DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 10

Germany Urges European Union to Intensify Support Towards Syria’s Economic Recovery

0

Germany has recently urged the European Union to intensify its efforts to support Syria’s economic recovery and stabilization following the prolonged civil war and the fall of the Assad regime in late 2024.

According to a position paper from Berlin addressed to the European Commission, Germany is pushing for expanded economic relations with Syria. Key proposals include: Initiating discussions with the European Investment Bank (EIB, owned by the EU’s 27 member states) about potentially resuming operations or involvement in Syria.

Placing greater emphasis on policies that promote economic recovery and post-war reconstruction, with the World Bank estimating reconstruction costs at least $216 billion. The rationale is that faster economic progress is essential for the country’s stability after over a decade of conflict.

Germany argues that stronger EU engagement in economic ties would help accelerate recovery and prevent setbacks in the transitional period. This call comes amid ongoing EU efforts since 2025, including: The lifting of all economic sanctions on Syria decided in May 2025, with Germany playing a key role in pushing for phased relief.

Significant aid pledges, such as the EU’s €2.5 billion commitment for 2025–2026 and an additional €620 million package for 2026–2027 focused on humanitarian aid, early recovery, and bilateral support. Broader initiatives like enhanced trade cooperation and involvement in Mediterranean Pact programs to facilitate private investment and socio-economic rebuilding.

Germany has been a leading voice in supporting Syria’s transition, including through bilateral talks on financial reforms, debt restructuring, and investments in sectors like energy and infrastructure. However, challenges persist: Syria’s economy saw only modest 1% growth in 2025, with high poverty rates (over 90% of the population affected), inflation, and limited tangible benefits from sanctions relief on the ground.

The push reflects Berlin’s view that sustained EU action—beyond humanitarian aid—is critical for long-term stability, inclusive governance, and potentially facilitating the voluntary return of refugees. This aligns with earlier German commitments to reconstruction in areas like health, education, water, and economic development.

Syria’s energy sector—encompassing oil, natural gas, electricity generation, and renewables—is undergoing significant revival and attracting substantial foreign investments following the fall of the Assad regime in late 2024, the lifting of most international sanctions in 2025, and the government’s regain of control over key northeastern oil and gas fields in early 2026.

The sector was devastated by over a decade of conflict, with pre-war oil production around 400,000 barrels per day (bpd) dropping to roughly 120,000 bpd by late 2025. Electricity generation has been severely limited, often providing only a few hours of power daily in many areas due to damaged infrastructure, fuel shortages, and neglect.

Oil and Gas Production

Following the January 2026 handover of major fields like Al-Omar (the largest oil field) and Conoco/Tabiyeh gas complexes from Kurdish-led forces to central government control, production is rebounding. Oil output has increased by tens of thousands of bpd through low-cost repairs, workovers, and facility upgrades.

The Syrian Petroleum Company targets further gains, with expectations of reaching 100,000+ bpd soon and potential for doubling gas production to 14-15 million cubic meters per day by end-2026.

Electricity: Generation has improved from ~3 hours/day in some regions in early 2025 to 13+ hours in many areas by early 2026, with ambitions for 24/7 nationwide supply by end-2026. Gas imports from Azerbaijan via Turkey, Jordan/Qatar, and planned from Egypt support power plants in Aleppo, Homs, and Damascus.

Reconstruction needs for the broader energy sector (oil, gas, power, water) exceed $30 billion, with urgent requirements around $10 billion for power infrastructure alone. The World Bank estimates overall post-conflict reconstruction at ~$216 billion.

The transitional government has amended investment laws to allow up to 100% foreign ownership, attracting Gulf states, Turkey, the US, and others. Major deals focus on power plants, upstream redevelopment, and renewables. A $7 billion consortium led by Qatar’s UCC Holding signed in May 2025 for 5,000 MW capacity: four combined-cycle gas turbine (CCGT) plants (4,000 MW total) and 1,000 MW solar.

Locations include Aleppo, Deir ez-Zor, Homs, and others. This is structured as a public-private partnership and is one of the biggest post-war energy investments. Oil and Gas Upstream: US Chevron signed agreements with Qatari partners for offshore exploration and development, with operations starting soon.

UAE’s Dana Gas: MoU for redeveloping key gas fields like Abu Rabah. Other majors (ConocoPhillips, TotalEnergies, Eni) in talks or MoUs. Saudi firms (e.g., TAQA, ADES) providing technical support; Saudi Arabia announced broader investments including energy as part of a $2 billion+ package.

