Jumia

Monday, September 17, 2018

Friday, June 22, 2018


© Hong Wu/Getty Images Few people consider used plastic to be a valuable global commodity. Yet China has imported 106 million tons of old bags, bottles, wrappers and containers worth $57.6 billion since 1992, the first year it disclosed data. So when the country announced last year that it finally had enough of everybody else's junk, governments the world over knew they had a problem. They just didn’t know exactly how large it was.
Now they know. By 2030, an estimated 111 million metric tons of used plastic will need to be buried or recycled somewhere else—or not manufactured at all. That's the conclusion of a new analysis of UN global trade data by University of Georgia researchers.
Everyone's bottles, bags and food packages add up. Factories have churned out a cumulative 8.3 billion metric tons of new plastic as of 2017, the same Georgia team reported last year. Even 1 million metric tons, the scale that this material trafficks in every year, is hard to visualize in the abstract. It's 621,000 Tesla Model 3s. It's 39 million bushels of corn kernels. The world’s 700 million iPhones make up roughly a tenth of a million metric tons.
Nearly four-fifths of all that plastic has been thrown into landfills or the environment. A tenth of it has been burned. Several million tons reach oceans every year, sullying beaches and poisoning vast reaches of the northern Pacific. Just 9 percent of the total plastic ever generated has been recycled. China took in just over half the annual total in 2016, or 7.4 million metric tons.
As the industry matured and the negative effects on public health and the environment became clear, China got more selective about the materials it was willing to buy. A "Green Fence" law enacted in 2013 kept out materials mixed with food, metals or other contaminants. Exports consequently dropped off from 2012 to 2013, a trend that continued until last year, when the world's biggest buyer warned that its scrap plastic purchases would stop altogether.
Other nations, such as India, Vietnam and Malaysia, have taken in more plastic, although with an appetite smaller than China’s. Vietnam recently suspended imports as ships clogged its ports. 
The world’s plastic problem has been building for decades. Since mass production began in the early 1950s, annual output has grown from about 2 million tons to 322 million produced in 2015, the authors said. Current production rates are exceeding our ability to dispose of the stuff effectively—and supply is expected only to grow. “Without bold new ideas and management strategies, current recycling rates will no longer be met, and ambitious goals and timelines for future recycling growth will be insurmountable,” they wrote.
Related gallery: Families around the world join war on plastic (provided by Reuters)
a large pile of trash: FILE PHOTO: Plastic and glass waste lies on the ground during the Tamborrada in the Basque coastal town of San Sebastian Families around the world join war on plastic

