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Month: March 2022

Nigeria to Supply Equatorial Guinea With Natural Gas 

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Nigeria has agreed to supply natural gas to Equatorial Guinea at Nigeria’s International Energy Summit in Abuja. African energy experts are urging quick implementation of the gas deal amid high demand and supply disruptions caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

This week’s signing of a gas deal by Nigeria’s minister of state for petroleum, Timipre Sylva, and his Guinean counterpart, Gabriel Lima, is a testament to Africa’s untapped gas market.

The deal seeks to supply Nigerian gas to Guinea’s processing site in Punta Europa.

Sylva said the deal would allow much of Nigeria’s unused gas to access the global market within two years — a timely development, experts said.

Gbenga Komolafe, head of Nigeria’s Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission, said, “The supply disruptions caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine resulted in an upward surge of crude oil prices, surpassing $100 per barrel for the first time since 2014. This development offers market potential for Nigeria to key into maximizing its oil and gas assets.”

African energy experts at the signing urged officials of both countries to expedite the implementation of the deal.

Komolafe said African countries need to carry out increased exploration and adopt advanced technology to maximize production yields to increase oil and gas reserves.

Gas supply

Nigeria ranks among nine countries with the highest gas reserves in the world. In January, Nigeria’s gas reserves rose by 1.4% from the previous year. But the market remains largely untapped and previous attempts by authorities to initiate gas deals fell apart.

Nigerian authorities last week said they were willing to invest more and focus on natural gas exploration.

Simbi Wabote, executive secretary at the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board, said, “It is time for us to synergize as Africa in order to expand that opportunity beyond the shores of Nigeria.”

But officials said a lack of prior investments in the energy sector could limit this opportunity for African countries.

“There’s a clear demand and supply gap that we’re seeing today, and that’s why we’re seeing the $104 oil prices in the market today,” said Mele Kyari, managing director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Commission. “No one has invested significantly in the last 10 years, more so in the last five years, to an extent that we’re seeing the effect of what that truly means.”

For now, officials and experts will be eager to see how this gas deal changes the status quo.

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Argentina Signs $45 Billion IMF Deal to Help Restructure Debt

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Argentina has signed a $45 billion agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to help restructure and delay its debt payments.

Negotiations about revamping the country’s debt payments have taken almost two years. That’s leaving Argentina now racing to finalize the deal with the IMF ahead of an essential “cliff payment” deadline this month, which could amount to about $2.8 billion.

Argentina’s finance minister and chief negotiator for the IMF, Martín Guzman, says the bill may be sent to the lower house of congress next week.

If the bill is approved in congress, President Alberto Fernández says payments would start being made in 2026 and would be completed by 2034. While the government said it will replace a $57-billion loan from the IMF 2018 bailout in January 2023, IMF head Kristalina Georgieva says there is still much more work to be done, referring to potential political opposition in congress.

The IMF says the executive board will meet once the Argentine National Congress signs off on a bill to assent to “the economic and financial program embodied in the Memorandum of Economic and Financial Policies.”

“The law that enables the treatment of the Memorandum of Understanding with the IMF for its approval or rejection will formally enter into this chamber,” the head of Argentina’s lower house said in a statement on Wednesday.

The agreement contains measures to promote growth and protect social programs as part of a 30-month Extended Fund Facility to confront “the country’s most pressing economic challenges,” according to a statement from the IMF on Thursday.

Some information in this report came from the Associated Press and Reuters.

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Макрон: Франція і партнери запропонують заходи для підвищення безпеки ядерних об’єктів України

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Президент Франції Емманюель Макрон заявив 4 березня, що його країна і її партнери найближчими годинами запропонують комплекс конкретних заходів для підвищення безпеки п’яти основних ядерних об’єктів України на основі критеріїв Міжнародного агентства з атомної енергії (МАГАТЕ).

Макрон у заяві, поширеній його офісом, повідомив, що розмовляв із директором МАГАТЕ 4 березня і підтримав зусилля організації щодо моніторингу ядерних об’єктів України.

Президент Франції заявив, що рішуче засуджує напад російських військ на цивільні ядерні об’єкти України, і закликав Росію негайно припинити військові дії, щоб українська влада могла взяти під повний контроль ядерні об’єкти країни.

Раніше сьогодні посольство США в Україні назвало воєнним злочином наступ російських сил на Запорізьку АЕС ввечері 3 березня.

У Державній агенції ядерного регулювання України вдень 4 березня повідомили, що найбільша атомна електростанція в Європі – Запорізька АЕС – після важких боїв на вулицях міста Енергодара захоплена військовими силами Російської Федерації, а а результаті обстрілів з артилерійської зброї промислового майданчика ЗАЕС пошкоджень зазнала будівля реакторного відділення енергоблоку № 1, у район розміщення майданчика Сухого сховища відпрацьовано ядерного палива потрапило 2 артилерійські снаряди.

