nawa engineering & technology group an engineering consulting & investment firm presents...
TRANSCRIPT
Nawa Engineering & Technology Group
An Engineering Consulting & Investment Firm
Presents
Sub-Sahara AfricaBusiness Opportunities
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OutlineI. Company Overview II. Sub-Sahara Africa ResourcesIII. Sub-Sahara Africa Business OpportunitiesIV. Our ProjectsV. How to invest in our Company
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Nawa Engineering & Technology Group
Who we are: We are a US based global and worldwide
engineering consulting and investment company. We specialize helping companies and individuals all around the world to do profitable businesses in Sub-Sahara Africa.
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Nawa Engineering & Technology Group
Our Vision: Nawa Engineering & Technology Group will
positively change the way you think about Africa. Our responsibility is to continually help improve all
aspects of Africa economy trough manufacturing, infrastructure construction, agriculture modernization, telecom, and mining.
Our vision is to realize the tremendous African human and economical potentialities and to use them to the benefit of our customers, our shareholders and the African people.
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Our Mission: We strive to be the acknowledged global
consulting and investment leader and preferred partner in helping businesses and individuals to succeed in the Africa’s rapidly evolving and growing economy and consumer markets.
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Nawa Engineering & Technology Group
What we do: We are specialized in:
ManufacturingRenewable Energy (Solar / Wind)ConstructionAgricultureTelecommunicationTraining
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Nawa Engineering & Technology Group
What we do:Manufacturing
Product Testing strategies Lean Events6 Sigma ProcessesQuality defects root cause analysis Manufacturing plants equipmentQuality System development and deployment Manufacturing processes development, improvement and implementation
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Nawa Engineering & Technology Group
What we do:Renewable Energy (Solar / Wind)
System evaluationSystem designPower plant buildingSolar panelsWind millsAccessories (Inverters, controllers, batteries, cables, LED lamps..etc)
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What we do:Construction
Manufacturing plantsResidential housing complexes Single family housingLow income housing infrastructuresshopping centers and shopping mallsAmusement parksOffice buildingBuilding materials Land acquisition
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What we do:Agriculture
Agricultural equipmentFertilizers and pesticidesStorage facilitiesImport / ExportLand acquisitionLivestock Poultry and fishery
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What we do:Telecommunication
High speed internet networksTV channelsCell phones networksInternet businesses(online shopping malls) Internet café
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What we do:Training
Project managementLean Six Sigma Green Belt Renewable EnergyManufacturing Employee Training
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Nawa Engineering & Technology Group
Leadership Team:
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President & CEOPresident & CEO
VP & CFOVP & CFO VP Global MarketingVP Global Marketing VP HRVP HR
America Regions Lead
America Regions Lead
Western Africa Regions LeadWestern Africa Regions Lead
Central Africa Regions LeadCentral Africa Regions Lead
Lead Central Africa RegionsLead Central Africa RegionsLead Central Africa Regions
Eastern Africa Region Lead
Eastern Africa Region Lead
Southern Africa Regions Lead
Southern Africa Regions Lead
Sub-Sahara Africa:Geography and populationNatural resourcesBusiness opportunities
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Nawa Engineering & Technology Group
Sub-Sahara Africa:Geography
Sub-Saharan Africa is a vast region of approximately 27 000 square kilometers. Geographically, it is the area of the continent of Africa that lies south of the Sahara Desert. Politically, it consists of all African countries that are fully or partially located south of the Sahara (excluding Sudan).
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Sub-Sahara Africa: Geography
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Sub-Sahara Africa: Countries
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AngolaBeninBotswanaBurkina FasoBurundiCameroonCape VerdeCentral African RepublicChadComorosCongo (Brazzaville)Congo (Democratic Republic)
Côte d'IvoireDjiboutiEquatorial GuineaEritreaEthiopiaGabonThe GambiaGhanaGuineaGuinea-BissauKenyaLesothoLiberia
MadagascarMalawiMaliMauritaniaMauritiusMozambiqueNamibiaNigerNigeriaRéunionRwandaSao Tome and PrincipeSenegal
SeychellesSierra LeoneSomaliaSouth AfricaSudanSouth-SudanSwazilandTanzaniaTogoUgandaWestern SaharaZambiaZimbabwe
Sub-Sahara Africa: Geography Perspective
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Sub-Sahara Africa:PopulationSub-Saharan Africa's Population to Double by 2050
The 2014 United Nations Population Division
report predicts that sub-Saharan Africa will record the world’s largest population growth, from 1.1 billion to 2.4 billion people, between now and 2050.
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Population: Larger cities
By 2030 the 10 largest African cities in Sub-
Saharan Africa will be forces to reckon with. According to the latest Global Economy Watch by PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PWC) by 2030 the “next 10” are projected to add around 34m people to their populations and have the potential to triple their combined GDP by around $140billion.
