
ترامب من قمة السبع: إيران لن تنتصر ويجب أن تتفاوض قبل فوات الأوان
Dr Patience Oniha, Director-General, Debt Management Office, DMO, says Nigeria is on a steady path of economic recovery, driven by fiscal reforms, improved credit ratings, and targeted investments in infrastructure and environmental sustainability.
Mrs Oniha said this at an investors meeting for the Series III Sovereign Green Bond issuance on Monday in Lagos.
She said that Nigeria had recorded notable improvements in its macroeconomic fundamentals, including stabilising inflation, gradual Gross Domestic Product, GDP, growth, and a rebound in crude oil production.
According to her, global credit rating agencies, including Moody's and Fitch, had upgraded Nigeria's outlook, reflecting growing investor confidence in the country's economic trajectory.
'We have seen improvements in our ratings. There is clearly a difference from where we were before.
'This suggests that the reforms are working, even if the results are gradual,' she said.
On inflation, Mrs Oniha said that while it initially spiked to 30 per cent, it has since stabilised between 23 per cent and 24 per cent.
'That stabilisation is an indication that the economy is responding to monetary and fiscal policies,' she said.
She stressed the importance of GDP growth and infrastructure investments.
'We have seen post-COVID growth, though we acknowledge it should be higher.
'That is why there is a strong focus on infrastructure through the three-year National Development Plan.
'It is private sector-led, and once infrastructure improves, growth will accelerate,' she said.
She highlighted the recovery in oil production, noting that Nigeria had increased output from below one million barrels per day to between 1.5 and 1.6 million barrels.
She said that reforms in the oil sector, which include the unbundling of the NNPC into a limited liability company, were yielding results.
Turning attention to Nigeria's growing commitment to climate financing, Mrs Oniha announced plans to issue a N50 billion Sovereign Green Bond.
According to her, the bond, which follows earlier issuances in 2017 and 2019 totaling about N25.69 billion, is part of the country's broader strategy to tackle climate change and support environmental sustainability.
NAN
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Saudi Gazette
06-08-2025
- Saudi Gazette
Fakeeh group delivers 1H 2025 revenue of SR1.51 billion, up 13% year-on-year
Dr Soliman Abdel Kader Fakeeh Hospital Company and its Subsidiaries ('Fakeeh Care Group', 'FCG', 'Fakeeh Care', the 'Company' or the 'Group'), a leading fully integrated academic healthcare provider listed on TASI (SYMBOL: 4017 and ISIN code SA562GSHUOH7), announced its financial results[1] for the second quarter ended 30 June 2025. Growth during the quarter was supported by higher patient volumes and a richer case‑mix as activity normalized post‑Ramadan. The total number of patients served reached 465 thousand+ in 2Q‑2025 (+16% YoY), taking 1H‑2025 volumes to ~900 thousand (+8% YoY). Outpatient and inpatient volumes grew 15% and 16%, respectively, in the quarter translating into combined revenue growth of 18%. Pricing and case‑mix tailwinds added support to the average revenue per outpatient visit and inpatient admission contributing 3% YTD on a consolidated revenue level. Jeddah's double‑digit growth was central driver, complemented by accelerating throughput in Riyadh and early activity in Madinah. At the headline level, the Group delivered 2Q‑2025 revenue of SR812 million (+24% YoY) and Net Profit after Zakat of SR68 million (+59% YoY); 1H‑2025 revenue was SR1.51 billion (+13% YoY). Commenting on the Group's performance, FCG's President Dr. Mazen Soliman Fakeeh said: 'In the second quarter of the year, Fakeeh Care Group revenues reached to SR812 million, posting a solid 24% year on year growth thanks to a 16% year‑on‑year growth of patients served and a richer case mix. Jeddah's year-on-year expansion in census and revenue continues to demonstrate the strength of our brand and clinical depth, while Riyadh's disciplined ramp‑up continues to progress—together with the recently opened DSFH Madinah—our geographic reach continues to broaden. Our platform remained a robust earnings engine with Attributable to Shareholders profits reaching SR154 million in the first half (SR82M in 2Q25) or 28% up year-on-year, after absorbing the anticipated start‑up operating losses from ramping facilities—investments that are underpinning our multi‑year growth trajectory. In Riyadh, operational beds increased to 102 (from 71 a year earlier), supporting mid‑30% growth in outpatient and inpatient volumes and a sharp rise in surgical throughput as higher‑complexity services scale. In Madinah, the Group admitted its first patients in the initial 48 beds (of 200 beds) under a disciplined, quality‑first ramp that is expected to build steadily. In Jeddah, the flagship network remained the primary revenue center, sustaining double‑digit volume growth and strong pull‑through across service lines. The Group broke ground on DSFMC