Bank of Africa s’associe à dltledgers afin d’accompagner la digitalisation des opérations de commerce international au travers de la Blockchain.

SINGAPOUR and CASABLANCA19 décembre 2022 /PRNewswire/ — BANK OF AFRICA franchit une nouvelle étape dans l’accompagnement de ses clients dans la digitalisation des flux commerciaux internationaux à l’aide de la technologie blockchain de #dltledgers. La technologie est un facteur différenciateur dans l’environnement concurrentiel actuel, autant pour les entreprises que pour les banques. #dltledgers permettra à BANK OF AFRICA d’offrir à ses clients un nouveau canal digital pour le traitement des opérations de Trade Finance. Ce partenariat stratégique permettra au groupe bancaire de faciliter les échanges internationaux, d’améliorer la visibilité des flux sous-jacents et d’améliorer l’expérience client. En effet, la création de réseaux privés et sécurisés sur la blockchain permettra une collaboration et une confiance plus étroites entre la banque et ses clients. BANK OF AFRICA s’engage résolument à offrir une expérience client de pointe et à digitaliser les échanges documentaires des opérations de commerce international en utilisant la technologie blockchain de #dltledger ; la banque ouvre ainsi cette nouvelle voix en Afrique.

À propos de BANK OF AFRICA

Fondée en 1959, BANK OF AFRICA est un groupe panafricain de services financiers de premier plan. Capitalisant sur son appartenance au groupe O Capital, leader régional impliqué dans divers secteurs d’activité à fort potentiel de croissance, BANK OF AFRICA est une banque universelle dont les activités sont très diversifiées : banque de détail, commerciale, d’investissement et services financiers spécialisés tels que le leasing, l’affacturage, le crédit à la consommation et le recouvrement de créances. Présent dans 32 pays dont 21 en Afrique, le groupe se développe à travers une stratégie continentale tout en conservant une vocation internationale puisqu’il est bien positionné en Afrique, en Europe, en Asie et en Amérique du Nord.

À propos des dltledgers

dltledgers est une société technologique internationale dont le Siège social est basée à Singapour. Nous sommes une plate-forme centrée sur le client pour l’exécution des transactions transfrontalières. Plusieurs banques régionales et mondiales se sont inscrites et opèrent en tant que partenaires du réseau en offrant des services de financement du commerce sur la plateforme. Outre l’affectation de contrepartie dans la blockchain, nous mettons en réseau l’expédition, la logistique, les ports et d’autres partenaires de réseau dans un réseau commercial de confiance pour nos clients. Avec la digitalisation et la blockchain, le commerce transfrontalier se transforme comme jamais auparavant. La plateforme de blockchain #dltledgers est en tête du peloton avec plus de 4 milliards USD d’échanges exécutés dans le monde.”

A Graphenea lança a subsidiária de produtos químicos especiais KIVORO

Quality Control

Analysis of a specialty chemical

SAN SEBASTIAN, Espanha, Dec. 18, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A Graphenea S.A., líder mundial na produção de grafeno, lançou uma empresa subsidiária. A KIVORO é uma empresa química especializada, focada na criação de soluções para desafios industriais.

Vamos mais rápido! O slogan da KIVORO refere-se à agilidade e rapidez na colaboração com a empresa e, em conjunto com sua abordagem “keep-it-simple”, eles estão dando nova vida ao setor de produtos químicos especializados. Jeremey Shipp, Diretor de Vendas da KIVORO salienta: “Estamos trabalhando em desafios industriais complicados, mas não temos dificuldades para lidar com eles. Entendemos que nossos clientes estão em busca de soluções, não de problemas, e somos uma organização direta e ágil”.

Quality Control

Conducting quality control analysis

A KIVORO vai além do grafeno, comenta o CEO Jesús de la Fuente: “A KIVORO foi criada para podermos comercializar nossas soluções industriais atuais e irmos além do grafeno”. Naturalmente manteremos nossa experiência líder em carbono e nanomateriais, mas estamos firmemente focados no desenvolvimento das especialidades químicas corretas para os desafios industriais de nossos clientes, a fim de trazer eficiências operacionais e reduzir as emissões”.

