third anniversary of protests that led to the overthrow of the government of President Omar al-Bashir in April 2019. Demonstrators also gathered to protest the military coup in October and the political agreement that was signed in November.

The U.N. human rights office is calling on Sudanese authorities to investigate the allegations of rape and sexual harassment promptly and thoroughly. Throssell said the alleged deaths and injury of protesters because of the disproportionate use of force and live ammunitions also must be investigated.

“The perpetrators must be identified and prosecuted. With further protests planned for this weekend and the weeks ahead, it is crucial that security forces guarantee and protect the right to peaceful assembly and act with full respect for international laws and standards regulating the use of force,” she said.

Throssell noted the country’s acting attorney general has set up a committee of senior prosecutors to investigate all human rights violations committed since the military coup on October 25.

The U.N. human rights office is urging national authorities to make the committee findings public and to hold to account those responsible for human rights violations and abuses.

Source: Voice of America