Afrobarometer begins Round 11 surveys, aims to cover 40 African countries

Source: APO

Afrobarometer (www.Afrobarometer.org) has launched Round 11 data collection, kicking off the new survey cycle with fieldwork in Zimbabwe and Gabon. 

Following the successful completion of Round 10 surveys in 38 African countries in 2024 and 2025, the new survey round is expected to cover up to 40 African countries in 2026 and 2027, representing almost 80% of the continent’s population. Twenty-seven years after launching its pioneering effort to systematically measure Africans’ attitudes, experiences, and evaluations, Afrobarometer remains the continent’s leading source of reliable public-attitude data. 

“At a time when Africa is navigating significant political, economic, social, and environmental change, understanding the perspectives of ordinary citizens is more important than ever,” said Boniface Dulani, Afrobarometer director of surveys. “Through Round 11, Afrobarometer will continue to provide high-quality, citizen-generated data that informs policy, strengthens democratic governance, and amplifies African voices in decision-making processes. We remain true to the high standards that have earned us multiple accolades as the gold standard for doing surveys in Africa.” 

Round 11 introduces several new thematic areas that reflect emerging issues on the continent and in global affairs. These include democratic resilience, Africa in international politics, financial inclusion, and political populism. The survey also expands existing modules on gender equality, taxation, and climate change, enabling deeper analysis of citizens’ experiences and perspectives in these critical areas. To improve the interview experience, the Round 11 questionnaire has also been streamlined to reduce respondent fatigue while maintaining the quality of collected information. 

Afrobarometer surveys, conducted by National Partner organisations, consist of nationally representative, face-to-face interviews with citizens aged 18 and above. The network works closely with national statistics offices, and its survey samples are based on population projections using the most recent census data. In each country, respondents are selected using a random, probability-based sampling methodology that ensures that every adult citizen has an equal chance of being included in the survey. To ensure that women’s voices are equally represented in the findings, Afrobarometer employs 50/50 gender alternation of respondents during fieldwork. The findings can also be disaggregated by age, rural/urban location, education, economic status, and other demographic characteristics, providing a broad and in-depth understanding of Africans’ evaluations, experiences, and expectations.  

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Afrobarometer.

For more information, please contact:
Josephine Appiah-Nyamekye Sanny
Director of communications
Telephone: +233243240933
Email: jappiah@afrobarometer.org 

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About Afrobarometer: 
Afrobarometer (AB) is a trusted source of high-quality data and analysis on what Africans are thinking. With an unmatched track record of 440,000+ interviews in 45 countries, representing the views of more than 75% of the African population, AB is leading the charge to bridge the continent’s data gap. AB data inform many global indices, such as the Ibrahim Index of African Governance, Transparency International’s Global Corruption Barometer, and the World Bank’s Worldwide Governance Indicators. The data are also used for country risk analyses and by credit rating and forecasting agencies such as the Economist Intelligence Unit. All AB data sets are publicly available on the website (www.Afrobarometer.org) and may be analysed free of charge using AB’s online data analysis tool (https://apo-opa.co/4bdPS0Z).

Visit us online at www.Afrobarometer.org

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Angola Oil & Gas (AOG) 2026 Brings Boardroom Dialogue to Center Stage with Exclusive Leadership Roundtables

Source: APO


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The Angola Oil & Gas (AOG) Conference and Exhibition – the country’s premier industry event – is bringing boardroom dialogue to center stage through a dedicated Leadership Roundtables Track, designed to facilitate high-level discussions around Angola’s most strategic oil and gas opportunities. Bringing together investors, operators, financiers, service providers and government stakeholders, the sessions aim to move beyond traditional conference formats and deliver the kind of strategic engagement typically reserved for executive boardrooms.

At a time when Angola is pursuing sustained production growth, expanding refining capacity, and accelerating local content development, aligning capital, partnerships, and policy has become increasingly critical. The Leadership Roundtables Track will offer stakeholders direct insight into the investment priorities, commercial challenges and market opportunities shaping the country’s oil and gas sector.

A program highlight will be a session on The Role of Local Banks in Building Angola’s Oil and Gas Entrepreneurs. The discussion will explore how financial institutions can play a more active role in supporting domestic operators and service providers as they scale their participation across Angola’s oil and gas value chain. Convening local banks alongside government authorities and international lenders, the session will assess how financing structures can better support Angola’s local content ambitions.