Specialty Chemical Production

Head of Production, Xabier Ulacia overseeing production

A KIVORO trabalha com muitas indústrias de construção, revestimentos, filtragem, compósitos e outras. Eles desenvolveram vários aditivos de alto desempenho que vão desde seu aditivo para cimento até o armazenamento de energia, compósitos, adesivos, látex de borracha, revestimentos e muito mais. Uma das realizações de que eles mais se orgulham é seu status de emissões líquidas zero, comentou o CEO Jesús de la Fuente: “Somos implacáveis em nossa busca de melhorias para alcançar grandes resultados com um impacto positivo no desempenho e no planeta. Todos os nossos produtos são neutros em carbono e, na maioria dos casos, nossos produtos permitem que nossos clientes melhorem sua pegada de carbono e economizem dinheiro”.

Kivoro Plant

Specialty chemical production plant

Sobre a Graphenea
A Graphenea é uma empresa de tecnologia criada em 2010 especializada na produção de grafeno, tem clientes em mais de 60 países e escritórios em San Sebastián (Espanha) e Boston (EUA). A Graphenea auxilia seus clientes produzindo novas formas de grafeno, desde transistores de efeito de campo de grafeno até óxidos de grafeno, e mantendo sua liderança no setor de produção de grafeno em expansão.

Sobre a KIVORO
A KIVORO é uma subsidiária da Graphenea e é o resultado de muitos anos de trabalho no setor de aditivos e nanotecnologia, onde eles acumularam um extenso know-how e conhecimento intersetorial na área de produtos químicos especializados. A KIVORO foi criada para melhorar e agregar valor aos produtos dos clientes, projetando o melhor aditivo químico para sua aplicação.

Entre em contato
info@kivoro.com
www.kivoro.com

Kivoro Plant

Specialty chemical production plant

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Graphenea lance KIVORO, sa compagnie dérivée spécialisée dans les produits chimiques

Quality Control

Analysis of a specialty chemical

SAINT-SÉBASTIEN, Espagne, 18 déc. 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Graphenea S.A., un des leaders dans la production mondiale de graphène, vient de lancer une entreprise dérivée. KIVORO est une société spécialisée dans les produits chimiques qui se concentre sur la création de solutions pour les défis de niveau industriel.

Let’s go faster! (Avançons plus vite !) Le slogan de KIVORO fait référence à la flexibilité et à la rapidité des collaborations que propose l’entreprise. Avec son slogan et son approche « de simplicité », KIVORO donne un nouveau souffle au secteur des produits chimiques spécialisés. Jeremey Shipp, directeur commercial chez KIVORO, mentionne : « Nous travaillons sur des défis industriels complexes, mais nous ne sommes pas un partenaire compliqué. Nous comprenons que nos clients sont à la recherche de solutions, pas de problèmes, et nous sommes une organisation directe et flexible. »

Quality Control

Conducting quality control analysis

KIVORO ne se confine pas au graphène, commente Jesús de la Fuente, PDG : « KIVORO a été conçue pour nous permettre de commercialiser nos solutions industrielles actuelles et de proposer plus que du graphène. Nous maintiendrons naturellement notre expertise de premier plan dans le domaine du carbone et des nanomatériaux, mais nous nous concentrons résolument sur le développement de produits chimiques spécialisés adaptés aux défis industriels de nos clients permettant d’obtenir des gains d’efficacité opérationnelle et de réduire les émissions. »

KIVORO travaille avec de nombreuses industries telles que la construction, les revêtements, la filtration, les composites, et bien d’autres encore. La compagnie a développé plusieurs additifs de haute performance, de leur exhausteur de ciment au stockage d’énergie, en passant par les composites, les adhésifs, les latex de caoutchouc, ou encore les revêtements, et plus encore. L’une des réussites de la compagnie dont KIVORO est la plus fière est son statut net zéro, et Jesús de la Fuente, PDG, a commenté « Nous sommes infatigables dans notre quête d’améliorations permettant d’obtenir d’excellents résultats présentant un impact positif sur les performances et la planète. Tous nos produits sont neutres en carbone. Dans la plupart des cas, nos produits permettent même à nos clients d’améliorer leur empreinte carbone tout en économisant de l’argent. »