© Hong Wu/Getty Images Few people consider used plastic to be a valuable global commodity. Yet China has imported 106 million tons of old bags, bottles, wrappers and containers worth $57.6 billion since 1992, the first year it disclosed data. So when the country announced last year that it finally had enough of everybody else's junk, governments the world over knew they had a problem. They just didn’t know exactly how large it was.
Now they know. By 2030, an estimated 111 million metric tons of used plastic will need to be buried or recycled somewhere else—or not manufactured at all. That's the conclusion of a new analysis of UN global trade data by University of Georgia researchers.
Everyone's bottles, bags and food packages add up. Factories have churned out a cumulative 8.3 billion metric tons of new plastic as of 2017, the same Georgia team reported last year. Even 1 million metric tons, the scale that this material trafficks in every year, is hard to visualize in the abstract. It's 621,000 Tesla Model 3s. It's 39 million bushels of corn kernels. The world’s 700 million iPhones make up roughly a tenth of a million metric tons.
Nearly four-fifths of all that plastic has been thrown into landfills or the environment. A tenth of it has been burned. Several million tons reach oceans every year, sullying beaches and poisoning vast reaches of the northern Pacific. Just 9 percent of the total plastic ever generated has been recycled. China took in just over half the annual total in 2016, or 7.4 million metric tons.
As the industry matured and the negative effects on public health and the environment became clear, China got more selective about the materials it was willing to buy. A "Green Fence" law enacted in 2013 kept out materials mixed with food, metals or other contaminants. Exports consequently dropped off from 2012 to 2013, a trend that continued until last year, when the world's biggest buyer warned that its scrap plastic purchases would stop altogether.
Other nations, such as India, Vietnam and Malaysia, have taken in more plastic, although with an appetite smaller than China’s. Vietnam recently suspended imports as ships clogged its ports. 
The world’s plastic problem has been building for decades. Since mass production began in the early 1950s, annual output has grown from about 2 million tons to 322 million produced in 2015, the authors said. Current production rates are exceeding our ability to dispose of the stuff effectively—and supply is expected only to grow. “Without bold new ideas and management strategies, current recycling rates will no longer be met, and ambitious goals and timelines for future recycling growth will be insurmountable,” they wrote.
Related gallery: Families around the world join war on plastic (provided by Reuters)
a large pile of trash: FILE PHOTO: Plastic and glass waste lies on the ground during the Tamborrada in the Basque coastal town of San Sebastian Families around the world join war on plastic
© Hong Wu/Getty Images Few people consider used plastic to be a valuable global commodity. Yet China has imported 106 million tons of old bags, bottles, wrappers and containers worth $57.6 billion since 1992, the first year it disclosed data. So when the country announced last year that it finally had enough of everybody else's junk, governments the world over knew they had a problem. They just didn’t know exactly how large it was.
Now they know. By 2030, an estimated 111 million metric tons of used plastic will need to be buried or recycled somewhere else—or not manufactured at all. That's the conclusion of a new analysis of UN global trade data by University of Georgia researchers.
Everyone's bottles, bags and food packages add up. Factories have churned out a cumulative 8.3 billion metric tons of new plastic as of 2017, the same Georgia team reported last year. Even 1 million metric tons, the scale that this material trafficks in every year, is hard to visualize in the abstract. It's 621,000 Tesla Model 3s. It's 39 million bushels of corn kernels. The world’s 700 million iPhones make up roughly a tenth of a million metric tons.
Nearly four-fifths of all that plastic has been thrown into landfills or the environment. A tenth of it has been burned. Several million tons reach oceans every year, sullying beaches and poisoning vast reaches of the northern Pacific. Just 9 percent of the total plastic ever generated has been recycled. China took in just over half the annual total in 2016, or 7.4 million metric tons.
As the industry matured and the negative effects on public health and the environment became clear, China got more selective about the materials it was willing to buy. A "Green Fence" law enacted in 2013 kept out materials mixed with food, metals or other contaminants. Exports consequently dropped off from 2012 to 2013, a trend that continued until last year, when the world's biggest buyer warned that its scrap plastic purchases would stop altogether.
Other nations, such as India, Vietnam and Malaysia, have taken in more plastic, although with an appetite smaller than China’s. Vietnam recently suspended imports as ships clogged its ports. 
The world’s plastic problem has been building for decades. Since mass production began in the early 1950s, annual output has grown from about 2 million tons to 322 million produced in 2015, the authors said. Current production rates are exceeding our ability to dispose of the stuff effectively—and supply is expected only to grow. “Without bold new ideas and management strategies, current recycling rates will no longer be met, and ambitious goals and timelines for future recycling growth will be insurmountable,” they wrote.
Related gallery: Families around the world join war on plastic (provided by Reuters)
a large pile of trash: FILE PHOTO: Plastic and glass waste lies on the ground during the Tamborrada in the Basque coastal town of San Sebastian Families around the world join war on plastic
© Hong Wu/Getty Images Few people consider used plastic to be a valuable global commodity. Yet China has imported 106 million tons of old bags, bottles, wrappers and containers worth $57.6 billion since 1992, the first year it disclosed data. So when the country announced last year that it finally had enough of everybody else's junk, governments the world over knew they had a problem. They just didn’t know exactly how large it was.
Now they know. By 2030, an estimated 111 million metric tons of used plastic will need to be buried or recycled somewhere else—or not manufactured at all. That's the conclusion of a new analysis of UN global trade data by University of Georgia researchers.
Everyone's bottles, bags and food packages add up. Factories have churned out a cumulative 8.3 billion metric tons of new plastic as of 2017, the same Georgia team reported last year. Even 1 million metric tons, the scale that this material trafficks in every year, is hard to visualize in the abstract. It's 621,000 Tesla Model 3s. It's 39 million bushels of corn kernels. The world’s 700 million iPhones make up roughly a tenth of a million metric tons.
Nearly four-fifths of all that plastic has been thrown into landfills or the environment. A tenth of it has been burned. Several million tons reach oceans every year, sullying beaches and poisoning vast reaches of the northern Pacific. Just 9 percent of the total plastic ever generated has been recycled. China took in just over half the annual total in 2016, or 7.4 million metric tons.
As the industry matured and the negative effects on public health and the environment became clear, China got more selective about the materials it was willing to buy. A "Green Fence" law enacted in 2013 kept out materials mixed with food, metals or other contaminants. Exports consequently dropped off from 2012 to 2013, a trend that continued until last year, when the world's biggest buyer warned that its scrap plastic purchases would stop altogether.
Other nations, such as India, Vietnam and Malaysia, have taken in more plastic, although with an appetite smaller than China’s. Vietnam recently suspended imports as ships clogged its ports. 
The world’s plastic problem has been building for decades. Since mass production began in the early 1950s, annual output has grown from about 2 million tons to 322 million produced in 2015, the authors said. Current production rates are exceeding our ability to dispose of the stuff effectively—and supply is expected only to grow. “Without bold new ideas and management strategies, current recycling rates will no longer be met, and ambitious goals and timelines for future recycling growth will be insurmountable,” they wrote.
Related gallery: Families around the world join war on plastic (provided by Reuters)
a large pile of trash: FILE PHOTO: Plastic and glass waste lies on the ground during the Tamborrada in the Basque coastal town of San Sebastian Families around the world join war on plastic 

