Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

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The Voice of Time
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Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

Post by The Voice of Time »

note: before you ask like Bill, yes, I am the original author, I didn't take this from anywhere

I here want to advocate for the need of a transcontinental infrastructure plan between Europe and Africa, seen primarily from a European perspective. Europe relatively recently released its infrastructure plan targeting its own continent, where there were fewer "massive" projects but very many medium and small projects (relative to Europe's size) attempting to improve the future transportation efficiency and ease the current pressure on already existing routes and on the environment in urban areas. In 2011 the "White Paper" was released (http://ec.europa.eu/transport/themes/st ... per_en.htm) setting goals for 2050. This plan of course is more of an ideological paper than any concrete plan of action. To exemplify this here is one of the 50-points of action:
5. Oil will become scarcer in future decades, sourced increasingly from uncertain supplies. As the IEA has recently pointed out, the less successful the world is in decarbonising, the greater will be the oil price increase. In 2010, the oil import bill was around € 210 billion for the EU. If we do not address this oil dependence, people’s ability to travel – and our economic security – could be severely impacted with dire consequences on inflation, trade balance and the overall competitiveness of the EU economy.
More close to our own time there was also recently released the new 10-year developmental target plan of action, with many more concrete measures (Norway also did this, one independent of Europe, not that anybody cares of little Norway). The TEN-T is a transportation plan (which has existed and been discussed for a long while) by the European Union (in some cooperation with other nations, like Norway) which seeks to expand on already existing lines of transport, ensuring a more integrated network, introducing several such-called "Motorways of the sea" (which was new to me, and if new to you as well it's not undersea rail or roads, but a fancy name for ferries) among things, focusing on maximizing the usefulness of existing roads and rail-roads by connecting ends.

To get the facts out of the bag first, an idea for a railway crossing at the Strait of Gibraltar (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strait_of_ ... r_crossing) has long been considered and planned for, while it yet to take the step of deciding on a follow through plan of action, but enough of the European state of transport...

My first arguments for the Afrophile approach is that 1) Africa is the foreign continent closest to central Europe where Europe's economic and political interests rests, 2) geopolitically Africa is historically unstable but also no direct external threat to Europe, therefore the power of Africa to abuse tighter interdependency for personal (ideological) gain is heavily reduced as opposed to the power-struggling and competing larger nations of Asia (Russian sphere of influence, Indian sphere of influence, Pakistani sphere of influence, and authoritarian China coupled with nationalist Indochina and far-away Japan, South-Korea and Indonesia and castrated Taiwan) or the more culturally opposing Middle-East (which is also unstable and delicate, with the Israeli-Palestinian questions, the Iranian question and the socio-political radicalism and authoritarianism characterising the Arab Peninsula and Mesopotamia in general), 3) despite strong conservatism (compared to Europe) and religiousness in Africa it's a continent where Europe is looked up to in terms of societal progress and some countries, South Africa being a beacon example, shares many ideas on society with Europe, and for this sake Europe as a word is an export brand, and historical ties remain strong with shared languages and an elite trained and educated in European universities not to mention shared research which has been a development strategy for the EU in the recent past, 4) the African population, like India, is young and eager but unable to find somewhere to live their out their eagerness, urbanization is helping with increasing social mobility; a crucial element in taking advantage of available workforce, not to mention that literacy and expertise is ever increasing and will continue to increase in the decades ahead with a question of who is to grab the geniuses when they turn up, and 5) transport in Africa is already extremely low, indicating that the potential behind development could unleash a lot of production energy that has as of yet been suppressed by the lack of means to deliver production.

The concrete argument lays in a three primary layered development approach and then a secondary set of complementary development approaches to expand on the initial development. There are already ideas for a Trans-African railway network (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transconti ... oad#Africa), unfortunately, as is not unexpected, the power of African countries to carry out on their own is limited by poor governance, financial restraints and lack of own expertise communities. The problem with the result is also that it sounds better than it would be, because of the lack of the right means the trains would be much slower, maybe even bought used, likely it would be single-tracked, only with a bit of luck there would be some short parallel passings (so you could have more than one train travelling the distance at the time and avoid collision). Because of these problems, there seems to be a need for more intensive development approaches, more targeted towards getting the goods to those who has money, and who has money? Europe. The means of goods-travel between Europe and Africa today are severely limited. Poor and small port facilities give slow and inefficient boat travel, the lack of highway connectivity and extensiveness results in problems in reaching targets efficiently and quickly, and African rail is practically a joke in the, to Europe, most useful geographic areas (by my limited knowledge of course, though it's unlikely anyone besides perhaps South Africa or Botswana can afford a proper rail).

