Thursday, October 9, 2025
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Researchers converge in AAU to discuss country’s air pollution  

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By our staff reporter

Evidence suggests that people living in cities with rapid urban growth and high industrial growth in Ethiopia suffer more from air pollution.

The new findings which come courtesy of an event themed, “Together for Cleaner Air: Towards Putting Ethiopia on the Clean Air Map” at the College of Natural and Computational Sciences of the Institute of Geophysics, Space Science and Astronomy (IGSSA) of Addis Ababa University (AAU), saw researchers converging to address air pollution issues.

As research showed, cities in the country have air contents of dust, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, carbon monoxide and ozone often exceeding the national ambient air quality standards.

Christina Isaxon (PhD), a Researcher at Centre for Healthy Indoor Environments and a senior lecturer in Ergonomics and Aerosol Technology, revealed in her introductory address that air pollution affects the climate and the human healthwith big consequences not only in premature deaths and human suffering but also economically lost productivity and strain on the health care system.

 “If everybody works together, Ethiopia can be enabled to leapfrog air pollution mistakes that other countries already have done, countries where cities have become denser and more and more polluted,” Christina cited.

According to the Researcher, Ethiopia can plan for cities focused on clean air and green spaces that can accommodate a healthy population and thereby also it plans for cities that are attractive not only to their inhabitants but also attract investors and tourism in general.

Elias Lewi (PhD), Director of IGSSA (AAU), explained that Atmospheric and Oceanic Unit of the Institute is engaged in research activities in the areas of climate change, impact assessment, flood and drought prediction, indoor and outdoor air quality monitoring, computational fluid dynamics and chemical analyses of the earth’s atmosphere.

The Director further said that the Institute and its adjunct members from USA and Ethiopia have been working on installing several Purple Air Quality monitoring instruments and there is a hope that it will be finalized as soon as calibration issues are resolved.

Kassahun Ture (PhD), from AAU, noted that air pollution causes and exacerbates a number of diseases, ranging from asthma to cancer, pulmonary illnesses and heart diseases.

“Outdoor air pollution and particulate matter, one of its major components have been classified as carcinogenic to humans by the International Agency for Research on Cancer,” he added.

As noted in the conference the main source of air pollution in Ethiopia was open burning of waste, vehicle emissions and traditional practices. Among these, open burning was one of the major sources of air pollution in metropolitan cities such as Addis Ababa.

Purpose Black Ethiopia avails a new innovative competition 

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By our staff reporter

Purpose Black Ethiopia comes up with a National Agriculture Innovation Award to boost farmers produce through use of sustainable fertilizers.

As announced by the company, the winner of the competition will receive a financial backing of 1 million birr.

“This innovative competition focuses mainly on the transfer of skills and experience in the agricultural sector; that could help shape innovative ideas into action, which down the line will aid farmers with small fields to increase their productivity,” Purpose Black cited while explaining the vision behind the competition.

The agricultural innovation competition also aims to get farmers out of dependence on chemical fertilizers with new invigorative ideas.

According to Purpose Black Ethiopia, the competition is in alignment with their structure of improving people’s lives which in this case can be benefitted by new approach of procedures and or concepts.

The company is also set to host the second National Agri-Innovation Summit from February 13 to February 15, 2024.

Mulatu Wolde, Director of Agri Innovation, stated that various governmental and non-governmental institutions will take part in the event and at the end of the conference, the best innovators will present their innovative work, especially those that can improve Purpose Black’s agricultural operations.

The director also explained that up to ten contestants will be given various incentives, support and supervision.

Ethiopia doubles down negotiations for WTO accession

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By our staff reporter

Ethiopia strongly sets its sight to become a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO). A new national committee gets established by the Prime Minister to spur negotiations.  

The committee which is headed by Gebremeskel Chala, the Minister of Trade and Regional Integration, in consensus noted that the nation has been engaged in negotiations with WTO member nations for four rounds now.

As highlighted, the procedure was put on hold for around three years stemming from several issues, with COVID-19 being the primary concern.

The committee disclosed that questions concerning the negotiation process have been submitted by the US, UK, China, Indonesia, Thailand, and other nations.

 “In the four round negotiation processes, about 900 questions have been tabled and we have given our response during the four negotiations,” the Committee expounded through its head.

According to Gebremeskel, after the fourth negotiation, members voiced over 181 issues, most of which centered on creating a competitive and favorable environment for imported goods alongside locally produced goods.

“The government’s stance on the customs levy is relevant here, they want to see predictable policy regarding our customs duty,” Gebremeskel stated.

“We have now completed the study in preparation for the forthcoming fifth negotiation on those matters,” revealed Gebremeskel, who is also a chief negotiator in the process.