Specialty Chemical Production

Head of Production, Xabier Ulacia overseeing production

À propos de Graphenea
Graphenea est une entreprise de technologie créée en 2010 et spécialisée dans la production de graphène. La compagnie compte des clients dans plus de 60 pays et a des bureaux à San Sebastián (Espagne) et Boston (États-Unis). Graphenea accompagne ses clients par la production de nouvelles formes de graphène, que ce soit des transistors à effet de champ en graphène ou des oxydes de graphène, et conserve son leadership dans le secteur en expansion de la production de graphène.

À propos de KIVORO
KIVORO est l’entreprise dérivée de Graphenea, et est l’aboutissement de nombreuses années de travail dans le secteur des additifs et des nanotechnologies avec le développement d’un savoir-faire et d’une expertise croisés étendus de l’industrie chimique spécialisée. KIVORO a été créée pour améliorer et valoriser les produits de ses clients, et concevoir le meilleur additif chimique pour leur application.

Kivoro Plant

Specialty chemical production plant

Contactez-nous
info@kivoro.com
www.kivoro.com

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Kivoro Plant

Specialty chemical production plant

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GIEWS Country Brief: Madagascar 19-December-2022

FOOD SECURITY SNAPSHOT

• Above average rainfall amounts forecast for 2022/23 cropping season

• Rice (paddy) harvest above five year average in 2022, but weather shocks resulted in reduced maize harvests in southern regions

• Adequate national rice supplies in 2022/23 marketing year

• Inflation rate increase on rising import costs

• Food insecurity worsens in southern regions

Above average rainfall amounts forecast for 2022/23 cropping season

Planting of the 2023 season cereal crops, primarily rice, started in November and is likely to finish in January. Following moderate early season rainfall deficits in parts of the main rice producing northern regions, weather forecasts for the December 2022 to March 2023 period point to an increased likelihood of above average rainfall amounts throughout the country, underpinned by the ongoing La Niña event. These forecasts portend to generally beneficial conditions for the 2023 cereal crops for the remainder of the season. In southern regions, which suffered multiple years of drought, the predicted rainfall amounts raise the likelihood of a potential upturn in cereal production in 2023, but harvest outcomes will still be constrained by the high prices of inputs and low income levels that are expected to contribute to a below average planted area. Weather forecasts point to an average number of cyclones in 2023, maintaining the risk of floods and wind damage to food crops.

Rice harvest above five year average in 2022

For a second consecutive year, rice (paddy) production in 2022 is estimated at an above average level of 4.6 million tonnes, mostly reflecting conducive weather conditions in the key rice producing central and northern regions. Maize production, with crops mostly grown in southern regions, is estimated at a level below the five year average, reflecting the impact of drought conditions and the passing of several tropical cyclones between January and February 2022. The cyclones caused damage to food crops worth an estimated USD 140 million in southeastern regions, according to an FAO assessment from March 2022.

Adequate national rice supplies in 2022/23 marketing year

Reflecting the above average paddy crop harvested in 2022, national supplies are estimated to be satisfactory during the 2022/23 marketing year (April/March). Compared to the previous year, import requirements of rice are estimated to decline slightly to a below average level of 540 000 tonnes.

Inflation rate up on increased import costs

The annual inflation rate was estimated at 10 percent in October 2022, up from 6 percent in the corresponding month of the previous year. The upturn largely reflects high prices of imported products, owing to elevated global commodity prices and a weakening national currency since mid 2022 that intensified the spillover of the higher global prices to the domestic market. Prices of rice, the key food staple, only increased by 4 percent year on year in October, in part reflecting the adoption of a price ceiling by the governmnt in April 2022. In addition, the subdued prices were supported by the above average domestic production as well as the stability of international prices, especially when compared to global benchmark prices of wheat and maize that surged earlier in 2022. To stem inflationary pressure, the government raised its key policy interest rate to 10 percent in October 2022, up from 7 percent in October 2021.

