Connect with us

World

EU plans investment in world’s tallest dam to dent Russia’s energy clout

Published

on

EU plans investment in world’s tallest dam to dent Russia’s energy clout

Flags are seen behind the emblem of the European Funding Financial institution pictured within the metropolis of Luxembourg, Luxembourg, March 25, 2017. Reuters/Eric Vidal

Register now for FREE limitless entry to Reuters.com

  • Brussels desires EU to turn into prime investor in Rogun undertaking
  • Dam would make Tajikistan impartial of Russian vitality
  • Electrical energy would even be exported to Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan
  • Transfer is a part of EU’s response to China’s Belt and Highway plan

BRUSSELS/DUSHANBE, July 6 (Reuters) – The European Union plans to turn into the highest investor on this planet’s tallest dam in Tajikistan, EU officers advised Reuters, in a transfer geared toward serving to Central Asia reduce its reliance on Russian vitality and a part of EU’s reply to China’s Belt and Highway Initiative.

Tajikistan started in 2016 the development of the enormous hydropower Rogun plant, which may ship full vitality independence to the landlocked former Soviet Union nation.

The EU’s funding arm, the European Funding Financial institution (EIB), has to date not funded the undertaking, whose major developer is Italian development agency Webuild (WBD.MI).

Advertisement
Register now for FREE limitless entry to Reuters.com

However an EIB spokesman advised Reuters this week that the financial institution has now been requested by the European Fee to turn into “the biggest investor” within the undertaking.

Rogun is predicted to value round $8 billion, of which $3 billion have already been spent, the Tajik vitality minister Dalyor Juma advised Reuters in June. Whereas it has been largely financed by Tajik authorities’s bonds and personal loans to this point, the federal government in Dushanbe has requested EU monetary and technological assist in finishing the undertaking, an EU official accustomed to the talks mentioned.

The EIB spokesman declined to touch upon the dimensions of the doable funding and on the explanations for the brand new dedication.

Advertisement

The financial institution has invested in Central Asia about 182 million euros ($186.8 million) between 2014 and 2020, a fraction of its multi-billion-euro investments outdoors the EU’s 27-nation bloc.

The EU official, who declined to be named as a result of was not authorised to talk to media, mentioned a key cause for the EU to turn into a prime investor within the hydropower dam was to make Tajikistan and its neighbours impartial from Russian vitality.

The EU is desirous about pursuing “Central Asia vitality independence from Russia,” the official mentioned.

Brussels and its Western allies have been making an attempt to isolate Russia in response to its February invasion of Ukraine.

The Rogun hydropower plant, with its 335-metre-tall clay core rockfill dam which the builders say will make it the tallest on this planet as soon as accomplished, is predicted to finish continual energy shortages in Tajikistan and permit it to export electrical energy to Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan.

Advertisement

Oil is Tajikistan’s major import from Russia, whereas Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan import Russian fuel, largely utilizing imported vitality to produce areas effectively interconnected with Russian infrastructure, at the same time as each are themselves fuel producers.

The funding can be a part of the EU’s “World Gateway” technique, the EU official mentioned. Brussels unveiled the 300 billion euro world infrastructure spending plan in December as a greater, greener different to China’s Belt and Highway Initiative. Beijing launched its plan in 2013 to spice up its commerce hyperlinks with the remainder of the world and Central Asia is among the many areas the place China has since closely invested.

The EIB spokesman mentioned the financial institution was contemplating a joint funding with the European Fee, which controls the EU multi-billion-euro price range and just like the EIB also can elevate cash within the markets. The EU government confirmed that the bloc was open to finance the hydropower Rogun dam undertaking.

The Tajik authorities had no remark.

It’s unclear when the EU’s plans may flip into precise investments, however the EU official mentioned that choices could possibly be made by the ultimate quarter of this 12 months.

Advertisement

($1 = 0.9741 euros)

Register now for FREE limitless entry to Reuters.com

Further reporting by Olzhas Auyezov in Almaty; writing by Francesco Guarascio @fraguarascio
Modifying by Tomasz Janowski

Our Requirements: The Thomson Reuters Belief Ideas.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

World

Canadian Nobel-winning author Alice Munro dies aged 92

Published

on

Canadian Nobel-winning author Alice Munro dies aged 92

Munro was renowned for her short stories, which focussed on the frailties of the human condition.