Thursday, June 21, 2018


Click Like and Share if you like what you see

SO FLY

Click Like and Share if you like what you see


Ellachiboi ft M-Sen & T-Shayne    SO FLY
 is a track prod. by wizzypro M&M by ele, all about heavenly band.
                                           
 


     Listen   Nowhttps://drive.google.com/open?id=1ukmZPW99wWy-HpgybmzRSGXlnzsUiMpf
                                         Ellachiboi ft M-Sen & T-Shayne    SO FLY

SO FLY

Click Like and Share if you like what you see


Ellachiboi ft M-Sen & T-Shayne    SO FLY
 is a track prod. by wizzypro M&M by ele, all about heavenly band.
                                           
 


     Listen   Nowhttps://drive.google.com/open?id=1ukmZPW99wWy-HpgybmzRSGXlnzsUiMpf
                                       
Ellachiboi ft M-Sen & T-Shayne    SO FLY

So-called schools

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Man shares unbelievable video of the condition of a school in Edo state 

A Nigerian man has shared a video on social media to show the unbelievable state of a primary school in Edo state. The man who was furious about the state of the school called on the government to do something about its damaged infrastructure. The man identified as Pharez Okpere shared the video on his Facebook page. He explained that all the classes inside the school has incomplete roofs. Okpere noted that due to the fact that there were no roofs inside the classes, the students were forced to find shelter outside their classrooms because rain was falling into the classrooms through the incomplete roofs. According to the man who had gone to park his car inside the school compound, he had thought compound was that of an abandoned school

Edo school

. Man shares unbelievable video of the condition of a school in Edo state Photo source: Facebook user Pharez Okpere 


Make chicken Change Today

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How to improve reactions on PR campaigns 

The general idea behind putting up PR campaigns is to get across to the advertiser’s target audience; in a bid to help advertisers get more out of their sponsored posts, we had a little chat with PR Executive of NAIJ.com, Mitchelle Okuku, to give us some important tips that could guide advertisers on their quest to get more reactions from our readers. 

NAIJ.com experience: How to improve reactions on PR campaigns

Would you say PR is really getting the audience involved in communication with the brand nowadays? From my experience, I would say that getting readers’ interest these days takes way more than it used to and only those who are paying close attention to this fact are still getting desired results. I did a careful analysis of 1,045 PR campaigns published on NAIJ.com in 2017 and the results showed that sponsored articles attracted an average of 11,000 views. Out of the 1,045 articles posted, most of them exceeded this average figure greatly, while some others fell short of expectations. - Do these successful articles have anything in common? Yes, successful PR articles have similar features. A lot of advertisers have discovered that native advertising is the way to go and they are taking advantage of this fact. There are also some general tips that can help advertisers improve the performance of their articles and attract readers’ attention: Keep your articles short and simple. There is really no need to bore readers with unnecessarily long articles, so make your campaigns brief but meaningful with key points highlighted. Also make it easy to understand and use simple terms that are easy to remember. Press releases are generally boring to most readers, as people enjoy to read stories, not emotionless facts. It is better to mix things up a little and actually look at the article from your reader’s point of view. Times are changing and readers are looking for some additional value, getting them interested will require more than the usual. Be honest and authentic. Being honest and authentic is a good way to keep your readers interested. Take things up a notch and actually teach them something real and useful while trying to pass information about your products or services. Follow the editorial format of the platform. A lot of sponsored articles end up performing way less than regular articles on a platform because most readers can tell it is sponsored at first glance. However, these posts can easily outperform editorial articles if they follow the editorial format of the page and ensure readers are not getting less value just because a post is sponsored. - What do you think is the best way to get the most reactions from readers? My biggest advice is – ‘move your PR articles closer to native advertising’! It is not enough to just talk about goods and services; take time to think about topics that are relevant to your product. It is easier for readers to remember your campaign if it can be related to activities they encounter daily. Entertain them, keep them engaged with interesting details or give answers to questions they probably have. You may be surprised how much difference this would make. 

SO FLY

Ellachiboi ft M-Sen & T-Shayne    SO FLY
 is a track prod. by wizzypro M&M by ele, all about heavenly band.
                                           
   


     Listen   Nowhttps://drive.google.com/open?id=1ukmZPW99wWy-HpgybmzRSGXlnzsUiMpf
                                         Ellachiboi ft M-Sen & T-Shayne    SO FLY



                    


Please Subcribe

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Watch this but don't laugh

Monday, June 18, 2018

It’s Official! Buhari Wins 2019 Election

President Muhammadu Buhari has won the 2019 presidential election, polling 15,191,847 votes  to defeat his closest rival, Alhaji Atiku ...

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