Food insecurity worsens in southern regions

According to the latest Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) analysis released in November 2022, about 2.23 million people are projected to face IPC Phase 3 (Crisis) and above levels of food insecurity, including 0.3 million people in IPC Phase 4 (Emergency), during the first quarter of 2023. The estimated number of food insecure people represents 40 percent of the analysed population in southern and southeastern regions, and, compared to the previous year, this number has almost doubled. The worsening of the food securtiy situation is primarily due to the impact of multiple years of weather shocks that resulted in low harvests, disruptions of livelihoods and reduced incomes, limiting the coping capacity of most houeholds.

Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

Mystery Nevada Fossil Site Could Be Ancient Maternity Ward

Scientists have uncovered new clues about a curious fossil site in Nevada, a graveyard for dozens of giant marine reptiles. Instead of the site of a massive die-off as suspected, it might have been an ancient maternity ward where the creatures came to give birth.

The site is famous for its fossils from giant ichthyosaurs — reptiles that dominated the ancient seas and could grow up to the size of a school bus. The creatures — the name means fish lizard — were underwater predators with large paddle-shaped flippers and long jaws full of teeth.

Since the ichthyosaur bones in Nevada were excavated in the 1950s, many paleontologists have investigated how all these creatures could have died together. Now, researchers have proposed a different theory in a study published Monday in the journal Current Biology.

“Several lines of evidence all kind of point towards one argument here: That this was a place where giant ichthyosaurs came to give birth,” said co-author Nicholas Pyenson, curator of fossil marine mammals at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History.

Once a tropical sea, the site — part of Nevada’s Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park — now sits in a dry, dusty landscape near an abandoned mining town, said lead author Randy Irmis, a paleontologist at the University of Utah.

To get a better look at the massive skeletons, which boast vertebrae the size of dinner plates and bones from their flippers as thick as boulders, researchers used 3D scanning to create a detailed digital model, Irmis said.

They identified fossils from at least 37 ichthyosaurs scattered around the area, dating back about 230 million years. The bones were preserved in different rock layers, suggesting the creatures could have died hundreds of thousands of years apart rather than all at once, Pyenson said.

A major break came when the researchers spotted some tiny bones among the massive adult fossils, and realized they belonged to embryos and newborns, Pyenson said. The researchers concluded that the creatures traveled to the site in groups for protection as they gave birth, like today’s marine giants. The fossils are believed to be from the mothers and offspring that died there over the years.

“Finding a place to give birth separated from a place where you might feed is really common in the modern world — among whales, among sharks,” Pyenson said.

Other clues helped rule out some previous explanations.

Testing the chemicals in the dirt didn’t turn up any signs of volcanic eruptions or huge shifts to the local environment. And the geology showed that the reptiles were preserved on the ocean floor pretty far from the shore — meaning they probably didn’t die in a mass beaching event, Irmis said.

The new study offers a plausible explanation for a site that’s baffled paleontologists for decades, said Dean Lomax, an ichthyosaur specialist at England’s University of Manchester who was not involved with the research.

The case may not be fully closed yet but the study “really helps to unlock a little bit more about this fascinating site,” Lomax said.

Source: Voice of America

Twitter Poll Closes, Users Vote in Favor of Musk Exit as CEO

More than half of 17.5 million users who responded to a poll that asked whether billionaire Elon Musk should step down as head of Twitter voted yes when the poll closed on Monday.

There was no immediate announcement from Twitter, or Musk, about whether that would happen, though he said that he would abide by the results.

Musk has clashed with some users on multiple fronts and on Sunday, he asked Twitter users to decide if he should stay in charge of the social media platform after acknowledging he made a mistake in launching new speech restrictions that banned mentions of rival social media websites.

In yet another significant policy change, Twitter had announced that users will no longer be able to link to Facebook, Instagram, Mastodon and other platforms the company described as “prohibited.”

But that decision generated so much immediate criticism, including from past defenders of Twitter’s new billionaire owner, that Musk promised not to make any more major policy changes without an online survey of users.

The action to block competitors was Musk’s latest attempt to crack down on certain speech after he shut down a Twitter account last week that was tracking the flights of his private jet.

