Tag: copper
Post
Nation founded on copper
Esri Story Maps combine maps with narrative text, images, and multimedia content to create compelling user experiences.
This is a story map about the discovery and mining of copper in Zambia and its inexorable influence on the country’s affairs. The country is so intertwined with copper that copper shows up in many of its symbols. Copper’s influence, however, reaches beyond mere symbolism—it exerts influence in other ways that impact Zambians in their daily lives.
Tag: economy
Post
Zambia 2022-2027 GDP growth forecast
The Forecast In mid-January 2023, the Economic Intelligence Unit (EIU) released its GDP growth estimate 1 and forecast for Zambia running from 2022 to 2027. The forecast for Zambia, although not great considering the level of economic activity required to rapidly reduce poverty countrywide, is optimistic compared to the GDP growth rate for the world and the USA. EIU projects Zambia’s GDP will grow in the years 2023 to 2027 by an average of 4.
Tag: education
Post
Talking tech in Zambia
On September 7th, 2021 the president of Zambia twitted:
But for any country to be part of the progress and technological innovation happening around the world, it must pay attention to developments in high-tech; both the consumer internet software tech such as Facebook, WhatsApp, Google, WeChat, and the electronics hardware tech producing chips to embed in smart devices: iPhones, Teslas, drones and for 5G roll-out—Zambia is not doing that.
Tag: elections
Post
2021 election results in maps and charts
Zambians went to the polls to elect a president on August 12, 2021—they needed to re-elect the incumbent or choose a new one, along with new 156-member parliament (an additional 10 members are nominated by the president for a total of 166). Sixteen presidential candidates took part in the polls. The results reported by the Elections Council of Zambia (ECZ) show that the two leading presidential candidates, Hakainde Hichilema (HH), of the United Party for National Development (UPND) and Edgar Chagwa Lungu (ECL) of the Patriotic Front (PF) received 98% of the 4.
Post
2021 elections - GenY and GenZ set a new course for Zambia
On August 12, 2021, Zambians reprised, what we must by now consider settled habit—they elected a new government. They have made a custom of changing governments with a certain directness and dispatch to the process: no self-doubt, no longing regretful glance back over the shoulder, no breakup tears, no hint or hedge leaving the door open for a future reunion in the curt goodbye. They did so for the first time in 1964 when the Zambian flag; amber, black, red, and green replaced the Union Jack and unfurled atop flag poles across the newly independent country of Zambia; again in 1991 when they said goodbye to the first Zambian president Kenneth Kaunda; and again in 2011 when they bid farewell to the Movement for Multi-Party Democracy and, once more, in the latest iteration, when they said enough to the Patriotic Front (PF) and choose the United Party for National Development (UPND) to manage their affairs.
Tag: electricity
Post
The river and the old dam
Holding back a mighty river At 62 years old, Lake Kariba, created by the construction of a dam across the Zambezi is a scenic lake in the middle of southern Africa feed by many rivers. The lake is the largest human-created reservoir in the world—a symbol of humans shaping and bending nature towards their own comforts. The Zambezi is the largest of the rivers that feed the lake. Its waters on their way to the Indian ocean, 800 miles (1,290km) downstream of the dam, are held back, if only for a time, by the dam—a 420ft (128m) high arched concrete wall.
Tag: energy
Post
The river and the old dam
Holding back a mighty river At 62 years old, Lake Kariba, created by the construction of a dam across the Zambezi is a scenic lake in the middle of southern Africa feed by many rivers. The lake is the largest human-created reservoir in the world—a symbol of humans shaping and bending nature towards their own comforts. The Zambezi is the largest of the rivers that feed the lake. Its waters on their way to the Indian ocean, 800 miles (1,290km) downstream of the dam, are held back, if only for a time, by the dam—a 420ft (128m) high arched concrete wall.
Tag: fish
Post
Siavonga: Life on a man-made lake
Siavonga is the largest shoreline town on the Zambian side of Lake Kariba. It’s top four economic mainstays are hydropower from Kariba Dam, wild kapenta fishing, tilapia farming on the lake, and tourism. Tourism is the reason I had come to town in April, 2022. I had come to see for seeing’s sake; and to touch, for the first time, the dam and the lake it holds back.
The dam is an enormous hunk of curved concrete.
Tag: future
Post
Talking tech in Zambia
On September 7th, 2021 the president of Zambia twitted:
But for any country to be part of the progress and technological innovation happening around the world, it must pay attention to developments in high-tech; both the consumer internet software tech such as Facebook, WhatsApp, Google, WeChat, and the electronics hardware tech producing chips to embed in smart devices: iPhones, Teslas, drones and for 5G roll-out—Zambia is not doing that.
