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  • Ifugao micro-hydro projects to be replicated in Ecija farming towns, by Desiree Caluza

    This province’s community-led micro-hydro power projects will be replicated in Nueva Ecija and Nueva Vizcaya to energize farming communities there. The establishment of the micro-hydro plants in the two provinces will provide electricity to the farming villages of Minuli and Capintalan in Carranglan, Nueva Ecija, and some villages in Sta. Fe, Nueva Vizcaya, said Shubert Ciencia, spokesperson of the Rice Watch and Action Network of the Philippine Rural Reconstruction Movement here...

    Source
    Philippine Daily Inquirer
  • Chavez Promises Plastic Houses for Poor

    President Hugo Chavez toured a house made of plastic and promised to build thousands more like it for Venezuela’s poor as he marked the creation of a national petrochemical company. Chavez said the new Corporacion Venezolana de Petroquimica, or Pequiven, will step up production of products from plastics to fertilizer as it begins operating independently from the state-run oil company, Petroleos de Venezuela S.A. We are going to turn Venezuela into a petroch...

    Source
    Associated Press
  • IFC Invests in New Africa-Focused Microfinance Initiative

    More than 300,000 small-scale entrepreneurs in some of the world?s most challenging economies are expected to be financed over the next five years by PlaNet Bank, a new global investment company for microfinance institutions launched this week. It is a joint initiative of the International Finance Corporation, the private sector arm of the World Bank Group, and PlaNet Finance , an international nonprofit organization dedicated t...

    Source
    IFC
  • Cheaper mobile phone-based POS could make African credit card sales easier, by Mapara Syed

    For years credit cards have failed to penetrate developing nations the way they have impacted the rest of the world. This is down to the fact that many merchants and traders in these countries do not accept card payments, only cash or cheques. Conventional card payment processing terminals are expensive and most African merchants simply cannot afford them. However, with the rapid growth of wireless technologies new options to bring electronic transaction authorisation to non-traditional location...

    Source
    Balancing Act
  • Mani Shankar Aiyar’s Thai dream, by Sheela Bhatt

    Union Minister for Petroleum & Natural Gas and Panchayati Raj Mani Shankar Aiyar on Saturday announced a highly ambitious project called Rural Business Hubs, which will aim to eradicate rural poverty and create employment opportunity in rural India. If it is implemented successfully, the project will have far reaching consequences, it is said. Learning from China, Thailand and Japan’s experience of commercialisation of the rural areas and its produces, India has de...

    Source
    Rediff.com
  • USAID Partnering To Help Africans Help Themselves Out of Poverty, by Bruce Greenberg

    In sub-Saharan Africa, Natsios said, more than 2 million people die annually from malaria and many more succumb to AIDS-related complications even as millions more become newly infected with the virus. With the losses through death and the effects of the debilitating illnesses that prevent people from working, public services suffer, children are not properly educated, and economies begin to atrophy, he said. Natsios described projects USAID is spearheading to control the ravages of m...

    Source
    USINFO
  • Hydro Power Development: Private Sector’s Key Role, by Kamal Raj Dhungel

    Poverty reduction, an agenda of the first quarter of the twenty-first century, is the main development goal of all developing countries. High economic growth rate is desirable to bring the dream of the goal of poverty reduction into reality. However, experiences have proved that high economic growth rate alone is not sufficient to eradicate poverty. Failures to achieve the national development goal are attributed to the declination of the policies as to how and where the resources of...

    Source
    The Rising Nepal
  • Block by block, by Ricardo Sandoval

    [Cemex] set out to study the ?auto-construccion? market ? the do-it-yourself home building business that dominates Mexico?s transitional countryside, where farming no longer yields even subsistence incomes, and in the ad hoc neighborhoods that seem to pop up almost overnight on the fringes of Mexico?s cities. The company put its faith in Hector Ureta, an urban planner by training who believed the company had to radically alter its business model to achieve new sales in marginal neighborhoods.

    Source
    Stanford Social Innovation Review
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