Alice Munro, the Nobel Prize-winning Canadian author known for her mastery of the short story, has died at the age of 92.

Munro died at her home in Port Hope, Ontario, publisher Kristin Cochrane, chief executive officer of McClelland & Stewart, said in a statement on Tuesday.

“Alice’s writing inspired countless writers … and her work leaves an indelible mark on our literary landscape,” Cochrane said.

Munro published more than a dozen collections of short stories, which she focused on the frailties of the human condition and set in the rural Ontario countryside where she grew up.

Advertisement

Awarded the International Booker Prize for her body of work in 2009, and the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013, Munro was diagnosed with dementia about a decade ago and was living in a care home.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the world had “lost one of its greatest storytellers”.

“A true literary genius … her short stories about life, friendship, and human connection left an indelible mark on readers,” he said.

Munro was born on July 10, 1931, in Wingham, Ontario. Her father raised foxes and poultry, while her mother was a smalltown teacher.

Munro decided she wanted to be a writer when she was 11, and never wavered in her career choice.

Advertisement

“I think, maybe I was successful in doing this because I didn’t have any other talents,” she once explained in an interview.

“I’m not really an intellectual,” Munro said. “There was never anything else that I was really drawn to doing, so nothing interfered in the way life interferes for so many people.”

“It always does seem like magic to me.”

Munro’s first story, The Dimensions of a Shadow, was published in 1950, while she was studying at the University of Western Ontario.

Munro was three times awarded the Governor General’s Award for fiction, the first for Dance of the Happy Shades, a collection of stories published in 1968. Who Do You Think You Are (1978) and The Progress of Love (1986) also won Canada’s highest literary honour.

Advertisement

Her short stories were often published in the pages of prestigious magazines, such as The New Yorker and The Atlantic. Her last collection of work, Dear Life, appeared in 2012.

The characters in Munro’s stories were often girls and women who led seemingly unexceptional lives but struggled with issues ranging from sexual abuse and stifling marriages to repressed love and the ravages of age.

She was often likened to Anton Chekhov, the 19th-century Russian known for his brilliant short stories – a comparison made by the Swedish Academy when it awarded her the Nobel Prize.

Calling Munro a “master of the contemporary short story”, the Academy also said: “Her texts often feature depictions of everyday but decisive events, epiphanies of a kind, that illuminate the surrounding story and let existential questions appear in a flash of lightning.”

Advertisement
Continue Reading

World

The Boys Gets Early Season 5 Renewal

Published

on

The Boys Gets Early Season 5 Renewal


‘The Boys’ Renewed for Season 5 at Amazon



Advertisement
















Advertisement





















Advertisement



Advertisement

ad


Advertisement





Advertisement


Quantcast



Advertisement
Continue Reading

World

Argentina reports its first single-digit inflation in 6 months as markets swoon and costs hit home

Published

on

Argentina reports its first single-digit inflation in 6 months as markets swoon and costs hit home

Argentina’s monthly inflation rate eased sharply to a single-digit rate in April for the first time in half a year, data released Tuesday showed, a closely watched indicator that bolsters President Javier Milei’s severe austerity program aimed at fixing the country’s troubled economy.

Prices rose at a rate of 8.8% last month, the Argentine government statistics agency reported, down from a monthly rate of 11% in March and well below a peak of 25% last December, when Milei became president with a mission to combat Argentina’s dizzying inflation, among the highest in the world.

ARGENTINA WILL GET NEXT INSTALLMENT OF BAILOUT AS IMF PRAISES MILEI’S AUSTERITY POLICIES

“Inflation is being pulverized,” Manuel Adorni, the presidential spokesperson, posted on social media platform X after the announcement. “Its death certificate is being signed.”

Although praised by the International Monetary Fund and cheered by market watchers, Milei’s cost-cutting and deregulation campaign has, at least in the short term, squeezed families whose money has plummeted in value while the cost of nearly everything has skyrocketed. Annual inflation, the statistics agency reported Tuesday, climbed slightly to 289.4%.

Advertisement

“People are in pain,” said 23-year-old Augustin Perez, a supermarket worker in the suburbs of Buenos Aires who said his rent had soared by 90% since Milei deregulated the real estate market and his electricity bill had nearly tripled since the government slashed subsidies. “They say things are getting better, but how? I don’t understand.”

