Africa is poised to play a defining role in the next wave of global growth. With a population expected to reach 2.5 billion ...
The Managing Director, Project Management Institute (PMI), Sub-Saharan Africa, Mr George Asamani, has predicted that by 2050, Africa’s young workforce could be one of the most powerful economic forces ...
ROME (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Africa will be able to grow enough cereals to feed its growing population by 2050, but only if it breaks a culture of complacency and starts now to invest more in ...
South Africa’s iron and steel industry will need as much as $25-30 billion in investment by mid-century to cut greenhouse gas emissions by up to 85% and align with net zero targets, according to a new ...
To realise its immense potential, Africa must put industrial transformation, storytelling and free trade front and centre at ...
Africa is at risk of experiencing a massive human migration crisis, with researchers projecting that over 113 million people could become climate migrants by 2050 due to the escalating impacts of ...
World Bank President Ajay Banga projects Nigeria’s population will grow by 130 million by 2050, making it one of the world’s largest.
At Indo-Pacific Regional Dialogue 2025, Rear Admiral Kunal Singh Rajkumar highlighted the strong alignment between India’s ...
Dar es Salaam. More than 2,000 startup founders, investors, policymakers and innovation leaders are expected to converge in Dar es Salaam from December 1 to 5, for the 2025 edition of Tanzania Startup ...
The Smarter Mobility Africa conference at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg began with an impactful keynote session on the Access Gauteng 2050 stage. This opening address set the tone for ...
For the best experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings. Africa is expected to record a surge in illicit drug users between 2019 and 2050, a report ...
DAKAR, Nov 26 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The number of child brides in Africa will soar to 310 million by 2050 from 125 million now if current trends persist, due to slow rates of reduction ...