Cuban leader on energy quest to Russia, China, Turkey, Algeria by AFP Staff Writers Havana (AFP) Nov 16, 2022
Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel started a tour Wednesday of Russia, China, Turkey and Algeria, hoping to boost his country's struggling energy sector in the midst of prolonged blackouts and fuel shortages. The president said on Twitter the tour was designed to address "essential issues for our country, fundamentally related to the electric power sector." Cuba, already under US sanctions for more than six decades, has energy sector-related agreements with the four host countries which Diaz-Canel said had extended "official invitations" for his visit. Cuba gets oil from Algeria and Russia as well as Venezuela, its main supplier, while several of the island nation's power plants rely on Soviet or Russian technology. China is Cuba's second-largest trading partner after Venezuela, and a key communist ally. A Turkish company, meanwhile, is leasing Cuba seven floating electricity generators, the latest of which arrived at the port of Havana on Tuesday. Diaz-Canel will be accompanied by his foreign, finance and trade ministers for the visit ending on November 27. "We will be working hard to strengthen economic and political ties that allow us to continue promoting the development of #Cuba," said the president.
Western thirst for African gas raises alarm at COP27 Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt (AFP) Nov 14, 2022 Wealthy Western nations facing an energy crunch are eyeing natural gas in Africa at the expense of supporting green transition in poorer countries, climate activists at COP27 charge. European countries have been scrambling for alternative sources of gas after the continent's former top supplier, Russia, slashed exports in apparent retaliation for Western sanctions over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine in February. Gas-rich Norway has since overtaken Russia as a leading supplier, but Europe sees grea ... read more
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