Strengthening Angola’s domestic service ecosystem will also be a key focus. A session on Building Angolan Value Chains: Logistics, Services and Insurance as Local Content Enablers will bring together supply chain executives, service providers and policymakers to examine how procurement strategies, regulatory frameworks and strategic partnerships can accelerate the development of competitive Angolan businesses across logistics, services and insurance.

Upstream investment opportunities will also take center stage, with a session on Angola’s Blocks on the Map: Licensing, Partnerships, and the Future of Upstream. As one of Africa’s leading oil and gas producers, Angola continues to offer significant exploration potential across mature, frontier and underexplored basins. The session comes as international operators pursue frontier opportunities, while independents drive an onshore resurgence supported by reprocessed seismic data and new drilling campaigns. Discussions will focus on the country’s evolving upstream landscape, including licensing opportunities, partnership structures and the exploration outlook.

Meanwhile, a discussion on Futureproofing Infrastructure: The Case for Building Downstream Assets for Value Capture and Import Substitution will address one of Angola’s key long-term priorities. As refining capacity expands and infrastructure investment accelerates, the session will explore how Angola can reduce import dependency, maximize domestic value creation and strengthen its position as a regional hub for refined petroleum products.

By bringing boardroom-level conversations into the AOG 2026 program, the Leadership Roundtables Track reinforces the event’s role as a leading platform for strategic engagement in Angola’s oil and gas sector. More than a series of discussions, it offers direct access to the ideas, partnerships and investment strategies shaping the country’s energy future.

AOG 2026 returns from September 9–10. The event will feature a multi-track program, networking functions and structured B2B meeting opportunities. A pre-conference day on September 8 will offer delegates deeper insight into the technical and operational foundations of Angola’s oil and gas industry.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Energy Capital & Power.

South Sudan at 15: how the political elite have found a way to profit from peace as well as war

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Matthew Benson-Strohmayer, Research Fellow & Sudans Research Director, London School of Economics and Political Science

South Sudan’s independence from Sudan in 2011 was meant to close the chapter on one of Africa’s longest civil wars: the north-south war that preceded it. Formally, it did. But independence did not end the deeper struggles over power, revenue and coercion inside the newly independent state.

South Sudan returned to war in 2013, watched a 2015 settlement collapse, and now lives under a 2018 Revitalised Agreement whose promised transition has been postponed repeatedly.

This is usually told as a story of failed peacemaking, with too many spoilers and too little political will. But what if these deals are not failing so much as working? What if they stabilise order precisely by preserving the systems that make violence profitable?

Political settlements theory helps explain why peace agreements often focus on dividing power, offices and resources among elites. The hope is that if rival leaders receive a share of power, offices and resources, they will have less reason to fight. But negotiated transitions can also carry wartime systems into peace. The question, then, is not only who gets a share of the state, but what kinds of war economies, revenue systems and coercive practices are being preserved.

As an economic historian of war and peace, I have spent more than a decade tracing how rulers in South Sudan and Sudan raise money, goods, labour and other resources, and how payment is enforced through soldiers, officials, checkpoints and offices. My recent research paper examined how South Sudan’s peace agreements reshaped the country’s systems of revenue, spending and coercion: who could extract resources, who could allocate them, and who could enforce payment.

My analysis drew on 2020-2024 fieldwork and archival, secondary and peace agreement data. I sought to answer three questions: who collected revenue from monetary and non-monetary sources, such as cash, cattle, grain and labour; who paid; and who benefited.

What emerges is that peace settlements have redistributed access to money, offices and external finance among elites, while leaving intact the coercive revenue system and war economies that preceded them. In some cases, peace has formalised those systems by turning wartime access to extraction into recognised office, revenue authority or security control. Violence changes form rather than ending; it recedes from the battlefield and lodges in the revenue systems, security forces and war economies that continue to extract from civilians – now in the name of order.

This is a pattern I call predatory peace.

The same machinery makes the state itself a prize: controlling it is so lucrative that capture remains worth fighting for, and when the power-sharing breaks down, as it did in 2013, the fighting returns. Peace and war become two settings of one extractive machine rather than true opposites.

Similar dynamics have emerged in other resource-rich, conflict-affected states, such as in oil-rich Angola and the mineral endowed Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). South Sudan is resource-rich too, above all because of oil. But the wider issue is not only natural resources. It is the political control of revenue streams such as oil, customs, aid, loans, contracts, checkpoints, timber, charcoal and other forms of extraction.

It’s all part of a wider pattern in peacemaking that has repeatedly paired political deals with economic reforms that entrenched elite control over revenue and other resources.