Al Zahraa in Jeddah—developed in partnership with Yasser Yousef Naghi Investment Company—a key spoke in the hub‑and‑spoke strategy. The center will bring comprehensive, high‑quality care closer to the community via one‑day surgical suites, a 24/7 emergency department, an integrated diagnostic hub, and key medical specializations. Dr. Mazen Soliman Fakeeh added: 'Our integrated ecosystem—with tertiary hospitals, medical centers, home healthcare, emergency medical services, medical education, technology and retail medical offerings that complete our service continuum—continues to differentiate Fakeeh Care. We continue to invest in our digital infrastructure, embedding tools that optimize patient journeys, enhance resource utilization, and reinforce our value-based care model, elevating patient reported outcomes.' 'Looking ahead, our priorities are clear: drive utilization across our ramping facilities with strategic case mix refinement in Jeddah and Riyadh; execute a disciplined, quality first ramp in Madinah; advance milestones across our growth agenda; and continue embedding digital and data driven workflows that unlock efficiency while elevating care standards. We aim to further broaden our preventative medicine and early intervention offerings, strengthening longitudinal patient engagement. Throughout, we remain disciplined in capital deployment—preserving a conservative balance sheet as we fund expansion and cement the foundation for a highly scalable and sustainably profitable healthcare ecosystem. With a resilient mature platform, a scalable operating model, and a deepening role in the Kingdom's healthcare transformation, we are well positioned to create enduring value for patients, staff, students, shareholders and the broader community.' he concluded. During the quarter, the Group achieved JCI Enterprise Accreditation, becoming the first private healthcare group in the Kingdom to earn system‑wide endorsement—validating governance, safety culture, standardized clinical pathways and enterprise risk systems, and ensuring the quality DNA of the flagship facilities scales consistently as the network grows. In parallel, Fakeeh Emergency Medical Services (MedE) supported the Kingdom's Hajj operations through the mobilization of ambulatory teams and ambulances and the CSR operation of Namira Hospital at peak demand, deepening the Group's partnership with national health authorities and reinforcing its role in serving broader societal needs. Fakeeh Care Group's complete 2Q-2025 Earnings Release with management's analysis of the Company's performance is available for download on


Saudi Gazette
05-08-2025
- Saudi Gazette
BP says it makes biggest oil and gas find in 25 years
SINGAPORE – Energy giant BP says it has made its largest oil and gas discovery this century as it shifts its focus away from renewable energy and back to fossil fuels. The UK-based firm said on Monday that it is conducting tests at the site in deep water off Brazil's east coast. The discovery could play a major role in BP's plans to increase crude oil production. Company executive Gordon Birrell says the discovery is "BP's largest in 25 years" and that the firm will explore building a production hub there. In February, BP slashed its planned investments in renewable energy and said it would spend billions of dollars more a year on its oil and gas operations, as it aims to boost investor confidence. BP said it had found a roughly 500-metre area of oil and gas at the Bumerangue block in the Santos basin, 250 miles (400km) off Brazil's east coast. It said the discovery was the company's biggest since the Shah Deniz gas field in the Caspian Sea in find adds to BP's several other discoveries of energy reserves this year, including those in the Gulf of Mexico, which is called the Gulf of America by the administration of US President Donald Trump, and Egypt."This is another success in what has been an exceptional year so far for our exploration team", said Birrell, the firm's executive vice president for production and attempt to transform itself into a "net zero" energy producer has faced major hurdles since it put the plan into action five years 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic pushed it to a $5.7bn (£4.29bn) annual also took a $25bn hit two years later from writing off a stake in its Russian energy business after the start of the Ukraine share price has also come under pressure as it pumped billions of dollars into renewable energy, while rival companies benefitted from soaring oil and gas prices in the wake of Russia's invasion of shares rose by a little over 1% in London trading after the announcement. – BBC


Arab News
25-07-2025
- Arab News
How AI speech-to-text technology is tuning in to a digital Saudi Arabia
