
Articles
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Jul 24, 2024 |
afrik21.africa | Inès Magoum
It’s now official. Zimbabwe becomes the 11th African country to accede to the 1992 Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary Watercourses and International Lakes (the Water Convention) after Ivory Coast, and the 15th African State, after Tunisia in 2009, to ratify the 1997 Convention on the Law of the Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses.
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Jul 24, 2024 |
afrik21.africa | Inès Magoum
Homepage » African Day of Seas and Oceans 2024 promotes sustainable growth African Day of Seas and Oceans 2024 promotes sustainable growth By Inès Magoum - Published on July 24 2024 / Modified on July 24 2024 To mark African Day of Seas and Oceans, which is celebrated every 25 July, the AFRIK 21 editorial team, in partnership with the SUEZ group, is bringing you a series of articles and interviews on the challenges facing this sector, which is essential to sustainable growth in Africa. To...
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Jul 22, 2024 |
afrik21.africa | Inès Magoum
Since the start of its activities in Africa in 1948, with the construction of its first drinking water plant in Sherbine, Egypt, SUEZ has made constant progress in its approach to the continent. Its aim is to support cities and industries in water management and waste recycling and recovery as a partner. In the water and wastewater sector, over the years the Group has built more than 500 drinking water and wastewater treatment plants serving most of Africa’s capital cities.
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Jul 17, 2024 |
afrik21.africa | Inès Magoum
Faced with serious water shortages that are hampering industrial growth and limiting social development in the Limpopo region, one of South Africa’s nine provinces, the government is coming up with concrete solutions. To this end, in 2010 it launched the Mokolo Crocodile Water Augmentation Project (MCWAP) through the Trans-Caledon Tunnel Authority (TCTA), which aims to build two main bulk raw water transfer systems. Work on the first batch was handed over in June 2015.
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Jul 12, 2024 |
afrik21.africa | Inès Magoum
Irrigating a 38-hectare ecological plantation in the Moroccan desert. This is the aim of the regenerative agriculture project implemented by the Franco-Moroccan company Sand To Green in the Guelmim-Oued Noun region, in southern Morocco. The company, which has developed an agroforestry model inspired by oases that reverses the process of soil degradation to make desert land fertile, will irrigate these hectares of plantations with desalinated water.
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#Egypt - The partnership agreement between @DowIberica and @WasteAid was signed on December 14th, 2021. #waste, #recycling, #plasticpollution https://t.co/yfcMcXA0AQ

#SECHELLES _ The new delivery deadline for the La Gogue #dam is 2022. @SinohydroCorpo1, @AfDB_Group https://t.co/9yZPVzYpAW

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