How UNESCO got it wrong in Africa
May 30, 2017
Onome Amuge For decades, Nigeria, Africa’s fourth largest economy has struggled to convert scale into reliable power. Households and enterprises...
Read moreDetailsOnome Amuge Nigeria relied heavily on fuel imports in November 2025 to stabilise domestic supply, as refinery shutdowns and delayed...
Read moreDetailsOnome Amuge Nigeria is attempting to turn one of its longest-running environmental and economic liabilities into a source of investment,...
Read moreDetailsOnome Amuge Nigeria recorded a marginal rise in crude production in November but continued to fall short of its OPEC-assigned...
Read moreDetailsOnome Amuge Global oil and gas investment is shifting back to high-potential frontiers, and Africa is racing to reposition itself...
Read moreDetailsOnome Amuge The long-standing dependence on costly and environmentally damaging self-generated electricity by manufacturers in Aba and its environs may...
Read moreDetailsOnome Amuge Nigeria is doubling down on indigenous oil-services companies as the government seeks to restore confidence in an industry...
Read moreDetailsOnome Amuge TotalEnergies has deepened its footprint in Nigeria’s offshore oil sector with a pair of asset swaps that strengthen...
Read moreDetailsOnome Amuge While governments gather in Belém, Brazil, for COP30 to renew global climate commitments, a parallel race is accelerating...
Read moreDetailsBusiness a.m. Electricity has been restored in Aba and the environs after about 11 hours, the first time the area...
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