DHAHRAN: In a world racing toward automation, Klemen Simonic believes the most natural interface is also the most enduring: the human voice. As founder and CEO of Soniox — a cutting-edge speech-to-text platform — Simonic is betting that voice-powered technology will drive the next wave of digital innovation. And in a country like Saudi Arabia, where smartphones dominate daily life and a young population is hungry for digital solutions, the potential is hard to ignore. Soniox, which Simonic launched five years ago, offers speech recognition, transcription and real-time multilingual translation in more than 60 languages. Unlike many competitors, it delivers ultra-fast, token-level outputs in milliseconds — a critical advantage for live assistants, wearables, bots and smart speakers. But Simonic's journey toward building the company began long before the rise of generative AI. 'I started in programming development right after high school, and I was invited to join the Jozef Stefan Institute in Slovenia, one of the best institutes in this part of Europe,' he told Arab News. 'I was working there with Ph.D. students and postdocs on machine learning, natural language processing, dependency parsing, tokenization, tagging and entity extraction.' That early exposure led him to two internships at Stanford University in 2009 and 2011, where he worked alongside top researchers in AI. 'I wanted to join Google to work on these cool things,' he said. After an internship there in 2014, Simonic was courted by both Google and Facebook — ultimately joining the latter in 2015 to help build speech recognition systems now used across Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp. Today, his company is focused entirely on voice AI, and its promise goes beyond convenience. With privacy and compliance built in — including SOC 2 Type II certification and HIPAA readiness — Soniox is already being used in hospitals, call centers and emergency rooms where clear, accurate transcription can be a life-saving tool. 'We have many healthcare customers using our API in emergency rooms where real-time AI interpretation can bridge communication gaps that human translators sometimes cannot, especially with complex medical terminology,' said Simonic. Saudi Arabia represents a particularly compelling market for the company's ambitions. With more than 90 percent smartphone penetration and a population where 70 percent of people are aged under 35, the Kingdom is fertile ground for voice-enabled technologies. The widespread adoption of government-developed platforms like Tawakkalna during the COVID-19 pandemic only accelerated the Kingdom's reliance on mobile-first services. 'Data and artificial intelligence contribute to achieving Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030; this is because, out of 96, 66 of the direct and indirect goals of the vision are related to data and AI,' according to the Saudi Data & AI Authority. The Kingdom's communications and IT sector is now worth more than $44 billion — 4.1 percent of gross domestic product — and expanding quickly with strategic investments in cloud computing, automation and smart infrastructure. Although Soniox does not yet have a team on the ground in the region, the company sees significant interest from Saudi organizations exploring AI-powered transcription and customer service tools. Simonic said there are pilot programs in countries like Portugal and interest from companies in Saudi Arabia looking to improve call center and transcription services. And while Arabic remains one of the more complex languages for voice AI, Simonic sees both the challenge and the opportunity. Many of Saudi Arabia's rural communities speak dialects rich in cultural nuance — languages that are often excluded from mainstream datasets. This environment offers fertile ground for Soniox's technology, which strives to 'enable all languages, so everyone in the world can speak and be understood by AI.' Simonic's team, primarily based in Slovenia, is committed to expanding language support to make the technology more inclusive, even in markets where none of the developers speak the local tongue. Soniox is also designed with flexibility in mind. Businesses can integrate its API without storing any audio or transcripts, ensuring tight data control. For individual users, features like encrypted transcripts and a summarizing tool enhance productivity — even for the tech-averse. 'My mom is not very tech-savvy, but she uses our app to build her grocery shopping list,' Simonic said. 'That was not the original purpose, but it shows how technology can evolve in ways we didn't expect.' In July, Soniox launched a new comparison tool that allows developers and businesses to benchmark different speech AI providers using their own voice samples and real-world data. It is another step toward transparency and broader adoption — especially in regions like the Gulf, where choosing the right solution can hinge on performance in diverse linguistic contexts. 'The tech morphs, but the human voice remains the most intimate and effective way we communicate,' Simonic said. As Saudi Arabia pushes forward with its digital transformation under Vision 2030, technologies like Soniox may find their voice amplified — not just as a tool for productivity, but also as a bridge between language, innovation and access in a rapidly changing world.