Tag: gdp
Post
Zambia 2022-2027 GDP growth forecast
The Forecast In mid-January 2023, the Economic Intelligence Unit (EIU) released its GDP growth estimate 1 and forecast for Zambia running from 2022 to 2027. The forecast for Zambia, although not great considering the level of economic activity required to rapidly reduce poverty countrywide, is optimistic compared to the GDP growth rate for the world and the USA. EIU projects Zambia’s GDP will grow in the years 2023 to 2027 by an average of 4.
Tag: innovation
Post
Talking tech in Zambia
On September 7th, 2021 the president of Zambia twitted:
But for any country to be part of the progress and technological innovation happening around the world, it must pay attention to developments in high-tech; both the consumer internet software tech such as Facebook, WhatsApp, Google, WeChat, and the electronics hardware tech producing chips to embed in smart devices: iPhones, Teslas, drones and for 5G roll-out—Zambia is not doing that.
Tag: maps
Post
2021 election results in maps and charts
Zambians went to the polls to elect a president on August 12, 2021—they needed to re-elect the incumbent or choose a new one, along with new 156-member parliament (an additional 10 members are nominated by the president for a total of 166). Sixteen presidential candidates took part in the polls. The results reported by the Elections Council of Zambia (ECZ) show that the two leading presidential candidates, Hakainde Hichilema (HH), of the United Party for National Development (UPND) and Edgar Chagwa Lungu (ECL) of the Patriotic Front (PF) received 98% of the 4.
Post
2021 elections - GenY and GenZ set a new course for Zambia
On August 12, 2021, Zambians reprised, what we must by now consider settled habit—they elected a new government. They have made a custom of changing governments with a certain directness and dispatch to the process: no self-doubt, no longing regretful glance back over the shoulder, no breakup tears, no hint or hedge leaving the door open for a future reunion in the curt goodbye. They did so for the first time in 1964 when the Zambian flag; amber, black, red, and green replaced the Union Jack and unfurled atop flag poles across the newly independent country of Zambia; again in 1991 when they said goodbye to the first Zambian president Kenneth Kaunda; and again in 2011 when they bid farewell to the Movement for Multi-Party Democracy and, once more, in the latest iteration, when they said enough to the Patriotic Front (PF) and choose the United Party for National Development (UPND) to manage their affairs.
Tag: mining
Post
Nation founded on copper
Esri Story Maps combine maps with narrative text, images, and multimedia content to create compelling user experiences.
This is a story map about the discovery and mining of copper in Zambia and its inexorable influence on the country’s affairs. The country is so intertwined with copper that copper shows up in many of its symbols. Copper’s influence, however, reaches beyond mere symbolism—it exerts influence in other ways that impact Zambians in their daily lives.
Tag: power
Post
The river and the old dam
Holding back a mighty river At 62 years old, Lake Kariba, created by the construction of a dam across the Zambezi is a scenic lake in the middle of southern Africa feed by many rivers. The lake is the largest human-created reservoir in the world—a symbol of humans shaping and bending nature towards their own comforts. The Zambezi is the largest of the rivers that feed the lake. Its waters on their way to the Indian ocean, 800 miles (1,290km) downstream of the dam, are held back, if only for a time, by the dam—a 420ft (128m) high arched concrete wall.
Tag: tech
Post
Talking tech in Zambia
On September 7th, 2021 the president of Zambia twitted:
But for any country to be part of the progress and technological innovation happening around the world, it must pay attention to developments in high-tech; both the consumer internet software tech such as Facebook, WhatsApp, Google, WeChat, and the electronics hardware tech producing chips to embed in smart devices: iPhones, Teslas, drones and for 5G roll-out—Zambia is not doing that.
Tag: tourism
Post
Siavonga: Life on a man-made lake
Siavonga is the largest shoreline town on the Zambian side of Lake Kariba. It’s top four economic mainstays are hydropower from Kariba Dam, wild kapenta fishing, tilapia farming on the lake, and tourism. Tourism is the reason I had come to town in April, 2022. I had come to see for seeing’s sake; and to touch, for the first time, the dam and the lake it holds back.
The dam is an enormous hunk of curved concrete.
Tag: travel
Post
Siavonga: Life on a man-made lake
Siavonga is the largest shoreline town on the Zambian side of Lake Kariba. It’s top four economic mainstays are hydropower from Kariba Dam, wild kapenta fishing, tilapia farming on the lake, and tourism. Tourism is the reason I had come to town in April, 2022. I had come to see for seeing’s sake; and to touch, for the first time, the dam and the lake it holds back.
