Ethio Telecom Launches Experience Center at Adwa Victory MemorialEnvironmental Protection Agency Bill caters for youth interest

Ethio telecom has inaugurated today an Experience Center at the Adwa Victory Memorial Museum.

The center features a retrospective of telecom technological development processes, narrates the current level of technological advancement, and predicts emerging technological development trends.

It is also organized to showcase the historical development stages of Ethio telecom, displaying telecom gadgets while highlighting the present and future levels of technological excellence.

Launching the Experience Center, CEO of Ethio Telecom, Frehiwot Tamiru said the center provides residential and enterprise customers with the opportunity to exhibit, engage with, and experience the latest technologies firsthand.

The center will also showcase existing products and services, allowing customers to test new digital technologies, and explore technological breakthroughs, she added.

The center also showcases state-of-the-art technology, presenting verticals such as the health care sector, agriculture, and education, a valu
able opportunity to modernize their facilities using cutting-edge solutions, it was indicated.

This initiative is also designed to establish a streamlined systems capable of reducing costs, minimizing resource wastage, and enhancing overall productivity ultimately paving the way for the digital transformation of our country.

It is instrumental to the ongoing efforts aimed at enhancing our country’s digital economy, elevating the standard of living for citizens, and driving societal transformation through technological advancements.

The center was planned to function as a testing ground for comprehensive solutions with the potential to drive significant advancements and innovation within the industry, among others, smart Home Automation, tele birr financial transactions, immersive visitor experiences, Fintech integration as well as smart agriculture techniques, smart Tourism services and remote patient monitoring.

Ethio telecom has been providing telecom services in Ethiopia for 130 years.

Source: Ethiop
ian News Agency

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Bill 2023 will include dimensions that capture the interest of the youth.

The move is to enrich the Bill, make it more relevant and ensure smooth implementation, when passed.

Dr Godfred Seidu Jasaw, the Deputy Ranking Member of the Parliamentary Select Committee on Food, Agriculture and Cocoa Affairs, said this at a public consultation organised by Alliance for Green Revolution Africa (AGRA) in Accra.

The event sought to assist in the content revision and to propose specific amendments that will address needs of youth, and vulnerable groups, including People living with Disabilities around climate adaptation and use of climate change funds that will be established as a provision of the Bill when enacted.

It also served as a platform to create awareness, engagement, and climate literacy among young people.

Dr Jasaw said the timing of the amendment to the Bill was right because, ‘it is currently at the second consideration stage and open for input to make it solid.

He noted that the Bill was seeking to elevate the Environmental Protection Agency as an Authority to be empowered to regulate, protect, and exercise general oversight and co-ordination over all matters relating to the environment and climate change.

He said the Bill, when passed, would consolidate the various dispersed Environmental Acts; the Environmental Protection Act, 1994 (490), the Pesticides Control and Management Act, 1996 (Act 528) and the Hazardous and Electronic Waste Control and Management Act (917) under one Act.

The Bill under review was enacted twenty-nine years ago to regulate matters that affect the environment and to coordinate the activities of bodies that deal with the practical and technical aspects of the environment.

Mr Assan Ng’ombe, the Head of Resilience at AGRA, said Ghana had a large youthful population of which 73.7 per cent of them were below the age of 35 years.

‘However, youth participation in public and private processes remains low. For example, less than two per cent
of the 275 Members Parliament fall in the 21-35 age range,’ he noted.

The situation, Mr Ng’ombe said had, created gaps in national laws and programmes in effectively responding to the needs of the youth.

He said Ghana just like other global south countries was vulnerable to rising sea levels, droughts, increasing temperatures and erratic rainfall which adversely impacted infrastructure, hydropower production, food security and coastal and agricultural livelihoods.

Mr Ng’ombe noted that the youth had a role to play in helping the implementation of the country’s climate adaptation and mitigation measures hence the need for their inclusion.

Source: Ghana News Agency

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