None of this is inevitable. A different approach would start by treating the whole revenue complex as the heart of peacemaking itself, not as a technical issue to be postponed until after a peace agreement is signed. It would ask who controls money and other resources, including humanitarian and development assistance; who is allowed to extract resources, payments and labour from civilians; and whether people can see anything in return for what they pay.

Peace as ‘organised robbery’ in South Sudan

South Sudan’s national revenue system includes taxes, customs, fees, oil revenues, international loans, aid and off-budget income. It also includes non-monetary extraction, such as cattle, grain, labour and goods taken from civilians. These flows are enforced through soldiers, security forces, government offices and checkpoints. Together, they form what I call a revenue complex: the machinery through which rulers extract the resources that allow them to govern, reward allies and sustain coercive power.

In much of South Sudan, “peace” has reshuffled who profits from the revenue system, not what it does to those who pay. A businessman in Malakal, a city in Upper Nile State, described the tax system as “organised robbery” in which soldiers were overcharging and pocketing the proceeds. He was told that the system had to be endured to “maintain peace”.

Predation was not a breakdown of order; it was a condition of order.

None of this began with the peace process. My peace agreement analysis starts in the early 1970s, but in separate archival research and an earlier round of just over 200 interviews, I traced the territory’s revenue complex back to at least 1899. Across colonial, rebel and independent rule, I found a similar logic: revenue sources were used to secure rulers’ control more than to fund public goods.

Across more than 120 years, changes in government did not dismantle the underlying machinery of extraction and control. Each major political settlement since the 1970s has been laid over that inheritance, reshuffling who profits from it.

Confusion is integral to the system. Traders described being shuttled from office to office to meet fresh demands; collectors themselves spoke of decrees “passed from nowhere” that shifted revenue to other units. A businesswoman in Wau described fierce competition for tax collection posts because of what could be skimmed from them. This is not administrative failure, but a system that works for those who run it. When revenue authority is spread across overlapping offices, no one can be held to account and everyone can be rewarded for their loyalty.

This performance of state finance runs all the way up. In 2012, the president conceded that some US$4 billion in oil money had simply been “stolen”. In 2026, a UN panel of experts found that South Sudan continued to sell oil months in advance of delivery, and that disputes over undelivered oil cargoes and oil-backed debts had reached UK commercial courts.

State budgets perform reform while the money moves elsewhere.

What people get in return

South Sudanese nevertheless do not reject the idea of contributing to public authority. They contrasted community-level payments and contributions, which they could see returning as boreholes, roads or clinics, with state taxation, which they experienced as extraction without return.

Many insisted that paying tax is good, so long as it is reciprocal, transparent and tied to public goods.

The problem is that peace agreements often leave that link severed, even as they formalise new bargains among elites.

What non-predatory peace would require

A different kind of peacemaking would mean taking the following steps.

  • rebuilding of a transparent, civilian-controlled revenue complex

  • linking what people pay to what they receive

  • making external support conditional on genuine revenue reform.


Read more: Checkpoint ‘taxes’ make South Sudan one of the most expensive places to move goods


Lastly, South Sudanese civic actors should be supported to monitor the cross-border flows – oil, arms, timber, charcoal, looted goods and finance – that fund fighting.

This work does not fall solely to donors and mediators. People are already documenting where the money goes.

A serious settlement would treat them as central to any peace worth the name.

– South Sudan at 15: how the political elite have found a way to profit from peace as well as war
– https://theconversation.com/south-sudan-at-15-how-the-political-elite-have-found-a-way-to-profit-from-peace-as-well-as-war-285846

Serving a state that couldn’t pay: why South Sudan’s civil servants didn’t quit during the war

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Emmanuelle Veuillet, Associate professor, University of Juba

When civil war broke out in South Sudan in December 2013, civil servants found themselves at the centre of a deep political and economic crisis.

The state was, and remains, the largest employer, surpassing private companies and NGOs. In 2015, the approved national budget accounted for 465,041 government personnel. Over 85% were engaged in security-related functions. Despite the absence of official statistics, observations confirm that the civil service has not shrunk over the years.

As the conflict became increasingly politicised and shaped by ethnic divisions, civil servants had to navigate shifting loyalties and growing insecurity.

The war also triggered an economic collapse. In 2015, the South Sudanese pound lost nearly 90% of its value against the US dollar. Trade routes were disrupted. Domestic production of products declined and shortages of imported goods fuelled hyperinflation.

