Oil prices soar as analysts debate whether it’s a blip or start of a new supercycle

Oil prices soar as analysts debate whether it’s a blip or start of a new supercycle

Since November 2020, oil prices have risen by 70 per cent, hitting $70 per barrel in March. A united Opec+ (comprising the 13 Opec members plus 10 other big oil exporters), fast-recovering economies, the snowstorm in Texas and rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East – the recent Houthi attack...

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Energy industry is going to be the bedrock of Africa’s road to recovery

Energy industry is going to be the bedrock of Africa’s road to recovery

African Energy producers and the governments are facing an unprecedented economic crisis caused by coronavirus, unemployment, economic recession and energy poverty and energy transition concerns. The African Energy Chamber’s Road to Recovery: How the African energy industry can reshape itself for a post-Covid comeback offers a common-sense strategy for the...

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Journalists’ organisation says use of spyware compromises press freedom

Journalists’ organisation says use of spyware compromises press freedom

In light of dozens of incidents in which journalists and those close to them have been targeted with spyware, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) hasy launched a campaign calling on governments to stop the use of spyware and to take steps to prevent states with bad press freedom records...

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Species that often mate outside a bonded pair produce larger and faster seeds – research

Species that often mate outside a bonded pair produce larger and faster seeds – research

Starting in the late 1980s, the advent of genetic analysis put the final nail in the coffin for the idea of monogamy in birds, showing that in many species, males other than the one at the nest can father some of the offspring. Sperm competition, it appeared, is a concern...

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Promiscuity: Insects, birds are as fiercely protective and jealous as humans

Promiscuity: Insects, birds are as fiercely protective and jealous as humans

On a spring day in 1965, 20-year-old biology student Geoff Parker found himself lying flat on his stomach in an English meadow, staring at a pat of cow dung and the frantic activities of dung flies around it. But this was far from a case of a student grudgingly accepting...

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Public debt to grow by nine per cent of gross domestic product worldwide

Public debt to grow by nine per cent of gross domestic product worldwide

Global government spending to combat Covid-19 and its economic fallout – $11.7 trillion just in the first six months of the pandemic according to the International Monetary Fund – means public debt will grow by nine per cent of gross domestic product on average this year worldwide. In the United...

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Lockdown: Fewer cars on roads, but number of fatal accidents spikes

Lockdown: Fewer cars on roads, but number of fatal accidents spikes

Although there are fewer cars on America’s roads since the pandemic began, the number of fatal car crashes has increased. Early nationwide data support this counterintuitive finding: Even as daily trips from households fell significantly, preliminary data show that 28,190 people died in motor vehicle traffic crashes during the first...

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China’s five-year plan focuses on scientific self-reliance

China’s five-year plan focuses on scientific self-reliance

Scientific and technological self-reliance takes centre stage in China’s latest five-year plan — a result of recent tensions with the United States and other Western nations spilling over into the realm of science, say researchers. The 14th five-year plan, which sets out China’s vision for social and economic development over...

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Kenya: US copyright law, fake Gmail accounts used to censor gambling story

Kenya: US copyright law, fake Gmail accounts used to censor gambling story

On February 4, Emmanuel Dogbevi turned to Twitter with a plea for help. He tagged press freedom groups and colleagues in a series of tweets, lamenting how allegations that he violated US copyright law had prompted his news website to be taken offline. Dogbevi told CPJ via phone that Ghana...

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Press Freedom: Sixty-five journalists killed last year in the line of duty

Press Freedom: Sixty-five journalists killed last year in the line of duty

The number of journalists killed last year in the line of duty rose by 17 to stand at 65 compared to 2019’s 49, bringing further to the fore questions about the safety of media professionals as well as the right of the public to access information, and Press Freedom.  The...

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