Polio this week as of 01 February 2023

Headlines:

  • WHO Executive Board: This week and next week, global health leaders are convening at WHO’s Executive Board to discuss global public health policy, including on the global effort to eradicate polio. In his opening address, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus noted that no wild poliovirus cases had been reported anywhere since September 2022, and commended support for this effort globally, including through the pledging of US$2.6 billion to the effort in October. The ongoing proceedings can be viewed here.
  • Gearing up to stop polio in Afghanistan and Pakistan in 2023: In October 2022, the Technical Advisory Group (TAG) for Afghanistan and Pakistan met in Muscat, Oman, to conduct a thorough review of ongoing polio eradication efforts in the remaining polio endemic countries. During the 6-day meeting they also provided strategic technical guidance on steering efforts towards successful interruption of the poliovirus in both countries in 2023. Read more
  • Syria takes steps to advance polio transition while strengthening essential health priorities: “The main goal of this mission is to ensure that the polio essential functions are well preserved,” — Dr Rana Hajjeh, Director of Programme Management at WHO’s Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean. Read more

Summary of new polioviruses this week:

  • Pakistan: one WPV1 positive environmental sample
  • Central African Republic: one cVDPV2 case
  • Chad: seven cVDPV2 cases and one positive environmental sample
  • Indonesia: one cVDPV2 case
  • Nigeria: one cVDPV2 case
  • Somalia: one cVDPV2 positive environmental sample
  • Yemen: one cVDPV2 case

 

 

Source: Global Polio Eradication Initiative

Eastern Africa Market and Trade Update – 2022 Q4, January 2023

Highlights

 

After peaking in the second quarter of 2022, international food and crude oil decreased throughout the rest of the year. Nevertheless, international commodity prices are still well above average levels five-year trends.

 

Despite reduced output and rising production and transport costs, import demand for cereals was still high which has affected regional trade dynamics and the price of imported food. Wholesale maize prices in key producing and exporting countries (Tanzania, Kenya, and Uganda) remained high in the last quarter of the year; prices are likely to be elevated until the next harvest in mid-2023.

 

Crude oil prices continued to fall in the last quarter of 2022. However, average fuel prices across the region were stable and significantly higher than a year ago. As of December 2022, average pump prices stood at USD 1.5/L –55 percent higher than the same month last year. Petrol prices in Burundi continued to increase in the last quarter of 2022 whereas prices in South Sudan, Somalia, and Uganda declined.

 

The prolonged drought in the Horn of Africa has greatly impacted food prices by undermining food availability and economic access to food. For nearly two years, staple food prices have sustained an upward trend in most parts of Somalia, even surpassing price levels recorded during the 2011 famine. In the Arid and Semi-Arid Lands (ASAL) of Kenya and across most markets in Oromia and Somali regions of Ethiopia, local cereal prices continued to soar through the last quarter of 2022 and remained well above the national average.

 

In the last quarter of the year, local currencies across Eastern Africa continued to lose their value against the U.S. dollar (USD), with South Sudan and Sudan recording the highest depreciation of the local currency against the USD both in the official market and parallel markets.

 

The cost of living in Eastern Africa are still significantly higher than a year ago. The annual inflation rate across the region averages at 24.2 percent. December marked the ninth monthly decline in annual inflation in Sudan; however, the country still records the highest annual inflation rate in the region (at 87.3 percent). Ethiopia, Rwanda, Burundi, and Uganda continued to record double-digit inflation in the last quarter of 2022.

 

Food prices are pushing up the overall cost of living for households, with food inflation averaging at 27.2 percent in Eastern Africa. Sudan, Rwanda, Burundi, Ethiopia, Uganda, and Kenya continued to record double-digit food inflation throughout quarter four of 2022.

 

In the last quarter of the year, the average per capita monthly price of a local food basket was stable across Eastern Africa. However, it is still significantly higher than a year ago. As of December 2022, the average per capita monthly price of a local food basket reached USD 19.2 across the Region – representing a 46.3 percent increase from the same month last year. Sudan and South Sudan continued to record the highest year-on-year (y-o-y) increase (up 89.4 and 80.5 percent, respectively). Somalia and Sudan continued to record the most expensive food baskets in the region (USD 28.8 and USD 28, respectively).

 

In line with global price developments, the average price of imported vegetable oil across Eastern Africa recorded a declining trend in the last quarter of the year, with variations among countries.

Nevertheless, in y-o-y terms, vegetable oil prices are firming, by showing a 24.7 percent increase between December 2022 and December 2021. Ethiopia and South Sudan recorded the highest increases (up 56.5 and 51.8 percent, respectively), followed by Sudan (up 23.8 percent). Vegetable oil prices are well above the five-year average in all countries of the Region.

 

Source: World Food Programme

Gordon Brothers to Sell Machinery & Equipment Formerly Used by José Sánchez Peñate

Madrid, Feb. 02, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Gordon Brothers, the global advisory, restructuring and investment firm, is offering for immediate sale by private treaty machinery and equipment from four plants in the Canary Islands formerly leased by the firm to the Spanish food products manufacturer and distributor José Sánchez Peñate.

José Sánchez Peñate primarily produced dairy products from two plants in Tenerife, Spain and manufactured and supplied coffee and bakery products from two plants in Gran Canaria. The complete plant and available machinery equipment are as follows:

  • Milk plant, including preparation, mixing, sterilization, cooling, packaging and palletizing systems.
  • Yoghurt plant, including raw material reception, pasteurization of milk, mixing station, pasteurization of yoghurt, addition of starter, fermentation, packaging, palletizing, cooling and storage.
  • Coffee plant, including raw materials reception, recipe preparation, roasting, milling, packing of coffee beans for restaurants or ground coffee, packaging, palletizing and storage.
  • Bakery plant, including raw materials reception, kneading machines, forming machines, cutting and boarding, fermentation area, baking and cooling, packaging and palletizing.

“This unprecedented food manufacturing plant sale is already generating global interest and is an amazing opportunity to acquire machinery and equipment worth millions of euros,” said Duncan Ainscough, Managing Director, Commercial & Industrial at Gordon Brothers. “With over €95 billion of assets appraised and disposed in the food and beverage industry, we are a trusted partner with a deep understanding of this sector and a strong history in maximizing asset value for companies in Spain and throughout Europe.”

The machinery and equipment is installed and inspections are available by appointment only. To view the full list of available assets, visit Gordon Brothers’ website: www.gordonbrothers.com/JSP.

About Gordon Brothers

Since 1903, Gordon Brothers (www.gordonbrothers.com) has helped lenders, management teams, advisors and investors move forward through change. The firm brings a powerful combination of expertise and capital to clients, developing customized solutions on an integrated or standalone basis across four services areas: valuations, dispositions, financing and investment. Whether to fuel growth or facilitate strategic consolidation, Gordon Brothers partners with companies in the retail, commercial and industrial sectors to provide maximum liquidity, put assets to their highest and best use and mitigate liabilities. The firm conducts more than $100 billion worth of dispositions and appraisals annually and provides both short- and long-term capital to clients undergoing transformation. Gordon Brothers lends against and invests in brands, real estate, inventory, receivables, machinery, equipment and other assets, both together and individually, to provide clients liquidity solutions beyond its market-leading disposition and appraisal services. The firm is headquartered in Boston, with over 30 offices across five continents.

Lauren Nadeau
Gordon Brothers
+1.617.422.6599
lnadeau@gordonbrothers.com

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