Azerbaijan (SOCAR) supplies 1.2 billion cubic meters annually since August 2025 for 1,200–1,300 MW generation. Regional pipelines (Arab Gas Pipeline via Jordan) and planned Egyptian supplies. World Bank $146 million grant for the “Syria Electricity Emergency Project” to repair transmission lines and substations.

US firms (Baker Hughes, Hunt Energy, Argent LNG) developing roadmaps for oil/gas/power tied to a new Syrian Sovereign Wealth Fund. Saudi ACWA Power: Joint agreement for 2.5 GW renewables (solar/wind). Gulf investments alone reached ~$28 billion across sectors in 2025, with energy as a priority.

European involvement remains limited but growing: Germany’s Siemens discussed opportunities in 2025, and the EU via pledges like €2.5 billion for 2025–2026 and €620 million for 2026–2027 focuses on humanitarian and early recovery aid, with Germany pushing for more economic engagement.

Despite momentum, hurdles include slow MoU implementation, infrastructure damage requiring massive rehab, governance and transparency concerns, political fragility, and the need for sustained stability to unlock full potential. Production gains in 2026 are expected to be incremental at first, focused on repairs rather than major new developments.

The sector’s revival is central to Syria’s economic stabilization, reducing import dependency, generating revenue for reconstruction, and improving living conditions through reliable power. International investment—primarily from Gulf and regional players—drives progress, with 2026 positioned as a pivotal year for tangible recovery in output and capacity.

Europe Wants an END to the Ongoing Escalations in the Middle East 

0

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz stated on Wednesday that Germany would have advised against the current course of action in the ongoing US-Israeli war against Iran if Berlin had been consulted beforehand.

In a government statement to the Bundestag (German parliament) ahead of an EU summit, Merz emphasized that Washington had not consulted Germany or deemed European assistance necessary. He reportedly said: “Ladies and gentlemen, we would have advised against taking this course of action in the way it has been taken.”

Merz reaffirmed Germany’s position of non-participation in the conflict, stating that Berlin would not join the war as long as it continues. He noted a lack of a “convincing plan” or shared strategy for bringing the operation to a swift and successful conclusion, while acknowledging shared long-term goals with the US and Israel—namely, ensuring Iran no longer poses a threat.

This reflects growing European concerns over the escalation, including potential impacts on energy supplies, regional stability, and transatlantic relations. Merz has previously distanced Germany from deeper involvement, stressing no NATO mandate exists for participation and ruling out actions like sending warships to secure routes such as the Strait of Hormuz.

The comments come amid an active US-Israeli military campaign against Iran which appears to have begun earlier in March 2026, with no clear end in sight according to European leaders. Merz has also welcomed any signals from US President Donald Trump indicating readiness to wind down combat operations, potentially opening the door for diplomatic contributions from Europe once fighting ceases.

The European Union’s response to the ongoing US-Israeli war against Iran has been characterized by calls for de-escalation, diplomatic efforts to end the conflict, condemnation of escalatory actions particularly Iran’s retaliatory strikes, and a firm refusal to participate militarily.

The EU has emphasized that “this is not Europe’s war,” while expressing concern over impacts on energy security, global trade routes especially the Strait of Hormuz, and regional stability.

Following the start of US-Israeli strikes, the EU issued a statement on March 1 via High Representative Kaja Kallas, expressing “utmost concern” over developments in the Middle East. It called for “maximum restraint,” protection of civilians, and full respect for international law, including UN Charter principles and international humanitarian law.

The EU urged Iran to refrain from indiscriminate military strikes while reiterating long-standing demands for Iran to end its nuclear program, curb ballistic missiles, cease destabilizing activities, and stop repression at home. The EU and member states including through joint statements with Gulf Cooperation Council countries on March 5 strongly condemned Iran’s retaliatory attacks on GCC states and other regional targets as “unjustifiable,” “indiscriminate,” and threats to global security. These targeted civilian infrastructure like energy facilities.

Diplomatic Focus and Calls to End the War

By mid-March, the EU shifted toward actively pushing for a resolution. On March 17, Kallas stated that the war must end, describing it as easier to start than stop and prone to getting out of hand. She highlighted consultations with Middle Eastern countries to develop proposals allowing all parties (US, Israel, Iran) to “save face” and exit the conflict.

The EU has offered diplomatic assistance to bring parties together and stop the war, while keeping the door open for potential involvement in securing navigation only as part of a broader diplomatic solution and not military escalation. The EU has rejected US calls to join operations, such as sending warships to secure the Strait of Hormuz.