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Population: Larger cities
Abidjan, Ivory Coast
Sub-Sahara AfricaNatural resources: Mineral Resources Many parts of Africa have long been known
to be rich in mineral resources. Eleven of its countries, especially in southern and western Africa, rank among the top ten sources for at least one major mineral
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Sub-Sahara AfricaNatural resources: Mineral Resources The continent has a majority of the world’s
known mineral resources:
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Copper Bauxite Platinum Chromium Ore
Gold Diamonds and gems Lead/ Zinc Manganese ore
Nickel Cobalt Uranium Phosphate rock
Sub-Sahara AfricaNatural resources: Oil & Gas Resources As at January 2014, Sub-Saharan Africa's share of world
oil production and oil reserves was 6.52% and 4.26% respectively, and the share of gas production and reserves was 3.19% and 3.28% respectively.
However, these production and reserve numbers are expected to grow significantly as the vast continent remains one of the last exploration frontiers for oil and gas, as evidenced by the exploration activity by upstream exploration companies and significant oil and gas discoveries in the region.
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Sub-Sahara AfricaNatural resources: Agricultural Resources Agriculture is Africa’s largest economic sector,
representing 15 percent of the continent’s total GDP, or more than $100 billion annually.
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Sub-Sahara AfricaNatural resources: Agriculture Agricultural production includes but not limited:
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Tomatoes Onions peppers lettuce Beans
Sub-Sahara AfricaNatural resources: Agriculture
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Anarcade Plantain Coffee Cacao Rubber Tree
Sub-Sahara AfricaNatural resources: Agriculture
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Palm oil tree Peanuts Avocado Pineapple Banana
Sub-Sahara AfricaNatural resource s: Agriculture
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Cotton Sugar Cane Rice Corn Cassava
Sub-Sahara AfricaNatural resources: Agriculture Agricultural production includes but not limited:
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Oranges Citruses Grapefruits Tangerines Mangos
Many other tropical fruits are found in Sub-Sahara Africa
Sub-Sahara Africa Natural resources: livestock
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Sheet Goat Cow
Pig Fishery Poultry
Sub-Sahara AfricaInfrastructures
Maritime Transport Over 90 percent of international trade between Sub-Sahara
Africa and foreign countries is conducted via maritime transport.
The top 10 ports in SSA account for nearly three-quarters of the cargo transported to and from the region.
Among the region’s largest and/or most active ports are Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, and Tema, Ghana, in West Africa; Dares Salaam, Tanzania, and Mombasa, Kenya, in East Africa; and Durban, South Africa, and Maputo, Mozambique, in southern Africa.
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Sub-Sahara AfricaInfrastructures
Airlines Africa is home to some of the biggest cities in the world
and these cities attract millions of visitors who are travelling for leisure or business related tasks. But who transports these visitors to African cities? Of course the various airlines that are owned in the continent do this important task of flying passengers to their preferred destination within and outside of the African continent.
South African Airways, Ethiopian Airlines, Kenya Airways, Arik Air, Air Mauritius
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Sub-Sahara AfricaGross Domestic Product (GDP)
According to the World Bank, economic activity was robust in much of Sub-Saharan Africa in 2013: GDP growth in the region strengthened to 4.7 percent in 2013, up from 3.7 percent in 2012.GDP (current US$) is about $1.6 trillion 2013
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Business opportunities: Consumer Good
Markets As many as 200 million Africans will enter the
consumer goods market by 2015. Banking and telecommunications are growing
rapidly too. Infrastructure expenditures are rising
significantly faster in Africa than in the world as a whole.
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Business opportunities:Manufacturing
With domestic labor costs rising, many Asian manufacturing producers are now looking to relocate their factories in other regions of the world. Could Africa replace Asia and/or China as the world's next manufacturing hub?
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Business opportunities: Manufacturing
To be sure, Africa has a number of manufacturing
advantages that it has yet to realize. Besides low labor costs and abundant resources, these include:
Duty-free and quota-free access to U.S. and EU markets for light manufactures under the Africa
Growth and Opportunity Act. The Cotonou Agreement.
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Business opportunities: Housing
Over the next 50 years, African cities will accommodate more than 40,000 people each day. The estimates for the period 2001-2011 registered a housing shortage of 60 million new units for the growing number of new urban households. Sub-Saharan African middle class, growing at the fastest pace in the world, faces the housing shortage problem despite of its economic improvements.
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Business opportunities: Energy (Electricity)
According to the International Energy Agency, sub-Saharan Africa will require more than $300 billion in investment to achieve universal electricity access by 2030. The United States will commit more than $7 billion in financial support over the next five years to this effort.
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Business opportunities: Infrastructures The overall infrastructure spending in the sub-
Saharan region is projected to grow by 10 per cent a year over the next decade and will exceed US$180bn by 2025, a new report by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC) reveals. Growth prospects in most of the region’s economies look promising as they were not affected as much by the global financial crisis of 2008.
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Business opportunities: Mining Africa continues to experience a significant resource
boom. Africa has around 30 per cent of global mineral reserves including some of the areas with the highest prospects for new mineral and energy resource discoveries. About two-thirds of African countries have mining activities underway; more than half the countries of Africa regard mining as an important economic activity and are producing minerals for an international market outside Africa; and there is still further potential in the sector.