The banned platforms included mainstream websites such as Facebook and Instagram, and upstart rivals Mastodon, Tribel, Nostr, Post and former President Donald Trump’s Truth Social. Twitter gave no explanation for why the blacklist included those seven websites but not others such as Parler, TikTok or LinkedIn.

Twitter had said it would at least temporarily suspend accounts that include the banned websites in their profile — a practice so widespread it would have been difficult to enforce the restrictions on Twitter’s millions of users around the world. Not only links but attempts to bypass the ban by spelling out “instagram dot com” could have led to a suspension, the company said.

A test case was the prominent venture capitalist Paul Graham, who in the past has praised Musk but on Sunday told his 1.5 million Twitter followers that this was the “last straw” and to find him on Mastodon. His Twitter account was promptly suspended, and soon after restored as Musk promised to reverse the policy implemented just hours earlier.

Musk said Twitter will still suspend some accounts according to the policy but “only when that account’s (asterisk)primary(asterisk) purpose is promotion of competitors.”

Twitter previously took action to block links to Mastodon after its main Twitter account tweeted about the @ElonJet controversy last week. Mastodon has grown rapidly in recent weeks as an alternative for Twitter users who are unhappy with Musk’s overhaul of Twitter since he bought the company for $44 billion in late October and began restoring accounts that ran afoul of the previous Twitter leadership’s rules against hateful conduct and other harms.

Musk permanently banned the @ElonJet account on Wednesday, then changed Twitter’s rules to prohibit the sharing of another person’s current location without their consent. He then took aim at journalists who were writing about the jet-tracking account, which can still be found on other social media sites, alleging that they were broadcasting “basically assassination coordinates.”

He used that to justify Twitter’s moves last week to suspend the accounts of numerous journalists who cover the social media platform and Musk, among them reporters working for The New York Times, Washington Post, CNN, Voice of America and other publications. Many of those accounts were restored following an online poll by Musk.

Then, over the weekend, The Washington Post’s Taylor Lorenz became the latest journalist to be temporarily banned. She said she was suspended after posting a message on Twitter tagging Musk and requesting an interview.

Sally Buzbee, The Washington Post’s executive editor, called it an “arbitrary suspension of another Post journalist” that further undermined Musk’s promise to run Twitter as a platform dedicated to free speech.

“Again, the suspension occurred with no warning, process or explanation — this time as our reporter merely sought comment from Musk for a story,” Buzbee said. By midday Sunday, Lorenz’s account was restored, as was the tweet she thought had triggered her suspension.

Musk’s promise to let users decide his future role at Twitter through an unscientific online survey appeared to come out of nowhere Sunday, though he had also promised in November that a reorganization was happening soon.

Musk was questioned in court on Nov. 16 about how he splits his time among Tesla and his other companies, including SpaceX and Twitter. Musk had to testify in Delaware’s Court of Chancery over a shareholder’s challenge to Musk’s potentially $55 billion compensation plan as CEO of the electric car company.

Musk said he never intended to be CEO of Tesla, and that he didn’t want to be chief executive of any other companies either, preferring to see himself as an engineer instead. Musk also said he expected an organizational restructuring of Twitter to be completed in the next week or so. It’s been more than a month since he said that.

In public banter with Twitter followers Sunday, Musk expressed pessimism about the prospects for a new CEO, saying that person “must like pain a lot” to run a company that “has been in the fast lane to bankruptcy.”

“No one wants the job who can actually keep Twitter alive. There is no successor,” Musk tweeted.

Source: Voice of America

Historic Biodiversity Agreement Reached at UN Conference

Negotiators reached a historic deal at a U.N. biodiversity conference early Monday that would represent the most significant effort to protect the world’s lands and oceans and provide critical financing to save biodiversity in the developing world.

The global framework comes on the day the United Nations Biodiversity Conference, or COP15, is set to end in Montreal. China, which holds the presidency at this conference, released a new draft on Sunday that gave the sometimes-contentious talks much-needed momentum.

“We have in our hands a package which I think can guide us as we all work together to halt and reverse biodiversity loss and put biodiversity on the path to recovery for the benefit of all people in the world,” Chinese Environment Minister Huang Runqiu told delegates before the package was adopted to rapturous applause just before dawn. “We can be truly proud.”

