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2024 Zambia-China Culture and Tourism Year opens in Beijing

China

2024 Zambia-China Culture and Tourism Year opens in Beijing
China

China

2024 Zambia-China Culture and Tourism Year opens in Beijing

2024-05-12 21:30 Last Updated At:22:07

The 2024 Zambia-China Culture and Tourism Year opened in Beijing on Saturday.

Sun Yeli, China's minister of culture and tourism; Rodney Sikumba, Zambia's minister of tourism; and Iven Zyuulu, Zambia's ambassador to China, addressed the opening ceremony.

A promotional section was set at the event for Zambian tourism, with the attendance of nearly 100 tourism industry insiders from China and Zambia.

During the China-Zambia Culture and Tourism Year, the two countries will hold a number of activities, like artistic performances, tourism promotions and personnel trainings.

2024 Zambia-China Culture and Tourism Year opens in Beijing

2024 Zambia-China Culture and Tourism Year opens in Beijing

The World Bank predicted Tuesday that energy prices may surge 24 percent in 2026 to their highest level since the Russia-Ukraine conflict erupted in 2022 due to the war in the Middle East, while overall commodity prices are projected to increase 16 percent.

In its latest Commodity Markets Outlook released on Tuesday, the World Bank said that attacks on energy infrastructure and shipping disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, which handles about 35 percent of global seaborne crude oil trade, have triggered the largest oil supply shock on record, with an initial reduction in global oil supply of about 10 million barrels per day.

Fertilizer prices are projected to increase by 31 percent in 2026, driven by a 60-percent jump in urea prices, while prices for base metals, including aluminum, copper and tin, are expected to reach all-time highs.

Precious metals prices are forecast to increase 42 percent as geopolitical uncertainty fuels demand for safe-haven assets.

Commodity prices could rise even higher if hostilities escalate or supply disruptions from the Iran war last longer than projected, the report said.

Indermit Gill, the World Bank Group's chief economist and senior vice president for Development Economics, said the war is hitting the global economy in cumulative waves, warning that poorer populations will be hardest hit.

World Bank forecasts 24-pct surge in energy prices in 2026

World Bank forecasts 24-pct surge in energy prices in 2026

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