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Business opportunities: Telecom Telecom revenues have increased at a compound
annual growth rate (CAGR) of 40 percent, and the number of subscribers rapidly exceeded 400 million. To meet the increased demand, investment in telecom infrastructure—about $15 billion a year—has also grown massively, with a 33 percent CAGR from 2003 to 2008. Still up for grabs are two key pockets of growth, data and rural voice, with an additional revenue pool of $12 billion to $15 billion by 2012.
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Business opportunities: Aviation It’s no secret that sub-Saharan Africa is one of the
next big growth markets for business aviation. With an emerging class of high net worth individuals (HNWI) and growing political stability it’s no wonder that companies around the world are looking at the region as a budding business aviation hotspot.
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Business opportunities: Agriculture
Modernization Over the past five years, the world has
reenergized its efforts to improve African agriculture. Africa’s countries have committed themselves to increasing agriculture’s share of their budgets to 10 percent, donors are making significantly increased commitments, and private-sector players and investment funds are pouring serious money into the area.
These increased investments flow toward three general opportunities.
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Business opportunities: Agriculture
Modernization The first is developing technological
breakthroughs, such as drought-tolerant maize, that would have high returns on investment and could sustainably raise small farmers from poverty. Second, new value chain approaches aim to improve access to markets and help groups of farmers raise their productivity. The third opportunity is the development of selected large tracts of high-potential agricultural land.
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Sub-Sahara Africa:Business opportunities: Livestock
“Due to little investment in livestock research, predictions by various institutions show that Africa will be importing 15 per cent of its milk unless things change drastically,” Mudibo Traore, FAO
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Our Projects:Liberia projectsIvory Coast projectsCameroun projects
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Our Projects:Liberia projects
Renewable (wind / solar) Energy power plantHarper Liberia Rice FarmLow income and middle class HousingLatex glove manufacturing plantShopping Centers
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Our Projects: Liberia projects
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City Hosing Projects
Factories Shopping Centers
Energy Agriculture
MonroviaMontserrado County
100 to 300 Units middle class Houses
1 Latex glove
1 in Paynsville
30 MW Solar / Wind mill power plant
GbarngaBong County
100 to 200 UnitsLow income and middle class Houses
20 MW Solar / Wind mill power plant
HarperMaryland County
200 AcresRice farm
Our Projects:Ivory Coast projects
Low income and middle class housingAmusement ParksCacao manufacturing plantTire manufacturing plantPaper MillSopping Centers
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Our Projects: Ivory Coast projects
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City Hosing Projects Factories Shopping Centers
Parks
Abidjan 100 to 1000 Units middle class Houses
1 in Yopougon 1 in Cocody
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Yamoussoukro 100 to 700 Unitsmiddle class Houses
San-Pedro 100 to 500 Units low income and middle houses
Paper Mill 1 in Downtown
Soubre 100 to 500 Units low income and middle houses
Cacao Transformation
Tire
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Our Projects:Cameroon projects
Low income and middle class housingAmusement ParksSopping Centers
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Our Projects: Cameroon projects
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City Hosing Projects Factories Shopping Centers
Parks
Douala 100 to 1000 Units middle class Houses
Solar panel factory 1 Shopping center 1 park
Yaoundé 100 to 1000 Unitsmiddle class Houses
1 Shopping center
How to Invest: Stock optionsJoint venturesPartnership Subscription to purchase a house
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Nawa Engineering & Technology Group
How to Invest: Stock options The purpose of stock is to provide a way for us to
sell fractional shares of ownership in our company for the purpose of raising capital to finance launch and development. We also sell stock to fund corporate projects such as the acquisition of plant equipment as well as other construction projects . Stock trading provides liquidity to shareholders who wish to sell their holdings.
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How to Invest:Joint ventures We accept joint ventures with individuals and
other companies to pool resources and respective talents to achieve a particular project goal. Typically, we form joint ventures for a limited period of time in order to accomplish a specific business goal.
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How to Invest:Partnership We accept partnership agreement that
allows us to structure our relationship with partners in a way that suits our business needs. Our partnership agreement will establish the shares of profits (or losses) each partner will take, the responsibilities of each partner, what will happen to the business if a partner leaves, and other important guidelines..
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How to Invest:Subscribe to purchase a house You can subscribe to purchase a house in Liberia,
Ivory or Cameroun.
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Our Contacts:Phone:Cell phone:Email: [email protected]: www.nawatechgroup.comAddress:
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Sources:• http://www.mckinsey.com/insights/economic_studies/
africas_path_to_growth_sector_by_sector• http://www.cnn.com/2012/06/15/opinion/africa-manufacturing-
hub/• http://www.africanreview.com/construction-a-mining/buildings/
sub-saharan-africa-s-infrastructure-spending-to-exceed-us-180-million-by-2025-says-pwc-report
• http://aid.dfat.gov.au/countries/sub-saharan-africa/Pages/mining.aspx
• http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/06/30/fact-sheet-power-africa
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