The dam is an enormous hunk of curved concrete.
Tag: voting
Post
2021 election results in maps and charts
Zambians went to the polls to elect a president on August 12, 2021—they needed to re-elect the incumbent or choose a new one, along with new 156-member parliament (an additional 10 members are nominated by the president for a total of 166). Sixteen presidential candidates took part in the polls. The results reported by the Elections Council of Zambia (ECZ) show that the two leading presidential candidates, Hakainde Hichilema (HH), of the United Party for National Development (UPND) and Edgar Chagwa Lungu (ECL) of the Patriotic Front (PF) received 98% of the 4.
Tag: water
Post
The river and the old dam
Holding back a mighty river At 62 years old, Lake Kariba, created by the construction of a dam across the Zambezi is a scenic lake in the middle of southern Africa feed by many rivers. The lake is the largest human-created reservoir in the world—a symbol of humans shaping and bending nature towards their own comforts. The Zambezi is the largest of the rivers that feed the lake. Its waters on their way to the Indian ocean, 800 miles (1,290km) downstream of the dam, are held back, if only for a time, by the dam—a 420ft (128m) high arched concrete wall.
Tag: zambezi
Post
The river and the old dam
Holding back a mighty river At 62 years old, Lake Kariba, created by the construction of a dam across the Zambezi is a scenic lake in the middle of southern Africa feed by many rivers. The lake is the largest human-created reservoir in the world—a symbol of humans shaping and bending nature towards their own comforts. The Zambezi is the largest of the rivers that feed the lake. Its waters on their way to the Indian ocean, 800 miles (1,290km) downstream of the dam, are held back, if only for a time, by the dam—a 420ft (128m) high arched concrete wall.
Tag: zambia
Post
Siavonga: Life on a man-made lake
Siavonga is the largest shoreline town on the Zambian side of Lake Kariba. It’s top four economic mainstays are hydropower from Kariba Dam, wild kapenta fishing, tilapia farming on the lake, and tourism. Tourism is the reason I had come to town in April, 2022. I had come to see for seeing’s sake; and to touch, for the first time, the dam and the lake it holds back.
The dam is an enormous hunk of curved concrete.
Post
Talking tech in Zambia
On September 7th, 2021 the president of Zambia twitted:
But for any country to be part of the progress and technological innovation happening around the world, it must pay attention to developments in high-tech; both the consumer internet software tech such as Facebook, WhatsApp, Google, WeChat, and the electronics hardware tech producing chips to embed in smart devices: iPhones, Teslas, drones and for 5G roll-out—Zambia is not doing that.
Post
2021 election results in maps and charts
Zambians went to the polls to elect a president on August 12, 2021—they needed to re-elect the incumbent or choose a new one, along with new 156-member parliament (an additional 10 members are nominated by the president for a total of 166). Sixteen presidential candidates took part in the polls. The results reported by the Elections Council of Zambia (ECZ) show that the two leading presidential candidates, Hakainde Hichilema (HH), of the United Party for National Development (UPND) and Edgar Chagwa Lungu (ECL) of the Patriotic Front (PF) received 98% of the 4.
Post
2021 elections - GenY and GenZ set a new course for Zambia
On August 12, 2021, Zambians reprised, what we must by now consider settled habit—they elected a new government. They have made a custom of changing governments with a certain directness and dispatch to the process: no self-doubt, no longing regretful glance back over the shoulder, no breakup tears, no hint or hedge leaving the door open for a future reunion in the curt goodbye. They did so for the first time in 1964 when the Zambian flag; amber, black, red, and green replaced the Union Jack and unfurled atop flag poles across the newly independent country of Zambia; again in 1991 when they said goodbye to the first Zambian president Kenneth Kaunda; and again in 2011 when they bid farewell to the Movement for Multi-Party Democracy and, once more, in the latest iteration, when they said enough to the Patriotic Front (PF) and choose the United Party for National Development (UPND) to manage their affairs.
Post
Nation founded on copper
Esri Story Maps combine maps with narrative text, images, and multimedia content to create compelling user experiences.
This is a story map about the discovery and mining of copper in Zambia and its inexorable influence on the country’s affairs. The country is so intertwined with copper that copper shows up in many of its symbols. Copper’s influence, however, reaches beyond mere symbolism—it exerts influence in other ways that impact Zambians in their daily lives.