Kallas noted “no appetite” among EU foreign ministers to expand existing naval missions like ASPIDES in the Red Sea into the Gulf. Leaders like German Chancellor Friedrich Merz have reiterated non-participation as long as the war continues, citing no NATO mandate, lack of consultation by the US, absence of a convincing endgame plan, and risks of endless escalation.

Merz stated Germany would have advised against the current course if consulted. Responses have been described as “disjointed,” with divisions over military intervention. Some states have been more critical of the US-Israeli actions as unilateral or unlawful, while others have aligned somewhat with shared goals like preventing Iranian nuclear threats but stressed restraint.

The EU Commission, led by Ursula von der Leyen, has focused on mitigating fallout: supporting evacuations, monitoring Red Sea/Hormuz routes, enhancing security cooperation, and preparing for energy price surges and potential migrant flows. EU leaders are addressing the conflict at a summit in Brussels, alongside Ukraine-related issues.

Topics include energy security, economic impacts from disrupted oil and gas flows, and diplomatic contributions once fighting ceases. Kallas has linked the need for swift resolution to broader priorities, noting Russia’s potential gains from prolonged chaos.

The EU prioritizes diplomacy over military engagement, condemns escalation especially Iran’s responses, shares long-term objectives with the US and Israel; neutralizing Iranian threats, but criticizes the lack of strategy and consultation. This reflects Europe’s vulnerability to energy shocks and desire to avoid deeper entanglement in what many view as a US-led conflict.

 

“Tokens will define the next economy”: Nvidia’s Huang Recasts AI as a Metered Industrial Resource

0

At GTC Conference 2026, Jensen Huang did more than outline product roadmaps. He sketched a shift in how computing itself is valued, arguing that the future of artificial intelligence will revolve around a single unit of measurement: tokens.

The Nvidia chief executive described a world where computers function less like personal tools and more like industrial systems that continuously generate intelligence, with tokens serving as the output. In that framing, AI is no longer a feature embedded in software—it becomes a consumable resource, metered, priced, and optimized much like electricity.

Tokens, often described as fragments of text processed by AI systems, have largely existed in the background of tools such as ChatGPT and Claude. They determine how much input a model processes and how much output it generates.

What Huang is proposing goes further. He is effectively elevating tokens from a technical accounting unit into a financial and strategic metric that could reshape corporate decision-making.

In practical terms, this introduces a new cost paradigm. Traditional enterprise software spreads costs across fixed subscriptions or licenses. Token-based pricing ties cost directly to usage, meaning that every query, automated workflow, or AI-generated output carries a marginal cost. The more deeply AI is embedded into operations, the more variable—and potentially volatile—those costs become.

A New Layer In Corporate Budgets

Huang’s suggestion that tokens could sit alongside salaries and infrastructure in corporate budgets signals a structural change in how companies allocate resources.

In high-skill environments, particularly engineering, the balance between human labor and machine-generated output is shifting. Huang argued that giving engineers access to substantial token budgets could unlock productivity gains that far outweigh the additional compute costs. In effect, companies would be buying output, not just labor.

That logic reframes compensation itself. Instead of simply paying for time or expertise, firms may increasingly invest in augmented productivity, where an employee’s effectiveness is amplified by the volume of AI compute they can deploy.

The idea is already gaining traction across the industry; compute access is beginning to feature in hiring conversations, an early sign that AI capacity is becoming a competitive workplace resource, much like high-end hardware or proprietary software once were.

Underlying Huang’s argument is the rapid emergence of agentic AI systems that can operate independently, execute tasks, and iterate without constant human prompts.

That transition has profound implications for demand. Today, most computing remains intermittent; devices sit idle for large portions of the day. In an agent-driven environment, that idle time disappears. Systems run continuously, generating tokens in the background as they analyze data, write code, manage workflows, or simulate decisions.

The result is a shift from burst-based computing to persistent workloads, where demand for processing power becomes constant rather than cyclical. This, in turn, drives a surge in token consumption and places new pressure on infrastructure, energy supply, and cost efficiency.

Hardware Competition Becomes Cost-Per-Token Competition

For Nvidia, this vision aligns closely with its commercial strategy. If tokens become the currency of AI, then the key metric for hardware is no longer raw performance alone, but how cheaply and efficiently it can generate those tokens.

This is where Nvidia sees its advantage. By designing chips that deliver higher throughput at lower energy cost, the company positions itself as a supplier of token production capacity at scale.