The near-total collapse of oil exports – the government’s main source of revenue – severely weakened state finances. By late 2015, the government was effectively bankrupt and increasingly unable to fund the public sector.

This resulted in long delays in civil servants’ salary payments from several months to a year. Hyperinflation also eroded the value of wages.


Read more: Is Sudan’s war the reason for South Sudan’s economic crisis? What’s really going on with oil revenue


This did not lead to a mass exodus from the civil service, however. During my PhD fieldwork, I found that many civil servants chose to stay. As a political sociologist, I was interested in understanding their decision to remain in a broke administration during such challenging times. I explored the little-known wartime experiences of ordinary middle-ranking civil servants to make sense of it.

Drawing on 22 months of fieldwork in South Sudan, I found that civil servants chose to remain in government because – despite the absence of a salary and direct income – their jobs provided benefits. These included social status, and access to networks and opportunities. The job provided a sense of normality, too, during a period of political upheaval. It was also a realistic route to paid employment in a hoped-for future. Other options were scarce.

The civil war formally ended with the 2018 peace agreement, but South Sudan remains mired in political and economic crises. My findings help explain why, despite repeated shocks, state institutions have endured.

The study

I collected the data in my study between 2017 and 2022 in the region of Western Equatoria in South Sudan. The region doesn’t have oil resources, hosts a variety of ethnic groups and plunged into war later than many others. I relied on observations from various administration offices at county and state levels, and informal conversations held during these visits.

As part of my research, I followed the stories of six civil servants – two women and four men – from different departments and directorates at the county and state levels. They held different grades within the administration. They were aged over 30 and held at least a high school certificate.

The findings

My study shows that civil servants’ attachment to a state with no money was shaped by material, social and political factors.

Before the war – from independence in 2011 to 2013 – even lower-ranking government jobs provided civil servants with a modest but stable standard of living. For instance, a cleaner (grade 16) in public administration earned around US$180 to US$200 at the time. But after the conflict began, that economic security disappeared.

By April 2017, a director’s monthly salary (grade 3) could only buy a 20kg bag of rice and a 10kg bag of red beans. An administrative officer’s (grade 12) salary could barely pay for 2kg of rice.

All civil servants had to look for other sources of income for daily survival. These included farming, small-scale businesses, and renting or selling properties. The economic security attached to a position in the civil service had vanished.

Yet civil servants continued to go to the office because it still gave them access to other forms of resources, helped them maintain their status and preserved an appearance of normality.

The benefits included:

  • access to opportunities, such as NGO trainings and workshops that provided per diems for the period of participation, or a certificate of attendance that could be added to a CV

  • the knowledge and power to help people and do favours, which helped them cultivate social networks that could be used to access goods, services or credit

  • preserving social position and maintaining practices that reinforced a sense of normality, both in the eyes of others and for themselves

  • a shared experience which fostered forms of solidarity and mutual understanding among civil servants. They organised social activities and support mechanisms, such as savings groups, among themselves rather than with other social groups.

A desired future

Despite the South Sudanese government’s withdrawal from many of its social responsibilities, civil servants continued to imagine a different kind of state. Those I interviewed shared a vision of a strong and functioning state.

It was often accompanied by a sense of self-fulfilment, as they imagined themselves helping to build such a state. Maintaining the functioning of state institutions and preserving some level of public service during the crisis became a meaningful commitment, a survival strategy and an investment in upward mobility within a “wished-for state”.

The decision to remain in this career was also shaped by a lack of alternatives, however. Middle-ranking civil servants had relatively low levels of formal education and lacked the networks needed to secure other employment. The private sector has remained small because of a difficult business climate and a lack of economic diversification.

The total collapse of a functioning state would mean the disappearance of their jobs – which helps explain their efforts to keep the administration going.

The economic crisis in South Sudan raises questions, however, about how long civil servants can continue to sustain state institutions.

In many cases, salaries have gone unpaid for more than a year. And cash shortages in banks prevent civil servants from accessing whatever funds may be available to them.

– Serving a state that couldn’t pay: why South Sudan’s civil servants didn’t quit during the war
– https://theconversation.com/serving-a-state-that-couldnt-pay-why-south-sudans-civil-servants-didnt-quit-during-the-war-286083

United Nations (UN) Human Rights Council Adopts First-Ever Resolution on Human Rights and Neglected Tropical Diseases

Source: APO – Report:

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In a landmark moment for global health and human rights, the United Nations Human Rights Council today adopted the first-ever resolution that formally recognizes the profound and inseparable links between human rights and neglected tropical diseases (NTDs).