«Ступінь пошкоджень конструкцій і систем цих ядерних установок та їх вплив на безпеку потребує додаткових оцінок за результатами ретельних обстежень спеціальними службами Експлуатуючої організації», – повідомили в агенції.

За повідомленням, через пожежу, що виникла вночі через обстріли АЕС, значних пошкоджень зазнала будівля навчально-тренувального центру, «розміщена у безпосередній близькості до промислового майданчика ЗАЕС».

Оперативний персонал, який на момент захоплення російськими військами майданчика ЗАЕС був на зміні, вимушений був продовжувати працювати на своїх робочих місцях більше ніж добу, йдеться в повідомленні. Серед персоналу ЗАЕС загиблих та поранених немає. Частина персоналу на фоні стресу отримували медичну допомогу.

«Наразі здійснена ротація оперативного персоналу, попередньо заплановано, що нова зміна буде працювати до 23:00. Оперативний персонал контролює стан енергоблоків та забезпечує їх експлуатацію. При цьому, робота персоналу здійснюється під тиском озброєних військових РФ, що захопили ЗАЕС», – наголосили в агенції.

 

 

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Categories: Новини, Світ

US Added 678,000 Jobs in February in Sign of Economic Health

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U.S. employers added a robust 678,000 jobs in February, another gain that underscored the economy’s solid health as the omicron wave fades and more Americans venture out to spend at restaurants, shops and hotels despite surging inflation.

The Labor Department’s report Friday also showed that the unemployment rate dropped from 4% to a low 3.8%, extending a sharp decline in joblessness as the economy has rebounded from the pandemic recession.

The latest jobs data follows recent reports that have shown an economy maintaining strength as new COVID infections have plummeted since late January. Consumer spending has risen, spurred by higher wages and savings. Restaurant traffic has regained pre-pandemic levels, hotel reservations are up and far more Americans are flying than at the height of omicron.

Friday’s hiring figures were collected before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has sent oil prices surging and has escalated risks and uncertainties for economies in Europe and the rest of the world.

The report showed that average hourly pay in the United States barely rose last month but has increased 5.1% in the past year, a sign that companies feel compelled to raise wages to attract and keep workers. Many employers, in turn, have been raising prices to offset their higher labor costs, a process that has fueled inflation.

The strong hiring in February occurred across most of the economy, with restaurants, bars and hotels adding 79,000 jobs, construction 60,000 and transportation and warehousing 48,000. The economy still has 2.1 million fewer jobs than it did before the pandemic erupted two years ago this month, though the gap is closely fast.

After months of concerns about labor shortages holding back businesses, there were tentative signs last month that more people are taking jobs or looking for work. The number of people who said they avoided job hunting because they were concerned about COVID fell to 1.2 million in February, down 600,000 from January, when omicron was raging.

Yet consumer inflation has reached its highest level since 1982, squeezing America’s households and businesses, with price spikes especially high for such necessities as food, gasoline and rent. In response, the Federal Reserve is set to raise interest rates several times this year beginning later this month. Those increases will eventually mean higher borrowing rates for consumers and businesses, including for homes, autos and credit cards.

Chair Jerome Powell said this week that he plans to propose that the Fed raise its benchmark short-term rate by a quarter-point when it meets in about two weeks. Powell has acknowledged that high inflation has proved more persistent and has spread more broadly than he and many economists had expected.

The Fed chair cautioned that if inflation failed to ease later this year as he expects, he would consider carrying out half-point increases at future central bank meetings. Larger hikes would raise the risk of weakening the economy or even tipping it into recession.

Powell also warned that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will lead to higher prices for gas as well as for such other commodities as aluminum, wheat and corn, thereby keeping inflation higher than it would otherwise have been. Oil prices, which have been soaring since war began more than a week ago, are critically important to the global economy.

For now, though, despite high inflation, the rapid fading of the omicron variant is likely to accelerate the U.S. economy and job growth. A survey by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found that Americans are now much less worried about COVID than they were in December and January. Mask mandates and other restrictions are ending. More companies are returning to pre-pandemic operations, including working in offices.

Data from the restaurant reservation software provider OpenTable showed that seated diners surpassed pre-pandemic levels late last month. And figures from the Transportation Security Administration reflected a sharp increase in the number of people willing to take airplane flights.

During the omicron wave, businesses barely wavered in their demand for workers. Job openings at the end of December reached near-record levels, with an average of 1.7 available positions for every unemployed person. Historically, there are usually more people out of work than there are jobs.