The most significant part of the agreement is a commitment to protect 30% of land and water considered important for biodiversity by 2030, known as 30 by 30. Currently, 17% of terrestrial and 10% of marine areas are protected.

The deal also calls for raising $200 billion by 2030 for biodiversity from a range of sources and working to phase out or reform subsidies that could provide another $500 billion for nature. As part of the financing package, the framework asks for increasing to at least $20 billion annually by 2025 the money that goes to poor countries. That number would increase to $30 billion each year by 2030.

Financing emerged late in the talks and risked derailing an agreement. Several African countries held up the final deal for almost nine hours. They wanted the creation of a new fund for biodiversity but agreed to the creation of one under the pre-existing Global Environmental Facility (GEF).

“Creating a fund under the GEF is the best way to obtain something immediate and efficient,” said Christophe Béchu, France’s minister for ecological transition who headed its delegation, adding that a completely new fund would have taken several years to establish and deprived developing countries of immediate cash for biodiversity.

Then as the agreement was about to be adopted, Congo stood up and said it opposed the deal because it didn’t set up that special biodiversity fund to provide developing countries with $100 billion by 2030.

Huang swept aside the opposition and the documents that make up the framework were adopted. The convention’s legal expert ruled Congo never formally objected to the document. Several other African countries, including Cameroon and Uganda, sided to no avail with Congo and said they would lodge a complaint.

“Many of us wanted more things in the text and more ambition, but we got an ambitious package,” Canada’s Minister of Environment and Climate Change Steven Guilbeault said. “We have 30 by 30. Six months ago, who would have thought we could 30 by 30 in Montreal? We have an agreement to halt and reverse biodiversity loss, to work on restoration, to reduce the use of pesticides. This is tremendous progress.”

France’s Béchu called it a “historical deal.”

“It’s not a small deal. It’s a deal with very precise and quantified objectives on pesticides, on reduction of loss of species, on eliminating bad subsidies,” he said. “We double until 2025 and triple until 2030 the finance for biodiversity.”

The ministers and government officials from about 190 countries have mostly agreed that protecting biodiversity has to be a priority, with many comparing those efforts to climate talks that wrapped up last month in Egypt.

Climate change coupled with habitat loss, pollution and development have hammered the world’s biodiversity, with one estimate in 2019 warning that a million plant and animal species face extinction within decades — a rate of loss 1,000 times greater than expected. Humans use about 50,000 wild species routinely, and 1 out of 5 people of the world’s 8 billion population depend on those species for food and income, the report said.

But the government officials struggled for nearly two weeks to agree on what that protection looks like and who will pay for it.

The financing has been among the most contentious issues, with delegates from 70 African, South American and Asian countries walking out of negotiations Wednesday. They returned several hours later.

Brazil, speaking for developing countries during the week, said in a statement that a new funding mechanism dedicated to biodiversity should be established and that developed countries provide $100 billion annually in financial grants to emerging economies until 2030.

“All the elements are in there for a balance of unhappiness which is the secret to achieving agreement in U.N. bodies,” Pierre du Plessis, a negotiator from Namibia who is helping coordinate the African group, told The Associated Press before the vote. “Everyone got a bit of what they wanted, not necessarily everything they wanted.”

There were supporters of the framework who said it fell short in several areas.

The Wildlife Conservation Society and other environmental groups were concerned that the deal puts off until 2050 a goal of preventing the extinction of species, preserving the integrity of ecosystems and maintaining the genetic diversity within populations. They fear that timeline is not ambitious enough.

Some advocates also wanted tougher language around subsidies that make food and fuel so cheap in many parts of the world. The document only calls for identifying subsidies by 2025 that can be reformed or phased out and working to reduce them by 2030.

“The new text is a mixed bag,” Andrew Deutz, director of global policy, institutions and conservation finance for The Nature Conservancy, said. “It contains some strong signals on finance and biodiversity, but it fails to advance beyond the targets of 10 years ago in terms of addressing drivers of biodiversity loss in productive sectors like agriculture, fisheries and infrastructure and thus still risks being fully transformational.”

Source: Voice of America