The historic resolution was led by the Republic of Malawi, alongside a core group of African Member States including Burkina Faso, Kenya, Tanzania, The Gambia and Morocco. It marks the first time NTDs have been formally addressed through a dedicated Human Rights Council resolution – elevating these diseases beyond the health sector and recognizing them as issues of dignity, equity, inclusion, and justice. The adoption represents a major milestone in the global fight against NTDs and a powerful acknowledgment that the more than one billion people affected by these diseases can no longer be left behind.

NTDs are both caused by and drive human rights challenges. Poverty, unsafe water, inadequate housing, poor sanitation, discrimination, and limited access to healthcare create the conditions in which NTDs thrive. In turn, these diseases can cause disability, disfigurement, stigma, exclusion from education and employment, lost income, and preventable death – trapping individuals and communities in cycles of inequality and marginalization.

By adopting this resolution, the UN Human Rights Council has formally recognized that advancing human rights and ending NTDs are deeply interconnected goals.The resolution is expected to help elevate NTDs within global and national policy agendas, strengthen accountability, reinforce the links between health and human rights, and mobilize greater political will and resources to accelerate progress towards elimination.

The adoption comes amid growing global momentum behind NTD elimination. To date, 63 countries worldwide have eliminated at least one neglected tropical disease, demonstrating that sustained political commitment, investment, and partnership can drive transformative progress.

Africa continues to lead global efforts to end these diseases. Malawi itself eliminated trachoma as a public health problem in 2022, alongside previous elimination achievements for lymphatic filariasis and leprosy as public health concerns, while continuing efforts to eliminate additional NTDs by 2030.

Said H.E. Madalitso Chidumu Baloyi, Minister of Health, Republic of Malawi, “Today marks a historic victory for the millions of people affected by neglected tropical diseases around the world. Africa has borne a disproportionate burden of these diseases for generations, and African countries have also been leaders in the fight to eliminate them – driving innovation, progress, and political commitment. Malawi is proud to have helped lead this landmark resolution alongside our fellow African Member States. By formally recognizing the links between NTDs and human rights, the Human Rights Council has affirmed that no person should be denied dignity, opportunity, health, or inclusion because of a preventable and treatable disease.”

Said Stuart Halford, Director of Advocacy and Resource Mobilisation, Uniting to Combat NTDs, “We commend Malawi and the other African Member States whose leadership made this historic resolution possible. Africa has also driven some of the world’s greatest progress against NTDs, demonstrating what is possible through political commitment, partnership, and sustained investment. By recognizing NTDs as both a health and human rights issue, the Human Rights Council has taken an important step towards accelerating progress against these diseases and improving the lives and rights of millions of people worldwide. We now have an opportunity to build on this momentum and ensure that human rights considerations are fully integrated into efforts to end NTDs once and for all.”

Said Juan Gamboa, CEO, Anesvad Foundation: “We celebrate the approval of this resolution, particularly at this critical moment in a global fight against NTDs. The elimination of NTDs is a fundamental right of millions of people. Political will and financial commitments are needed to ensure that we can eliminate NTDs during our generation.  We note this significant step and recognize the journey ahead.  Malawi’s exemplary leadership through this resolution will help shape national policies, legal frameworks and adequate budget allocations to ensure the elimination of NTDs globally.”

Advocates say the resolution has the potential to catalyze stronger cross-sector action on the underlying conditions that allow NTDs to persist, including inadequate healthcare access, unsafe water and sanitation, poor housing, educational inequities, and stigma and discrimination.

Supporters also describe the resolution as a critical shift in how the world understands NTDs – not only as diseases requiring medical intervention, but as barriers to equality, opportunity, and the realization of fundamental human rights.

The adoption sends a strong signal that ending NTDs is not only a public health imperative, but also a human rights imperative. A key ask of the resolution is for Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) to conduct a consultation analysing the links between human rights and NTDs and providing recommendations for strengthening the integration of human rights considerations into national and global responses to NTDs across the United Nations system. While the resolution marks a historic milestone, its true impact will be measured by the actions that follow. The forthcoming OHCHR consultation and report will lay the foundation for a stronger human rights framework on NTDs, providing recommendations to governments, UN agencies, and partners that can help shape a new era of more equitable, accountable, and effective action against these diseases.

– on behalf of Anesvad Foundation.

