At the outset, Sendou was supposed to be a symbol of energy sovereignty: 125 MW of baseload power, capable of reducing power outages and boosting Senegal’s industrial growth. Twenty years later, the ambition has dissolved into a labyrinth of offshore shareholders, scattered between Cyprus, Mauritius, Malta, London, Stockholm, and Tel Aviv, to the point that…...
Trending
- UMOA Securities: Investors rush for Ivorian paper
- Ivorian fintech FeexPay strengthens its presence in Africa with an alternative to payment terminals
- Royal Air Maroc inaugurates a new direct route with Brussels
- Gabon: a new nationality code that prevents Bally Bagayoko and Zohran Mamdani from being mayors in Libreville
- Exclusive interview with Joseph Félix Dier, CEO of CGF Gestion and president of ASCOP
- Bank Of Africa: net profit up 11% in 2025, driven by core business dynamics
- Standard Bank processes USD 8.692 trillion in payments in 2025
- CEMAC: BEAC offers around 700 million USD to banks
