Absolutely Karim. Industrialization is a cross sectoral initiative, which energy is a major component.

Thanks,
Matarr


From: abdoukarim sanneh <[log in to unmask]>;
To: <[log in to unmask]>;
Subject: Re: What's Our Make-up & How Was/Is It Managed
Sent: Sat, May 31, 2014 6:48:04 PM

Burama
I mean a proposal.  The bridge barrage study was financed by UK Government.  The study was to have a bridge and barrage.  The barrage would serve a barrier to control the  flow salt water so that more areas can the flow of the fresh  water of the river for rice production and the bridge for transport crossing. The project was over shadowed by OMVG transboundary river basin agreement for joint integrated river basin agreement for energy production and agriculture.


Date: Sat, 31 May 2014 14:17:10 -0400
From: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: What's Our Make-up & How Was/Is It Managed
To: [log in to unmask]

AbdouKarim 

You mean proposed for Bamba/Yelle Tenda or was built?

Sure every project will bear some environmental concern. My question was whether it is already ascertain to be the best of options giving any of those concerns compared to other options.

Simply trying to know more.

I also heard (verbally) some expressing concern over the strength of the flow - whether it can effectively wheel the turbines. I know Ghana one time was experiencing that problem in the low flow season.

Is there any merit to that concern?

Regards

Burama

On Saturday, May 31, 2014, abdoukarim sanneh <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Burama
The Bridge barrage was build a bridge in bambatenda crossing for transports and the barrage is to contain the flow of salt water so that for land can be put into production. Students have indicated the hydro power potential of the Gambia River Basin. The recommendation are a jointed transboundary framework for all the member and their national ulitities to be Iinterconnected. Burama every big development project has its environment effect that is why environmental impact assessment is undertake to mitigate and reduce the effects.


Date: Sat, 31 May 2014 13:44:09 -0400
From: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: What's Our Make-up & How Was/Is It Managed
To: [log in to unmask]

AbdouKarim

Good observation. We need more and cheaper energy for all aspects of development. However many unanswered questions using water both environmental and economics.

I don't know any exact answer but nonetheless relevant concerns.  I recalled just vaguely PPP was considering a bridge/barrage somewhere close to Farafenni (Barra Kunda) mainly to halt salt instrusion at certain point. Too young both my knowledge and age at the time. Do we know what was it exactly and why/why not.

Just curious!

Burama

On Saturday, May 31, 2014, abdoukarim sanneh <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Matarr
Shifting from agriculture even light manufacturing industry cannot be possible without solving our chronic energy problem.  The solution of which lies using the hydro energy potential of Gambia River.  Electrification is fundamental to our development.


Date: Fri, 30 May 2014 21:11:18 -0700
From: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: What's Our Make-up & How Was/Is It Managed
To: [log in to unmask]

Demba, 

Don't be fooled by the comfy offices of the IMF & the WB in Washington, DC.  Along with the OECD, they operate some of the best databanks around.  Half of the data in the report Dr. Jaiteh quoted came from the WB & the IMF.  I don't know about the opposition, but Jammeh and his buddies do produce reports from data they get in the field.  You will find a handful if you look around. 

Burama, with inflation, I would be careful using the the MDG poverty line $ amount that was adjusted after the financial crisis by the World Bank to make a case for getting out of poverty.  Sure, Jammeh can finally play his oil CD and meet the $1.25 MDG requirement, but to be able to say Gambia truly moved over 1 million people out of poverty, policy makers must adjust/increase this poverty line to keep up with the rising CPI (between 5-7% annually).  

China - It can be very dangerous to use China as a case study.  The Chinese had a completely different attitude towards work, nonprofits, foreign aid and private relief organizations. Basically, almost everything you are preaching, the Chinese leaders were against, including human rights.  What ensured in China as a result was decades of famine that ended up killing millions. Given our politics at the moment, I do not see Gambia going through a similar phase for the sake of sustainable trade just to lift us out of poverty.   

We should also not get too excited about being poorly managed because we "have abundant resources"; we are a resource poor nation.  In the waters, there is really not much you can do with our ports these days.  We've lost our competitiveness as a re-exportation hub to other countries in the sub-region due to ill advised policies from the early days of the APRC govt. 

Stats - although statistics will help us plan better, but labour statistics in Africa is generally neither here nor there.  No one really know the real characteristics of our economy since most of it is done in the informal sector and trying to bring that to the fold is a way more difficult than we are imagining at the moment. This is where our stats problem continues to be and it is a phenomenon all African nations are currently struggling with.  

For Gambia, we will really need to start thinking about adopting policies that will shift our economy from the agricultural sector and into the industrial sector.  Industrialization as we've seen in all emerging economies will be key if we are really serious about ending poverty.  The data Dr. Jaiteh forwarde
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