Media Contacts:
Fernando Álvarez
Anesvad Foundation
fernandoalvarez@anesvad.org

Additional Statements:
Alia El-Yassir, Director, Department for Gender, Rights, Equity and Sexual Misconduct Prevention (GEM), WHO

“WHO welcomes this landmark resolution as an important recognition that neglected tropical diseases are both a public health and a human rights challenge. The resolution creates an opportunity to strengthen rights-based, equity-oriented and people-centred action that tackles the underlying drivers of NTDs, including poverty, inequality, stigma and barriers to essential services, while addressing their disproportionate impacts on women and girls.”

Dr Joo-Young Lee, member of the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights

“I welcome the adoption of the resolution on Human Rights and Neglected Diseases by the Human Rights Council on X July. Neglected tropical diseases affect more than one billion people, disproportionately those living in poverty, marginalization and vulnerability, and this resolution reaffirms that these diseases are not only a public health concern but also a matter of human rights. Addressing neglected tropical diseases is not only about realising the right to health. It is also about ensuring the rights to safe water, sanitation, adequate housing, education and access to information, all of which are essential to their prevention and control. The right to health further requires the availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality of essential medicines and other health products, integrated into universal health coverage and primary health care. Nearly two decades ago, the human rights dimensions of neglected diseases were first documented for this Council. The fact that research and development for these diseases remains persistently underfunded shows that this human rights challenge has yet to be overcome. This resolution reaffirms States’ obligations to ground national health policies and programmes in equality, non-discrimination, participation and accountability, ensuring equitable access to prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care for all. It must now be translated into concrete action, beginning with the OHCHR report that the resolution mandates.”

DBE congratulates Limpopo learners at global robotics challenge

Source: Government of South Africa

DBE congratulates Limpopo learners at global robotics challenge

The Department of Basic Education (DBE) has congratulated two Limpopo learner teams, Robo-Kidz and Roborise, for representing South Africa at the prestigious Robotics for Good Youth Challenge Grand Finale in Geneva, Switzerland. 

Robo-Kidz hail from Mashupye Tladi Primary School, while Roborise come from Bokamoso Secondary School. 

The international competition is taking place from 7 to 10 July 2026 at the Palexpo International Exhibition and Convention Centre.

The two teams earned their place on the global stage after progressing through the local, provincial and national rounds of the competition.

According to the department, their achievement reflects the growing impact of its investment in coding and robotics education as part of its commitment to equipping learners with the knowledge, skills and competencies required for success in the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

The department has approved and gazetted the Coding and Robotics Curriculum and Assessment Policy Statement (CAPS) and has been implementing the curriculum through phased pilots since 2021. 

The programme continues to expose learners to computational thinking, problem-solving, innovation, and digital technologies, while preparing them for future careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM). 

The success of the Limpopo teams has been made possible through the province’s implementation of the Mathematics, Science and Technology (MST) Conditional Grant, which supports coding and robotics, learner enrichment programmes, teacher development, laboratory resources, and technical education. 

Through the grant, approximately 90 000 learners benefit annually from camps, Olympiads, science fairs, competitions, and international opportunities that nurture innovation and excellence. 

Acting Director for Communications, Terence Khala, said the achievement proves the value of sustained investment in future-focused education.

“These learners are highlighting the best of South African education on the global stage. Their success proves what is possible when we invest in innovation, quality teaching and meaningful opportunities that allow young people to apply their knowledge to real-world challenges. 

“As the Department of Basic Education, we are still committed to expanding access to coding and robotics and strengthening STEM education so that every learner can thrive in a rapidly changing world,” Khala said. 

The department also commended the educators, school leadership, parents, the Limpopo Department of Education, and all partners who have supported the learners throughout their journey. 

As South Africa continues to expand the implementation of Coding and Robotics across the schooling system, the department said the achievements such as these reinforce its vision of developing a generation of digitally capable, innovative, and globally competitive learners.  

The Department wished both teams every success as they compete against young innovators from around the world and proudly fly the South African flag. – SAnews.gov.za  

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Guyana to Host Launch of Caribbean Energy Week 2027 as Regional Energy Momentum Builds

Source: APO – Report:

The in-country launch of Caribbean Energy Week 2027 will take place on July 20, 2026 at the Guyana Marriott Hotel in Georgetown, bringing together government officials, investors, operators and industry stakeholders to highlight the strategic opportunities shaping the region’s energy future.

