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Museveni Holds The Cards As Speakership Chess Game Intensifies: Oboth-Oboth Emerges From The Shadows In High-Stakes Power Battle • Sarah Kityo Sworn-In as Masaka District Woman MP as Parliament Continues Gazetted Swearing-In Sessions • Maarifasasa and Akademia Launch Pilot Testing for AI-Powered Offshore Delivery Platform Connecting Ugandan Engineers to Japan • Salaam Group’s Fuelstor breaks ground on $160 million energy terminal in Djibouti • From trending mystery to a new social reflex: The story behind the “Ahhh” movement • Uganda in Suspense as Museveni Keeps Nation Guessing in High-Stakes Speakership Race • COMMENTARY: Gen Muhoozi’s Growing Political Weight – The New Power Card No One Can Ignore • Shs 3 Billion Windfall: Mutebi Rallies Masaka to Embrace Bold Development Push • Uzodimma didn’t divert ₦800bn – S/East APC • Africa must drop ‘victim mentality’ – Elumelu • الولايات المتحدة وإثيوبيا تبحثان هدنة إنسانية وسلام دائم في السودان وتناقشان امن البحر الأحمر ومحادثات سد النهضة • الأمة القومي والاتحاد الأوروبي يبحثان في نيروبي سبل وقف الحرب بالسودان • BREAKING: Court sentences ex-power minister Mamman to 75 years • Tenants stranded after Kumasi landlord allegedly sells houses without notice • Security Operatives Arrest 12 Suspected Cultists In Edo, Seal Alleged Initiation Centres • Tumfa Market Airstrike: Amnesty alleges over 100 civilian deaths in Zamfara as military disputes claims • تحذير أممي من تصاعد ستة انتهاكات خطيرة ضد الأطفال أثناء النزاع المسلح في السودان • Court Jails Ex-Minister Saleh Mamman For 75 Years Over N33.8bn Fraud • Enugu seeks more enrollees into state’s universal health coverage • Letting Di’ja go was most difficult decision of my career – Don Jazzy • Museveni Holds The Cards As Speakership Chess Game Intensifies: Oboth-Oboth Emerges From The Shadows In High-Stakes Power Battle • Sarah Kityo Sworn-In as Masaka District Woman MP as Parliament Continues Gazetted Swearing-In Sessions • Maarifasasa and Akademia Launch Pilot Testing for AI-Powered Offshore Delivery Platform Connecting Ugandan Engineers to Japan • Salaam Group’s Fuelstor breaks ground on $160 million energy terminal in Djibouti • From trending mystery to a new social reflex: The story behind the “Ahhh” movement • Uganda in Suspense as Museveni Keeps Nation Guessing in High-Stakes Speakership Race • COMMENTARY: Gen Muhoozi’s Growing Political Weight – The New Power Card No One Can Ignore • Shs 3 Billion Windfall: Mutebi Rallies Masaka to Embrace Bold Development Push • Uzodimma didn’t divert ₦800bn – S/East APC • Africa must drop ‘victim mentality’ – Elumelu • الولايات المتحدة وإثيوبيا تبحثان هدنة إنسانية وسلام دائم في السودان وتناقشان امن البحر الأحمر ومحادثات سد النهضة • الأمة القومي والاتحاد الأوروبي يبحثان في نيروبي سبل وقف الحرب بالسودان • BREAKING: Court sentences ex-power minister Mamman to 75 years • Tenants stranded after Kumasi landlord allegedly sells houses without notice • Security Operatives Arrest 12 Suspected Cultists In Edo, Seal Alleged Initiation Centres • Tumfa Market Airstrike: Amnesty alleges over 100 civilian deaths in Zamfara as military disputes claims • تحذير أممي من تصاعد ستة انتهاكات خطيرة ضد الأطفال أثناء النزاع المسلح في السودان • Court Jails Ex-Minister Saleh Mamman For 75 Years Over N33.8bn Fraud • Enugu seeks more enrollees into state’s universal health coverage • Letting Di’ja go was most difficult decision of my career – Don Jazzy
ImpactHER, African governments rallies 5000 female entrepreneurs for green global market share
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ImpactHER, African governments rallies 5000 female entrepreneurs for green global market share

The Standard Gambia about 1 hour 3 mins read

ImpactHER Africa and 9 African countries- Nigeria, Chad, Uganda, Zimbabwe, Gambia, Sierra Leone, Cote D’Ivoire, Zambia and Gabon have scaled up women-led economic transformation for entrepreneurs across Africa with a momentous gathering of over 5000 female business owners drawn from 58 countries who converged on Abuja to discuss how they can become major players in the 5 trillion global green economy.

The gathering was the 2nd edition of the Global African Women Sustainability Conference with the theme: “Rethink, Reinvest, Regenerate: Women Entrepreneurs As Architects of Global Africa’s Sustainable Future which had in attendance over 10 African ministers, 20 African governments, US mayoral leadership, Latin America government representation, Caribbean government delegations, The African Development Bank, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development and the African Export-Import Bank.

According to Efe Ukala, Founder, ImpactHER Africa, the global green economy is now worth more than 5 trillion dollars a year and is on track to reach 7 trillion by 2030 and it is growing twice as fast as conventional industries. The global African women who already farm regeneratively, building with waste, weaving with eco-dyes and powering villages with the sun should be a part of the market and not outside it. “Consumers around the world are now willing to pay nearly 10 percent for sustainably produced goods- 10 percent more. The premium is real and that tells us there is a market. Furthermore, an estimated 70 percent percent of informal cross-border trade in Africa is conducted by women. This brings us to the question- why are our women stuck in the informal economy?”, she mentioned.

Ukala noted that “Certifications” have posed a barrier to African women involvement in global trade. “ The UN Women itself names the barrier: limited capacity to comply with regulatory requirements, with safety standards, with quality standards. Our women have the products. They do not have the paperwork. They have the practice- They do not have the proof. They have the sustainability- they do not have the certificate that lets the world see it. This is the gap that the sustainability conference is seeking to close. One of the sessions in this conference extensively dealt with “Sustainable Business Foundations” – certifications, standard and start-up rules. Our women deserve an ISO certification, an export licence and a global buyer for her products”, she explains.

The Ministers from Nigeria, Chad, Uganda, Zimbabwe, Gambia, Sierra Leone, Cote D’Ivoire, Zambia, Gabon who were active participants in the conference all pledged to strengthen access to female entrepreneurs in their various countries as they hold the golden torch to Africa’s collective success.

This article was sourced from an external publication.

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