The implications extend across the industry because cloud providers, chipmakers, and enterprise users will increasingly compete on cost-per-token economics, a metric that blends hardware performance, software optimization, and energy efficiency into a single benchmark.

The token model also introduces a new layer of financial complexity. As AI adoption accelerates, companies could face rising operational expenses tied directly to usage. In periods of intense activity—product launches, financial modelling cycles, or research bursts—token consumption could spike sharply.

Huang’s willingness to absorb high token costs during “crunch time” underpins a belief that productivity gains will outweigh inflationary pressures. But that balance is not guaranteed across all sectors. For lower-margin industries, sustained increases in token usage could compress profitability unless offset by efficiency gains or pricing power.

This dynamic mirrors earlier transitions in cloud computing, where initial cost savings were followed by runaway usage bills as companies scaled their operations.

Implications for the global AI race

At a macro level, the rise of token economics adds a new dimension to technological competition. Nations and corporations are no longer just competing on talent or algorithms, but on their ability to generate and afford large volumes of compute.

This has geopolitical implications. Access to advanced chips, energy resources, and data center infrastructure will directly influence a country’s capacity to produce tokens at scale, shaping its position in the AI hierarchy.

It also reinforces Nvidia’s central role in the ecosystem. As demand for token generation grows, so does reliance on the hardware and platforms that make it possible.

Perhaps the most consequential aspect of Huang’s argument is how it reframes productivity itself. In a token-driven economy, output is no longer limited by human bandwidth alone. It is constrained by how much compute can be deployed and how effectively it is used. Employees equipped with large token budgets and powerful AI agents could achieve levels of output previously unattainable, creating asymmetric productivity gains within organizations.

That raises new questions for management, from how to allocate compute resources to how to measure performance in environments where machines contribute significantly to output.

Huang’s vision is still emerging, but its contours are becoming clearer. AI is evolving into a utility-like layer of the economy, where tokens function as both the unit of production and the measure of value. If that model takes hold, the implications will ripple across industries—from how companies budget and hire to how nations compete in the global technology race.

CAF Got It Wrong: Why Senegal Rightfully Deserves the Trophy

0

Here are my thoughts on the decision by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) to take the tournament trophy from Senegal and award it to Morocco. Good People, there is no ambiguity here: CAF is wrong, completely and unequivocally.

The Confederation of African Football (CAF) has stripped Senegal of its Africa Cup of Nations title and awarded the championship to Morocco, following a dramatic and disputed final that has now escalated into a legal battle.

In a statement released Tuesday, CAF said Senegal had forfeited the match after players temporarily left the pitch in protest during the closing stages of the game. The governing body ruled that the result would be recorded as a 3-0 victory for Morocco, overturning Senegal’s 1-0 win secured after extra time.

The decision has triggered a sharp backlash from Senegal’s football authorities, who have vowed to challenge the ruling at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in Lausanne.

I may not have been a great footballer, but back at Secondary Technical School, Ovim, I was the fan-in-chief among my classmates. Nicknamed “Sausa,” I analyzed games and offered commentary, even though I never made the team. One lesson our coach, Mr. Udeagu Snr, always emphasized was this: the referee holds the ultimate authority and must be respected if you do not want to lose the match.

In this case, the match was restarted and eventually completed, despite the earlier disruption. Yes, the Senegalese team may have left the pitch at some point, but they returned and finished the game. That is what matters.

The referee is, in effect, the supreme authority on the field, the final arbiter. Once the match was concluded under his authority, that result should stand. CAF’s appeal committee should recognize this and refrain from overturning what was decided on the pitch. All the rules should consider that the match was completed on the pitch.

Simply put, this trophy belongs to Senegal because the game was played to completion. We must avoid technicalities in our beautiful game.

I am Sausa,

ex-football strategist, Secondary Technical School Ovim Abia State

Tencent Delivers $109bn Full-Year Revenue, But It Masks a Deeper Pivot as AI Spending Surge Redraws Its Growth Playbook

0

Tencent has delivered a headline earnings beat for 2025, but the more consequential story lies beneath the surface: a deliberate and capital-intensive shift toward artificial intelligence that is beginning to reshape how the company generates and defends revenue.

The group reported full-year revenue of 751.8 billion yuan ($109 billion), narrowly ahead of analyst estimates of 750.7 billion yuan. On paper, the outperformance is modest. In strategic terms, it reinforces a pattern that has been building for several quarters—Tencent’s legacy engines remain reliable, but its future growth narrative is being rewritten by AI integration across advertising, gaming, and cloud services.