Held under the patronage of President Dr. Mohamed Irfaan Ali and with the endorsement of the Honorable Minister of Natural Resources, Vickram Bharrat, the launch will underscore Guyana’s central role in driving regional energy development and advancing the Caribbean’s position as an emerging global energy hub. The event will also be supported by the Guyana Office for Investment, reflecting the country’s continued focus on attracting international capital and strengthening its investment pipeline.

The launch event will provide an early platform to outline the priorities for Caribbean Energy Week 2027, including upstream expansion, LNG development, infrastructure build-out and regional energy integration. It will also highlight the growing importance of cross-border collaboration as Caribbean states work to unlock shared resources and improve coordination across oil and gas value chains.

Guyana continues to anchor regional growth, with offshore production from the ExxonMobil-operated Stabroek Block averaging close to one million barrels per day in 2026 and expected to increase further as new developments come online. The continued expansion of upstream capacity, alongside ongoing exploration activity and FPSO deployments, has reinforced the country’s position as the region’s leading oil producer and a key driver of investment momentum.

Across the wider Caribbean, Suriname is advancing its offshore development agenda, led by TotalEnergies’ GranMorgu project and a growing pipeline of exploration activity. In Trinidad and Tobago, efforts are focused on revitalizing mature gas production while expanding LNG and petrochemical capacity, with renewed attention on upstream partnerships and regional gas monetization opportunities.

Building on this foundation, Caribbean Energy Week 2027 is expected to further expand its reach and impact, offering a dedicated platform for project announcements, investment facilitation and strategic partnerships. As global demand for secure and diversified energy supply continues to grow, the Caribbean is increasingly positioned as a key emerging hub defined by scale, collaboration and long-term opportunity.

– on behalf of Energy Capital & Power.

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PIE Amendment Bill submission deadline extended to August

Source: Government of South Africa

PIE Amendment Bill submission deadline extended to August

Human Settlements Minister Thembi Simelane has extended the public comment period for the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land (PIE) Amendment Bill by one month, from 6 July to 6 August 2026.

According to a statement issued on Tuesday, the extension follows requests from several organisations and members of the public, who said additional time was needed to engage with the proposed legislation and prepare submissions. 

Simelane published the PIE Amendment Bill for public comment on 16 April 2026. The Bill seeks to amend the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act, 1998, which was enacted to prevent unlawful evictions and address historical injustices associated with the removal of people from land without due process.

To ensure that no one was left behind and that there was maximum public participation on the bill, the Minister has appealed to the public and different organisations to seize this opportunity and make their voices heard.

“This about the people for the people. Once again, they have another opportunity to shape the bill,” Simelane said.

The department said it will continue hosting public information sessions over the coming weeks with a range of stakeholders, including traditional leaders, non-governmental organisations, the Banking Association of South Africa (BASA), Chapter 9 institutions and other government departments.

Additional information sessions will also be held in Gauteng and the Northern Cape. The department said it will publish a schedule of the remaining public engagement sessions.

Over and above information sessions, members of the public are also urged to submit their comments to PIE.AmendmentBill@dhs.gov.za, or hand deliver them at 240 Justice Mahomed Street, Sunnyside, Pretoria, or send them to the Director General, Department of Human Settlements, Private Bag x 644, Pretoria, 0001. – SAnews.gov.za

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MSGBC 2026 to Spotlight LNG Buildout Driving West Africa’s Gas Transformation

Source: APO


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The upcoming MSGBC Oil, Gas & Power 2026 conference and exhibition will host a dedicated technical session, “Gas Processing, LNG Infrastructure & Regional Gas Monetization Pathways,” bringing into focus the infrastructure systems and engineering innovations enabling the transformation of the MSGBC basin into a globally relevant gas production and export hub.

The discussion comes as the region moves decisively from frontier exploration toward large-scale gas development, with LNG infrastructure, floating production systems and cross-border pipeline networks increasingly central to national energy strategies. Taking place in Dakar from December 1–3, MSGBC 2026 will convene governments, operators, EPC contractors and investors to shape the next phase of West Africa’s gas-led growth.

Momentum across the basin is being driven by a wave of project execution and policy alignment. In Senegal, authorities recently approved construction of the GTA–Gandon pipeline segment, a key link in the country’s national gas grid designed to channel domestic volumes from the Greater Tortue Ahmeyim (GTA) project into power generation and industrial use, reducing import dependence and lowering energy costs.

The GTA development itself illustrates the scale and complexity of modern offshore gas infrastructure. Subsea production systems located nearly 3,000 meters below sea level are tied back to a floating production unit that removes impurities before transferring gas to the Gimi FLNG vessel for liquefaction and export.