A vendor waits for customers at the central market for fruit and vegetables in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Friday, May 10, 2024.  (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

Milei’s social media feed in recent weeks has become a stream of good economic news: Argentine bonds posting some of the best gains among emerging markets, officials celebrating its first quarterly surplus since 2008 and the IMF announcing Monday it would release another $800 million loan — a symbolic vote of confidence in Milei’s overhaul.

“The important thing is to score goals now,” Milei said at an event Tuesday honoring former President Carlos Menem, a divisive figure whose success driving hyperinflation down to single digits through free-market policies Milei repeatedly references. “We are beating inflation.”

Even so, some experts warn that falling inflation isn’t necessarily an economic victory — rather the symptom of a painful recession. The IMF expects Argentina’s gross domestic product to shrink by 2.8% this year.

Advertisement

“You’ve had a massive collapse in private spending, which explains why consumption has dropped dramatically and why inflation is also falling,” said Monica de Bolle, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who studies emerging markets. “People are worse off than they were before. That leads them to spend less.”

Signs of an economic slowdown are everywhere in Buenos Aires — the lines snaking outside discounted groceries, the empty seats in the city’s typically booming restaurants, the growing strikes and protests.

At an open-air market in the capital’s Liniers neighborhood, Lidia Pacheco makes a beeline for the garbage dump. Several times a week, the 45-year-old mother of four rummages through the pungent pile to salvage the tomatoes with the least mold.

“This place saves me,” Pacheco said. Sky-high prices have forced her to stick to worn-out clothes and shoes and change her diet to the point of giving up yerba mate, Argentina’s ubiquitous national drink brewed from bitter leaves. “Whatever I earn from selling clothes goes to eating,” she said.

Argentina’s retail sales in the first quarter of 2024 fell nearly 20% compared to the year before, a clip comparable to that of the 2020 pandemic lockdowns. The consumption of beef — an Argentine classic — dropped to its lowest level in three decades this quarter, the government reported, prompting panicked editorials about a crisis in Argentina’s national psyche.

Advertisement

“Now I buy pork and chicken instead,” said Leonardo Buono, 51-year-old hospital worker. “It’s an intense shock, this economic adjustment.”

Milei, a self-proclaimed “anarcho-capitalist” and former TV personality, warned his policies would hurt at first.

He campaigned brandishing a chainsaw to symbolize all the cutting he would do to Argentina’s bloated state, a dramatic change from successive left-leaning Peronist governments that ran vast budget deficits financed by printing money.

Promising the pain would pay off, he slashed spending on everything from construction and cultural centers to education and energy subsidies, from soup kitchens and social programs to pensions and public companies. He has also devalued the Argentine peso by 54%, helping close the chasm between the peso’s official and black-market exchange rates but also fueling inflation.

Inflation in the first four months of 2024 surged by 65%, the government statistics agency reported Tuesday. Prices in shops and restaurants have reached levels similar to those in the U.S. and Europe.

Advertisement

But Argentine wages have remained stagnant or declined, with the monthly minimum wage for regulated workers just $264 as of this month, with workers in the informal economy often paid less.

Today that sum can buy scarcely more than a few nice meals at Don Julio, a famous Buenos Aires steakhouse. Nearly 60% of the country’s 46 million people now live in poverty, a 20-year high, according to a study in January by Argentina’s Catholic University.

Even as discontent appears to rise, the president’s approval ratings have remained high, around 50%, according to a survey this month by Argentine consulting firm Circuitos — possibly a result of Milei’s success blaming his predecessors for the crisis.

“It’s not his fault, it’s the Peronists who ruined the country, and Milei is trying to do his best,” said Rainer Silva, a Venezuelan taxi driver who fled his own country’s economic collapse for Argentina five years ago. “He’s like Trump, everyone’s against him.”

Advertisement

Argentina’s powerful trade unions and leftist political parties have pushed back against Milei with weekly street protests, but haven’t managed to galvanize a broad swath of society.

That could change — last week, a massive protest against budget cuts to public universities visibly hit a nerve, drawing hundreds of thousands of people.

“The current situation is completely unsustainable,” said de Bolle, the economy expert.

Continue Reading

Trending