With many companies desperate for employees, layoffs have plunged. The number of people receiving unemployment aid fell two weeks ago to its lowest level since 1970.

Americans’ concerns about inflation have eroded their optimism about the economy. The Conference Board’s measure of consumer confidence slipped in February for a second straight month.

Still, other surveys show that Americans are increasingly satisfied with their own financial situations. And people clearly see that many jobs are available, the Conference Board’s survey shows.

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США надали українцям «тимчасовий захищений статус»

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Такий крок Міністерства внутрішньої безпеки дозволить українцям, які вже перебувають у США і не можуть повернутися в Україну через напад Росії, залишатися тут, і знімає загрозу їх депортації

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Categories: Новини, Світ

Ukraine Conflict Disrupts Global Energy Markets

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The ongoing conflict between Russia and Ukraine has left global oil and gas markets in the uncertain and unstable, causing supply issues and price spikes, with oil reaching levels of more than $110 a barrel Thursday. The uncertain duration of the conflict, though, makes it difficult to predict how much of the disruption will be permanent and how much is just temporary.

Washington-based Gulf analyst Theodore Karasik tells VOA there are many “wild cards” in the ongoing military confrontation that “could drive energy prices up even further.” He argues that “in any case, there are big changes occurring in the energy industry.”

“The energy situation and the pricing is contingent upon how long this [conflict] goes for and to what degree it ends. We’ve already seen extensive sanctions put on Russia because of its actions in Ukraine. Those sanctions against Russia in the energy field are going to affect how the Russian energy industry operates, and we just don’t have a clear picture of that yet,” Karasik said.

In the meantime, buying of Russian crude has stalled on the back of rising uncertainty over the possibility of direct western sanctions on energy exports, sending prices into freefall and prompting buyers to find alternatives.

The Russian export blend Urals — which trades as a differential to Atlantic Basin benchmark Dated Brent — touched record lows in recent sessions.

A source within the oil trading industry, who specializes in global markets told VOA that European buyers are now actively sourcing alternative crude supplies — Poland’s PKN Orlen is taking supplemental cargoes from term supplier Aramco — and much of that will come from local North Sea production as well as West Africa and the United States.

The source who chose to be unnamed said that the Chinese refiners, particularly those in Shandong province’s refining hub, are key buyers of Russian crude grades Urals and ESPO Blend.

“They have proven less concerned with sanctions, having purchased significant volumes of Iranian crude in the past year. But ongoing disruption to the global banking system as a result of SWIFT sanctions means that even willing buyers are struggling to pay for cargoes. Sanctions against Russian fleet Sovcomflot have only added to the logistical difficulties of buying Russian crude,” the analyst said.

Experts believe that Russian firms may eventually seek to set up accounts with Chinese banks to facilitate such transactions. And cargoes of Urals loading now in the Baltic Sea look likely to head to north China in bulk shipments, with or without earmarked buyers.

“But that entails losses — current market structure means long-haul arbitrage economics are marginal and storage economics are negative. Shipping a cargo to Shandong and floating for months is a losing proposition, even if that cargo has nowhere else to go,” sources in the energy industry told VOA.

Paul Sullivan, a Washington-based Middle East analyst, argues there is no end to the number of wild cards that could change the energy situation. “The conflict increases risk and therefore costs of energy by adding risk premiums,” he says.

On the flip side, “sanctions [on Russia],” he adds, “could hammer the world economy and push energy prices down.” Meanwhile, “some oil and gas companies are leaving Russia or divesting from Russia … [and that] could disrupt supply chains.”

Sullivan goes on to say that potential “terror acts in Russia towards pipelines could push prices up,” while “Turkey closing off the straits to Russian war ships” could also “affect energy ships,” as well.

Experts note that the majority of Russian spot crude is sold through international trading firms like Trafigura, Vitol and Glencore — only a small share is marketed directly by Russian firms like Surgutneftegaz. If Russian crude oil comes under sanction, then the longstanding dynamics that underpin trade in Russian seaborne exports could change, mirroring recent developments in the country’s upstream sector which has seen an exodus as western oil majors exit projects.

Egyptian political sociologist Said Sadek tells VOA that countries in North Africa, like Egypt and Algeria, are being sought out to increase their gas exports to Europe to compensate for Russian gas, which makes up 40% of European imports.

“North African states that produce gas — Algeria, Egypt — Egypt have limited stock, but they have been increasing by 365% [quantities of] liquified gas, because 90% of Egyptian gas is used domestically, 10% is exported, and then we get gas from Israel and Cyprus and transfer it into liquified gas [to] export,” Sadek says.