Further upstream, Senegal’s transfer of the Yakaar-Teranga gas field to state-owned Petrosen has unlocked one of the region’s most significant undeveloped gas resources. With an estimated 25 trillion cubic feet of gas and a proposed $7.5 billion development plan, the project is expected to anchor the country’s long-term industrialization strategy, with first production targeted for the late 2020s.

Across the wider MSGBC basin, international interest continues to build. Chevron has entered Guinea-Bissau’s offshore sector through operatorship of Blocks 5B and 6B, while Energean is reportedly evaluating participation in major developments including Mauritania’s BirAllah project and Senegal’s Yakaar-Teranga system, reflecting sustained confidence in the basin’s long-term gas potential.

Mauritania’s BirAllah field, with development concepts centered on a major offshore production system and onshore LNG hub near N’Diago Port, remains one of the basin’s largest undeveloped gas resources and a potential cornerstone of future export capacity.

The MSGBC 2026 technical session will examine how FLNG solutions, modular infrastructure and integrated pipeline systems are accelerating the commercialization of deepwater gas resources. The success of GTA Phase 1 – first gas in late 2024, first LNG in early 2025 and multiple cargo exports within its first year of operation – has already demonstrated the viability of this model at scale.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Energy Capital & Power.

MSGBC 2026 Technical Presentation to Examine Deepwater Delivery and Contracting Models

Source: APO


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The engineering and contracting models that delivered GTA and Sangomar are being measured against the basin’s next projects, where cost and schedule discipline will decide which developments advance.

The MSGBC basin is adopting the standardized engineering, phased development and integrated contracting that operators worldwide use to keep high-cost offshore projects financeable. With Greater Tortue Ahmeyim (GTA) and Sangomar now in production, the basin’s next wave of projects hinge on their ability to apply those models quickly and competitively.

These questions anchor the technical presentation “Deepwater Engineering & Offshore Project Delivery in the MSGBC Basin” at this year’s MSGBC Oil, Gas & Power 2026 conference and exhibition. The session aims to examine how subsea production systems, the deployment of FPSO and FLNG units, offshore drilling, marine logistics and contracting models combine to turn a discovery into bankable production.

In offshore infrastructure, concept selection follows the resource. The economics of each vessel choice are visible in the basin’s two producing assets. Sangomar relies on a standalone FPSO, a converted very large crude carrier supplied by MODEC and moored roughly 100 km offshore, with a first-phase cost of around $5 billion.

GTA processes gas on an FPSO before piping it to the Gimi FLNG vessel operated by Golar LNG under a 20-year contract, with a nameplate capacity of approximately 2.7 million tons per year. Oil developments reward the storage and offloading flexibility of an FPSO, while large-scale gas justifies the cost of dedicated liquefaction close to shore.

The subsea systems linking wells to their host facilities represent a significant portion of a deepwater project’s engineering risk and cost. Sangomar ties its wells to the FPSO through 101 km of rigid flowlines, with a 24-well drilling program completed by deepwater drillships during ramp-up, while GTA connects its ultra-deepwater wells across roughly 100 km to processing infrastructure. Phasing is the principal lever for containing that exposure, allowing operators to bring on early production before committing capital to later stages. Woodside is now assessing a Sangomar Phase 2 of around 33 additional wells tied back to the existing FPSO, an approach that reuses the host facility rather than financing a new one.

At Sangomar, the subsea production systems ­– umbilicals, risers and flowlines – were delivered by the Subsea Integration Alliance under a single engineering, procurement, construction and installation (EPCI) contract. This approach consolidated technical scopes that are traditionally tendered separately.

“As the MSGBC basin moves into its next phase of deepwater development, the ability to deliver projects efficiently, safely and competitively will be critical to unlocking new investment and production. Leveraging the MSGBC Oil, Gas & Power platform, we aim to showcase the technologies, partnerships and delivery strategies that are helping transform discoveries into commercially viable production,” says Sandra Jeque, Vice President, Energy Capital & Power.

Gas developments lean on long-term LNG sales agreements and domestic supply commitments to underpin financing, while oil developments rely on the phased reuse of existing infrastructure to protect returns. As such, the “Deepwater Engineering & Offshore Project Delivery in the MSGBC Basin” presentation at MSGBC Oil, Gas & Power 2026 will examine how these engineering, logistics and contracting decisions connect, and how operators can carry the delivery performance achieved in the region into its next investment cycle.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Energy Capital & Power.