Chief executive Ma Huateng signaled as much, pointing to AI’s role in improving ad targeting precision and boosting engagement across Tencent’s gaming ecosystem. That matters because advertising efficiency and user retention are increasingly the levers that separate incremental growth from structural expansion in large platform businesses.

Yet the scale of Tencent’s AI ambition is best captured in its spending trajectory. The company deployed 18 billion yuan into AI in 2025 and intends to double that this year. This is not discretionary spending—it is a foundational investment, covering compute infrastructure, proprietary models, and talent acquisition in a global market where high-end AI engineers remain scarce and expensive.

What emerges is a familiar but high-stakes equation: Tencent is using the cash flows from gaming and social platforms to subsidize an AI buildout that may take years to fully monetize.

Gaming remains the anchor. Domestic titles generated 164.2 billion yuan in revenue, rising 18% year-on-year, with new releases such as Delta Force complementing long-running franchises that continue to deliver predictable income. International gaming revenue climbed to 77.4 billion yuan, crossing the $10 billion threshold for the first time.

That milestone carries weight beyond optics. It signals Tencent’s gradual decoupling from China’s regulatory cycle, where licensing constraints and content scrutiny have periodically disrupted growth. By scaling overseas operations, the company appears to be building a hedge against domestic policy shocks while tapping into higher-margin global markets.

Still, gaming’s dominance also exposes a structural tension. The segment funds Tencent’s expansion, but it is unlikely to deliver the kind of exponential growth investors now associate with AI-driven businesses. That places pressure on newer divisions to accelerate.

The clearest evidence of that shift is in business services. Fourth-quarter revenue in this segment grew 22%, driven by cloud computing demand—particularly AI-related workloads—and higher e-commerce technology fees. This is a critical inflection point. For years, Tencent’s cloud unit lagged domestic rivals in scale and enterprise penetration. Now, AI demand is effectively resetting the competitive landscape, allowing Tencent to grow alongside a broader industry upswing.

Fintech and business services revenue rose 8% to 229.4 billion yuan, reflecting steady payments activity and enterprise adoption. Social network revenue, tied to platforms like WeChat, grew 5% to 127.7 billion yuan—an indication that user growth may be plateauing, but monetization remains intact.

The fourth quarter offered a snapshot of this evolving mix. Revenue rose 13% year-on-year to 194.4 billion yuan, slightly above expectations. The composition of that growth is what stands out: less reliance on any single segment, and increasing contribution from cloud and AI-linked services.

Tencent’s strategy is not unfolding in isolation. Across the global technology sector, AI is driving a new investment cycle that is compressing margins in the near term while promising long-term gains. The risk is execution. Building AI capability is capital-intensive, but capturing value depends on translating that capability into differentiated products and pricing power.

Tencent appears to be pursuing a layered approach. AI enhances ad targeting, which improves yield without increasing user load. It deepens gaming engagement, extending the lifecycle of titles. And it drives demand for cloud services, where enterprise clients require compute resources to run their own AI models. Each layer reinforces the others, creating a network effect that could be difficult for competitors to replicate.

Geography adds another dimension. Tencent has indicated it plans to expand its cloud footprint into Europe and deepen its presence in the Middle East. These regions offer growth potential but also introduce geopolitical complexity. Tensions linked to the Iran conflict, for instance, could complicate infrastructure deployment or regulatory approvals in parts of the Middle East.

Such risks are becoming a defining feature of global tech expansion. Data sovereignty rules, cross-border restrictions, and political alignments increasingly shape where and how companies can build digital infrastructure.

For Tencent, the balancing act is that it must scale internationally without triggering regulatory resistance, while continuing to navigate China’s domestic policy environment.

Analysts at Citi described the results as “solid,” with upside driven by business services. That assessment captures the current moment: Tencent is stable, but stability alone is not the objective. The company is attempting to reposition itself at the center of the AI economy while maintaining the profitability of its legacy operations.

The early indicators are encouraging. AI is already contributing to revenue quality, not just volume. Cloud growth is accelerating. International gaming is expanding. But the cost base is rising, and the payoff from AI investment remains partly deferred.

What investors will watch next is not whether Tencent can grow—it has demonstrated that repeatedly—but whether it can convert its escalating AI spend into sustained margin expansion and defensible market share.

The 2025 results suggest the transition is underway. The challenge now is proving that the billions being channeled into AI will translate into something more durable than incremental gains—something closer to a new core business.