According to the Minister, the national committee is preparing the offer for product imports and is now examining the research.

As he described, a decision was made at the most recent meeting in Geneva in July to wrap up the accession process in three years, and “the government is also working to conclude in the timeframe.”

“The government will work aggressively to join the WTO within three years, and all stakeholders, including the private sector, should be aware of this,” he stated.

One of the economic changes implemented by the present administration, which came to power around five years ago, was to reintroduce the longstanding negotiations and admit the nation as a member of the largest platform.

Ethiopia restarted negotiations in 2020 with the goal of finishing the process by 2021, however unanticipated problems caused the process to be postponed.

Nevertheless, the nation participated in the WTO as an observer for around 20 years, but it was unable to become a member since it could not match the demands of the other nations.

One of the main issues that member nations brought up was Ethiopia’s response to liberalization of the finance and telecommunications sectors.

The government has opened up the aforementioned two sectors on its own initiative, despite the process having been put on hold for the previous three years.

About 29 years ago, 125 nations founded the WTO with the intention of accelerating commerce and the global economy. There are 164 members as of now.

The primary goal of the intergovernmental World Trade Organization is to guarantee unhindered and unrestricted international commerce between states.

Local laws of a nation that is a member of the WTO are not allowed to conflict with WTO rules and regulations.

In addition, the WTO acts as a mediator, giving member nations a forum to discuss and settle trade disputes when they emerge.

Approximately 96.4 percent of global commerce is presently governed by WTO rules and regulations.

Currency outside banks hit all-time highs

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By Muluken Yewondwossen

Due to an unusual decrease, the quantity of currency outside banks (COB) has set yet another record in a single fiscal year from its all-time high.

The COB, often referred to as money with the public, decreased in the fourth quarter of the previous fiscal year, which ended on June 30, 2023, as compared to the preceding quarter.

This is the second instance in the same fiscal year and the second after the demonetization of notes in 2020.

Several tools have been put in place by the government to reduce one of the world’s highest rate of inflation.

Reducing the amount of money in circulation within the economy is one of the main macroeconomic tools used by specialists to stabilize the market.

The COB stood at 254.3 billion birr, which contracted by 1.6 percent from its all-time high of the third quarter of the same fiscal year, despite increasing by 22.1 percent from the same quarter of the 2022/23 fiscal year, according to the National Bank of Ethiopia’s (NBE) most recent economic review, which evaluated the situation in the fourth quarter of the 2022/23 fiscal year.

The COB was recorded at 258.3 billion birr in the third quarter of the 2022/23 fiscal year.

According to the NBE 2022/23 1st Q assessment, the COB decreased by 2.2 percent over the specified time, standing at 169.5 billion birr, in comparison to the previous quarter, or the 4th Q of the 2021/22 fiscal year. But the second and third quarters have witnessed significant increases.

The second and third quarters’ COBs climbed by 18.6% and 9.5 percent, respectively, compared to the previous quarters, according to the NBE review. When the government began the note demonetization in the first quarter of the 2020/21 fiscal year, the COB was just 64.6 billion birr, a severe decrease of 29.3 percent from the 109 billion birr of the fourth quarter of the 2019/20 fiscal year.

To achieve 108 billion birr, or a 67.5 percent increase over the first quarter, it has, nonetheless, nearly equaled the previous peak position in the second quarter of the same fiscal year.

Mamo E. Mihretu, the governor of NBE, met with representatives of the financial industry for the first time since taking office around a year ago, he said that during the first half of the fiscal year 2022/23 that ended on December 31, 2022, COB climbed by 27 percent to reach 189 billion birr.

He went on to say that this statistic illustrates the abundance of resources available in the market for financial institutions to deploy as deposits.

In his most recent interview with the state-run media, ETV, Mamo stated that although it is assumed that currency with public will be high because the majority of the population lives in rural areas, there has been no increase over the previous five years relative to the rise in deposits.

The broad money supply, as reported by NBE, was 2.17 trillion birr at the end of the fourth quarter of 2022/23, with a 26.6 percent annual rise primarily attributable to a 26.6 percent expansion in domestic credit and a 9.2 percent increase in other items net, which countered a 43.7 percent contraction in external asset (net).

The fourth quarter of the previous fiscal year similarly saw a decrease in bank new loan disbursements.

During the review quarter 113.5 billion birr in fresh loans (including CBE’s bond purchase) were disbursed; this was a 34.5 percent or 58.6 billion birr year-over-year reduction while 172.1 billion birr was the fresh loan disbursement in the fourth quarter of the 2021/22 fiscal year.