Botswana Business News

Bourse Africa to Set Up African Commodities Exchange

Bourse AfricaBourse Africa, a unit of Financial Technologies, plans to set up an electronic exchange to trade African commodities futures by the second half of next year, Director of Strategy Adam Gross said.

The Gaborone-based company is in talks with regulators in Botswana, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast, South Africa and Zambia for approval to incorporate them into an Africa-wide trading forum, Gross said today in an interview in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. Read the rest of this entry »

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Investec Asset Management Gains from its South African Roots

Investec Asset ManagementZimbabwe is a market that is too exotic to be top of mind for the average international investor, but not for Investec Asset Management, according to Hendrik du Toit, chief executive of the group.

Investec has been buying into Zimbabwe for some time, he says, making use of its South African roots and exploiting its advantage in the area.

It has been increasing exposure in its Africa fund and Africa Frontier private equity fund, though liquidity in the market remains an issue, says Mr du Toit.

Despite recent political turbulence following remarks by prime minister Morgan Tsvangirai that he would “disengage” from working with Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s president, and his ZANU PF party, Mr du Toit remains optimistic about the long-term fundamentals for post-Mugabe Zimbabwe.

In an interview before this incident, Mr du Toit said there were a couple of triggers that had made the country a talking point for “Africa enthusiasts”. These were the positive effects from the switch to using US dollars from local currency, and the influence the government’s coalition partner, Mr Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), is having on the economy.

Mr du Toit said before the most recent upheaval: “It is very difficult to call a bottom in a place that’s been down but we’ve seen triggers [such as the shift to using the US dollar]. There is a more palatable partner that is by and large in charge of the economy, which is a powerful signal.” Read the rest of this entry »

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Congo Will Ask Southern African Development Community (SADC) to Help Build Grand Inga Hydropower Plant

River DamThe Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) will invite more countries into Western Power Corridor Co. (Westcor), the regional partnership that plans to build the $5 billion Inga 3 hydropower plant on the Congo river, Africa’s biggest river.

Congo will ask all 15 members of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) to join Westcor at a regional summit due to be held in Kinshasa on Sept. 7-8, said Bene M’Poko, the Congolese ambassador to South Africa.

“What we’re going to propose during this summit is a framework whereby we should aim to produce more than 4,000 megawatts so that we can accommodate the needs of everyone in the region,” M’Poko, who is also the contact point for SADC, said today in an interview in Kinshasa. “Let’s open the doors so all the countries can join in.”

Angola, Botswana, Congo, Namibia, and South Africa in 2005 established Westcor to develop Inga 3 and tackle growing power shortages in the region. The plant would generate 4,300 megawatts from the Congo River, the world’s second-largest river by volume. Read the rest of this entry »

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VIDEO: CNBC Interview with Ayo Salami, CIO, Duet Victoire Africa Index Fund; Long-Term Investment in Africa: More Than a Commodity Play

The long-term investment case for Africa remains intact, according to Ayo Salami, CIO of Duet Victoire Africa Index Fund. Ayo Salami says that Africa is more than just a commodity play.

Watch more videos

Duet Group

Source(s): CNBC

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Southern Africa Set for a Flood of Renewable Energy (RE) Projects, According to Frost & Sullivan

Solar EnergyDespite the considerable potential that exists to produce electricity using renewable energy (RE) in Southern Africa, RE projects have been largely limited to off-grid, small-scale applications. However, the renewable energy market in South Africa is expected to grow exponentially in the next few years, owing to the announcement of the renewable energy feed-in tariff made in March 2009.

New analysis from Frost & Sullivan, Southern African Renewable Energy Equipment Market, finds that the Renewable Energy industry earned revenues of $28.4 million in 2008 and estimates this to increase nearly tenfold by 2015, to reach $262.3 million. This will include projects to develop energy from solar photovoltaic, solar thermal, wind power, and biomass sources. Read the rest of this entry »

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Doing Business in Africa Getting Easier, says World Bank/International Finance Corporation (IFC)

Doing Business 2009Botswana led a record year for African reformers making it easier to do business, with 28 countries completing 58 improvements

Botswana was one of the world’s top three reformers of business regulations, according to “Doing Business 2009″, an annual report published by the World Bank and the International Finance Corporation (IFC). Ghana was judged the best place to do business in West Africa for the second year in a row. Senegal has made it easier to start a business, register property, and trade across borders.

Burkina Faso introduced a new labor code and reforms for registering property, dealing with construction permits, and paying taxes. Botswana has cut the time to start a business, facilitated trade, and strengthened investor protections. Read the rest of this entry »

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VIDEO: Africa Open for Business (6 Minute Preview)

Voted BBC World Documentary of the Year 2006.

Ten stories, one continent, a global world. Get ready to see Africa as you’ve never seen it before. Imagine an Africa with entrepreneurial spirit that is striving to take care of itself and finding African solutions to African problems. That’s what you will see in this groundbreaking one-hour documentary by award-winning producer Carol Pineau.

There is no denying Africa has wars, famines, and natural and man-made disasters, but it also has high rises, stock markets, and internet cafes. Africa Open for Business challenges the stereotypes and proves Africa cannot be so easily defined.

Africa Open for Business offers a tour of the continent, profiling ten companies throughout Africa. Some operate in countries with good governance. One operates in a country with no government! What they have in common is hard work and good business sense. Taken together, they are inspiring stories of human force of will.

This is the Africa you don’t see on the nightly news. They are the real stories on the ground – the successes, the struggles, the challenges, and the solutions. Together, they are building Africa one business at a time.

Source(s): Africa Open for Business

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