I start with a map of Africa:

Image

In this map I'd like to drawn the three primary lines of connectivity. The first one should be built from Spain to Morocco, down through Mali going through important hub cities like Timbuktu before forming a "belly" circumventing curve route snapping up Western-most Africa before entering the extremely populous Nigeria and exploiting the vast access to a workforce that is represented there, from then on the route briefly enters Central African Republic, as a hope of giving the country the opportunity to alleviate its dependence on other countries for export routes as well as offering the extremely undeveloped country an opportunity to develop in the area close to the rail-road, further on it enters western Congo where it stays shortly out of Eastern Congo as to offer Congolese access but try to stay within the more stable and developed parts of the country big and populous country, the journey continues on in a quest to offer inland countries a fast an easy access to the European market travelling through Zambia before it enters the more developed and rich country of Botswana and finally finishing through a headway onto Johannesburg which is the most populous city in South Africa and a place of more access to cheap work force in a developed society. Remember that the drawing is crude and many adjustment should likely be done, especially to centre it more hub-wards in terms of big cities and populated or productive areas and include possibly countries like Liberia and maybe Angola and Mauritania as well.

After the now mentioned line has been drawn in red. The second line comes in blue:

Image

To increase the access and efficiency into central Europe and especially capital rich countries like Switzerland, Austria and Germany and further into the Scandinavian countries a route connects through Italy down through Sicily and across the strait into Tunisia. Tunisia is like Morocco a stable and sufficiently developed country, the Arab Spring not being representative example (and even that went rather peaceful in Tunisia), marking a nice entrance and connection point between Europe and Africa. From there on, the Sahara desert to the south consists of vast areas of desert and low-population, therefore to increase efficiency (at the cost of longer route) the route leads eastwards first travelling through the populated areas of northern Libya before joining with Egypt and the Nile river southwards seeking population. Exiting Egypt it enters the vast expanse of Sudan, not exactly for Sudan's own sake but in search for Addis Ababa, the capital and biggest city of the vastly populous Ethiopia and also the political capital of Africa being the centre of the African Union headquarters among things. From there on a visit to Kenyas interior avoids highly populated areas in exchange for a temperate fertile inland, although I realize the line probably should've gone closer to the coast and went a little too far the west in Kenya, possibly also a little more to the east in southern Ethiopia. After this is seeks unification with the first line in order to connect transport from the south (South Africa and Botswana) to both Western and eastern Africa as well as granting two alternative routes to Europe and the possibility to choose the faster. It is possible to save speed to drop Egypt and cross instead in a rather straighter diagonal line from Libya through Sudan to Addis Ababa, and it might very well be preferable and then leave Egypt to its own job of connecting with the network, something it should be capable of doing if it wants to.

A third line in green unifies the inlands of Africa with the overall design goals of access, efficiency and speed:

Image

The complementary developments will be smaller connectivity projects where gainful to give populous areas or missed productive areas access to the network. Last but not least comes the how-to-do part which is the most important perhaps. The idea is to create a company owned by all investing European countries, not for the sake of direct profit perhaps but rather as an organized alternative to grants. The company gains revenue initially by European countries buying series of annually issued stocks at fixed prices (planned budget). The goal is that 99% of the workforce of the company should be Africans, with grants for African students to top university attendance by proven strong candidates if there is a need for skilled labour not offered on the African continent or not offered sufficiently. One of the primary reasons for the Africans-only approach to the company's workforce is that 1) it should inspire African pride and a will to succeed not disfigured by Europe's own needs and patronage, 2) it should avoid cost-intensive labour if possible so that the company might live on as a cost-efficient alternative, and 3) once you have a skilled work force up and running it is capable of doing things on its own and thereby offer regional development that will nourish European trade opportunities beyond its initial goals.

The goal is to have fast-running green-technology trains designed and manufactured in Africa. In Europe this would provide extremely cost intensive, but when everything can be homebuilt given a guaranteed access to stable funding and expertise capable of developing independent methods, the result should be drastically lower production and installation costs. To allow for fast speed the trains and the tracks should be enclosed in (for instance transparent) plastic tunnels hindering physical objects slowing down its progress and in so doing also avoiding the rate of accidents and irregularity. To boost the target of opening up the markets between and possibilities for exploits between the continents a central idea is to offer grants for the building of industrial parks along the routes that house people, includes medical facilities, produce and load onto the trains from a train station on the industrial park using quick-load systems. A problem in Africa is often stable funding and reliability, therefore when one enters the continent one must be ready to offer guarantees of stability, including offering insurances on crucial infrastructure, so that the company wouldn't just go bankrupt and end a failure, that roads stretching to the industrial parks delivering raw materials are insured against natural disaster like floods, and that local police are ensured the finance to patrol and escort the roads in case there's danger of highway robberies or militant groups.