The expert adds that Qatar also is being solicited to increase LNG exports to Europe, but the tiny Gulf emirate already sends much of its gas to Asia: “A lot of contracts — long term — have already been signed between Qatar, South Korea, Japan, China, which cannot be revoked.”

Sadek emphasizes the Middle Eastern state that could conceivably make up the difference for lost Russian gas exports to Europe is Iran, and he thinks some European countries are hoping to lift sanctions on Tehran to allow oil and gas exports to resume. He questions, however, if Iran — an ally of Russia — would be willing to “stab Russia in the back.”

Some Middle Eastern and north African states, Sadek points out, are facing a potential food crisis, as well, “because they import large quantities of wheat from both Russia and Ukraine. “Countries like Tunisia, Sudan and Lebanon cannot afford more expensive alternative sources of wheat,” and they could eventually face instability if a major staple like bread runs short.

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У Чехії скасують відповідальність за найманство для тих, хто поїде воювати за Україну – прем’єр

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Напередодні міністр закордонних справ Дмитро Кулеба повідомив, що з 16 країн світу в Україну вже їдуть добровольці, «які готові пліч-о-пліч з українським народом боротися проти агресора»

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Categories: Новини, Світ

США запровадили санкції проти 19 російських бізнесменів і чиновників та їхніх родичів

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У санкційному списку – також 47 членів сімей російських бізнесменів і чиновників. Також до списку внесли низку пов’язаних із ними компаній

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Categories: Новини, Світ

Fewer Americans Apply for Jobless Benefits Last Week

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Fewer Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week reflecting a low number of layoffs across the economy.

Jobless claims fell by 18,000 to 215,000 for the week ending February 26, from 233,000 the previous week, the Labor Department reported Thursday.

The four-week average for claims, which compensates for weekly volatility, fell by 6,000 to 230,500.

In total, 1,476,000 Americans were collecting jobless aid the week that ended Feb. 12, a small uptick of 2,000 from the previous week’s revised number, which was its lowest level since March 14, 1970.

First-time applications for jobless aid generally track the pace of layoffs, which are back down to fairly healthy pre-pandemic levels.

The Labor Department releases its February jobs report on Friday. Analysts surveyed by the financial data firm FactSet forecast that the U.S. economy added 400,000 jobs last month.

In January, the U.S. economy added a whopping 467,000 jobs and revised December and November gains upward by a combined 709,000. The unemployment rate stands at 4%, a historically low figure.

The U.S. economy has rebounded strongly from 2020’s coronavirus-caused recession. Massive government spending and the vaccine rollout jumpstarted the economy as employers added a record 6.4 million jobs last year. The U.S. economy expanded 5.7% in 2021, growing last year at the fastest annual pace since a 7.2% surge in 1984, which also followed a recession.

Inflation is also at a 40-year high — 7.5% year-over-year — leading the Federal Reserve to ease its monetary support for the economy. The Fed has said it will begin a series of interest-rate hikes this month in an effort to tamp down surging prices.

Fewer Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week reflecting a low number of layoffs across the economy.

Jobless claims fell by 18,000 to 215,000 for the week ending February 26, from 233,000 the previous week, the Labor Department reported Thursday.

The four-week average for claims, which compensates for weekly volatility, fell by 6,000 to 230,500.

In total, 1,476,000 Americans were collecting jobless aid the week that ended Feb. 12, a small uptick of 2,000 from the previous week’s revised number, which was its lowest level since March 14, 1970.

First-time applications for jobless aid generally track the pace of layoffs, which are back down to fairly healthy pre-pandemic levels.

The Labor Department releases its February jobs report on Friday. Analysts surveyed by the financial data firm FactSet forecast that the U.S. economy added 400,000 jobs last month.

In January, the U.S. economy added a whopping 467,000 jobs and revised December and November gains upward by a combined 709,000. The unemployment rate stands at 4%, a historically low figure.

The U.S. economy has rebounded strongly from 2020’s coronavirus-caused recession. Massive government spending and the vaccine rollout jumpstarted the economy as employers added a record 6.4 million jobs last year. The U.S. economy expanded 5.7% in 2021, growing last year at the fastest annual pace since a 7.2% surge in 1984, which also followed a recession.

Inflation is also at a 40-year high — 7.5% year-over-year — leading the Federal Reserve to ease its monetary support for the economy. The Fed has said it will begin a series of interest-rate hikes this month in an effort to tamp down surging prices.

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Українці, які через вторгнення Росії втратили можливість працювати, отримають по 6,5 тисяч гривень – президент

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«Там, де бойові дії. Кожен найманий працівник, кожен ФОПівець, кожен наш громадянин України, у якого Росія забрала можливість працювати, отримає по шість із половиною тисяч гривень без жодних умов»

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