When finished, such an extensive system of infrastructure could revolutionize the geopolitics of the world, by making the much closer, much more Europe-friendly and much less threatening Africa (especially because of the division Africa is, it's far from a unified whole) the new big trade-partner of Europe, especially for industrial goods, one in particular which China today seems to have a near monopoly on in terms being a cost-effective alternative.

Two last point though would be that the line would have to be considered an international asset, so that individual countries couldn't just simply refuse other countries from travelling through their countries on the rails (though the host country doesn't have to allow their own citizens always to use it, that would be another matter). And the goal is that at time of operation the company would be running profit and be self-sufficient, with Europe not taking the profit but instead let the company use the profit for expansion and improvement and increased maintenance. Instead, European countries would offer each African country to buy a number of shares based upon their population (with a portion of the shares also being up for the grabs for the highest bidder) so that at any time they could buy it back at some suitable price (likely a fixed standard price increasing and decreasing based upon such things as inflation and deflation). In the end therefore Europe has in a way only "lent" Africa money, for when it can in some far-away future pay it back by buying the stocks of the company.
Last edited by The Voice of Time on Thu Apr 25, 2013 10:12 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

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I'm afraid that looking to Africa for future economic development is a pipe dream, and I say that despite the Second Coming of Christ being named Tor, which means king in the Tiv language of Nigeria, near the cradle of mankind (see "The Ouzo Prophecy" at http://church-of-ouzo.com/pdf/ouzo-prophecy.pdf).
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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

Post by Bill Wiltrack »

.




Should you provide the title & author of the original post?






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Image







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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

Post by The Voice of Time »

what? I am the original author ^^ I spent my whole bloody morning putting it together and deciding where to draw those lines in paint. I'm unsure whether I should thank you that you think it was sophisticated or whether I should be insulted that you think less of me... ?
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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

Post by bobevenson »

The Voice of Time wrote:what? I am the original author ^^ I spent my whole bloody morning putting it together and deciding where to draw those lines in paint. I'm unsure whether I should thank you that you think it was sophisticated or whether I should be insulted that you think less of me... ?
See, now you know how I feel regarding "The Ouzo Prophecy".
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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

Post by The Voice of Time »

I've never doubted you were the original person behind that prophecy thing. Not that I'll ever be able to take anybody seriously who talks about prophecies.
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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

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The Voice of Time wrote:I've never doubted you were the original person behind that prophecy thing. Not that I'll ever be able to take anybody seriously who talks about prophecies.
What I'm talking about is the insult of not being taken seriously, and your prejudice against the title of the paper rather than its content.
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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

Post by Bill Wiltrack »

.





Wait a minute...







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Image




I think this article is tremendous!


It's just that I am not used to seeing a fellow member creating images & posting them within an article.



I think this is GREAT.



No disrespect intended. Could you distill the article that you wrote into one sentence that I could react to? Similar to a thesis statement.


Also, why don't you add your legal name to something like this?



- See if Rick Lewis would publish this in his magazine.





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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

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Bill Wiltrack wrote:No disrespect intended. Could you distill the article that you wrote into one sentence that I could react to? Similar to a thesis statement.
What Bill is trying to say is, can you paste an irrelevant picture of some kind, you know, something he can relate to?
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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

Post by The Voice of Time »

bobevenson wrote:
Bill Wiltrack wrote:No disrespect intended. Could you distill the article that you wrote into one sentence that I could react to? Similar to a thesis statement.
What Bill is trying to say is, can you paste an irrelevant picture of some kind, you know, something he can relate to?
Hint taken.

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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

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Now that's something that Bill can sink his teeth into!
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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

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bobevenson wrote:I'm afraid that looking to Africa for future economic development is a pipe dream, and I say that despite the Second Coming of Christ being named Tor, which means king in the Tiv language of Nigeria, near the cradle of mankind (see "The Ouzo Prophecy" at http://church-of-ouzo.com/pdf/ouzo-prophecy.pdf).
You know that's interesting, because Tor, spelled Thor, is the name of the main character in a set of stories I've been writing on since my early teens called the Stories of the Thorsons (the first character being named Thor Thorson, with subsequent characters being his sons and grandsons/-daughters), and where Thor Thorson is a kind-of champion who fights a shady organization that loosely controls the Earth and that he eventually liberates the planet from them. Funny coincidence. Not that it's that unique, since Tor/Thor is a name which has come to mean many things and many characters over the course of recent history.
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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

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The Voice of Time wrote:
bobevenson wrote:I'm afraid that looking to Africa for future economic development is a pipe dream, and I say that despite the Second Coming of Christ being named Tor, which means king in the Tiv language of Nigeria, near the cradle of mankind (see "The Ouzo Prophecy" at http://church-of-ouzo.com/pdf/ouzo-prophecy.pdf).
Tor/Thor is a name which has come to mean many things and many characters over the course of recent history.
I'll drink to that. When I first wrote "The Ouzo Prophecy," it didn't have the poetic introduction, the drawing of the Ouzo Cross, or the "Notes on the Ouzo Cross," and I thought it was the greatest paper in the world. I read it over and over again, hundreds of times, without getting tired of reading it. The copyright showed my name, and in a way that was the best part of the paper, like the icing on the cake. However, after awhile, although it was always like I was reading the paper for the first time, I started to grow increasingly uncomfortable seeing my name on the copyright notice. It finally reached the point where I couldn't tolerate having my name on the paper. I remember just taking it off, but I had to copyright it under some name, but what? The first thing that came to mind was the Church of Ouzo, but I immediately rejected it as "premature." I then thought of the name Tor. I had originally seen the name in a paperback book of baby names. It was a Scandinavian variant of the Norse god of thunder Thor. A number of years later, I was watching a TV interview on PBS with a scientist of some repute, who said that life was now proceeding in the direction of solid-state electronics, that mankind would be left behind like dinosaurs. I envisioned a new church called the Solid-State Convention for life throughout the universe proceeding in the same direction. When the universe finally started to contract, there would eventually be a convention of all these solid-state electronic life forms, and the head of this new religion for the space age would be called Tor. I decided to copyright "The Ouzo Prophecy" with the name Tor, and when I did this, everything was fine again. Everything was fine until I experienced a sequence of auditory hallucinations. I don't remember if it was every day or every couple of days, but when I got to the copyright line, a feminine voice like that of an elementary schoolteacher asked, "Who is Tor?" Each time, I answered with a variation of the same answer, " I'm Tor," "Tor is my pen name," "Tor is the spokesman for the Church of Ouzo," etc., etc., etc. The question could have been a recording, it was always asked the same way in the same school-teacher tone. There was never any additional conversation, but it was obvious my answers were always inadequate. Finally, on a Saturday morning, I lost my patience, I had to see Tor in that paperback book of baby names. It had been 13 years, but I remembered the name of the book. However, instead of going to a store that sold paperback books, I went to a small Cincinnati area branch library. The shelf had a large number of books of baby names, and there was a single paperback book, the book I was looking for. I looked for Tor, but couldn't find it until I realized it was a variation of Thor. When I did find it, all the tension disappeared and it was like finding an oasis in the desert. Since there were so many books there, I started to browse thru them. Most of them didn't list Tor, but a couple of them did list the name as a variant of Torrance, which I thought was interesting. Finally, I got to a large, but very thin book that was made of cardboard with graphics on the cover. I don't remember the title, but the subtitle was "Religious and Ethnic Names from Around the World." I knew there wouldn't be much chance of Tor being in this book, and I was stunned when it was listed as meaning king in the Tiv language of Nigeria. Not a thought went thru my head, but I rushed over to the encyclopedias to look up Africa. I didn't find what I was looking for. Then I looked at books on Africa, and found nothing. I drove to a bookstore, saw a book on Africa, and turned to the index. And there it was in quotation marks, "The cradle of mankind." Only then did I let the thought go thru my mind that Tor was the Second Coming of Christ. And when I said it to myself, I flinched as though I might be hit by a bolt of lightning because it was the most blasphemous thought I ever had. That was the beginning of when "The Ouzo Prophecy" took on a different character, and I never had that auditory hallucination again.
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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

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School-teacher... lol. In my Stories, Thor has a female teacher of sorts called Nynyji. Spooky similarity xD

It is worth mentioning that the Vikings are known to have visited Africa, though as far south as Nigeria sounds partly unlikely, although the historic Nigerians could've travelled northwards as is more likely. The Vikings called the Africans "blue men", for reasons I don't know and many have found mysterious.
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Re: Afrophile Transcontinental Infrastructure Need

Post by Impenitent »

The Voice of Time wrote:...The Vikings called the Africans "blue men", for reasons I don't know and many have found mysterious.
The vikings never saw the smurfs...

-Imp
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