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  • Derde helft WK 2026: Laatste groepswedstrijden zetten koers naar knock-outfase

    Derde helft WK 2026: Laatste groepswedstrijden zetten koers naar knock-outfase

    After 48 matches played across host cities in North America, the 2026 FIFA World Cup is entering its decisive final group stage matchday window, running from June 24 to 27. When all final group fixtures wrap up, 16 teams will see their tournament run come to an end, while 32 sides will advance to the knockout round of the expanded 48-team World Cup format.

    Under the tournament’s current qualification rules, the top two finishers from each of the 12 groups earn automatic knockout round spots, joined by the eight best third-placed teams to complete the 32-team field for the knockout stage. With so much still at stake across the standings, the final group window delivers a slate of high-stakes clashes between global football powers and underdogs alike. Below, we break down the five most anticipated matches fans will not want to miss:

    ### Scotland vs Brazil | Miami Stadium, Wednesday 22:00
    This matchup marks the fifth time these two nations have faced off at a World Cup finals, adding historical context to an already tense encounter. Brazil currently shares the top spot in Group C with Morocco, both sitting on four points, and will fight to secure the group winner title with a win. For Scotland, the stakes are career-defining: the nation has never advanced past the group stage of a major men’s international tournament, and a draw could be enough to book their historic spot in the next round. This match will also mark Neymar’s long-awaited debut at the 2026 World Cup, adding even more star power to the clash. Simultaneously, Morocco will take on Haiti in their own final group fixture.

    ### Japan vs Sweden | Dallas Stadium, Thursday 20:00
    Sweden’s form heading into this final fixture is impossible to predict: the side delivered a dominant 5-1 victory over Tunisia in their opening match, followed by a shocking 5-1 defeat to Netherlands just days later. Japan, by contrast, has turned heads with entertaining, attacking play through their first two fixtures, including a 4-0 rout of Tunisia. With the winner guaranteed a top-two finish in Group F, analysts expect an open, high-scoring game full of entertainment for fans.

    ### Norway vs France | Boston Stadium, Friday 16:00
    Both sides have already secured their spots in the knockout round, but the battle for Group I’s top spot is still on the line. Two of the game’s biggest global stars, Erling Haaland (Norway) and Kylian Mbappé (France), have both netted four goals apiece so far this tournament, and both will be looking to add to their tally as they chase Lionel Messi’s all-time World Cup scoring record. France is targeting a third consecutive win to close out group play, while Norway is eager to prove it deserves to be ranked among the tournament’s top contenders as a dangerous outsider.

    ### Uruguay vs Spain | Estadio Guadalajara, Friday 21:00
    Group H has been one of the tournament’s biggest shockers so far, with unexpected results shaking up the standings: Uruguay opened with a draw against Saudi Arabia, while underdog Cape Verde earned a surprise goalless draw against tournament favorite Spain. Spain currently leads the group, with Uruguay trailing by two points. A win for Spain would lock in the top group spot, and let the side avoid a potentially devastating early matchup against Argentina in the round of 16.

    ### Egypt vs Iran | Seattle Stadium, Saturday 00:00
    Neither nation has ever advanced past the World Cup group stage, but this fixture guarantees that at least one of the two sides will hit that historic milestone after the final whistle. Group G’s standings are tightly packed after a series of draws across the first two matchdays, making this final clash a winner-takes-all encounter: a win guarantees a knockout round spot for either side. Iran has already overcome significant off-field obstacles to reach this point, including lengthy travel delays and visa complications. If Iran advances, they could face the United States in the first knockout round.

    In addition to these five highlight fixtures, the full schedule of remaining group stage matches is as follows:
    – **Wednesday 24 June**
    Switzerland vs Canada, BC Place, Vancouver, 16:00
    Bosnia vs Qatar, Seattle Stadium, 16:00
    Scotland vs Brazil, Miami Stadium, 22:00
    Morocco vs Haiti, Atlanta Stadium, 22:00
    Czech Republic vs Mexico, Mexico City Stadium, 22:00
    South Africa vs South Korea, Estadio Monterrey, 22:00
    – **Thursday 25 June**
    Ecuador vs Germany, New York New Jersey Stadium, 17:00
    Curaçao vs Ivory Coast, Philadelphia Stadium, 17:00
    Japan vs Sweden, Dallas Stadium, 20:00
    Tunisia vs Netherlands, Kansas City Stadium, 20:00
    Turkey vs USA, Los Angeles Stadium, 23:00
    Paraguay vs Australia, San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, 23:00
    – **Friday 26 June**
    Norway vs France, Boston Stadium, 16:00
    Senegal vs Iraq, Toronto Stadium, 16:00
    Cape Verde vs Saudi Arabia, Houston Stadium, 21:00
    Uruguay vs Spain, Estadio Guadalajara, 21:00
    – **Saturday 27 June**
    Egypt vs Iran, Seattle Stadium, 00:00
    New Zealand vs Belgium, BC Place, 00:00
    Panama vs England, New York New Jersey Stadium, 18:00
    Croatia vs Ghana, Philadelphia Stadium, 18:00
    Colombia vs Portugal, Miami Stadium, 20:30
    DR Congo vs Uzbekistan, Atlanta Stadium, 20:30
    Algeria vs Austria, Kansas City Stadium, 23:00
    Jordan vs Argentina, Dallas Stadium, 23:00

  • Official summary results of the 2026 Caribbean Primary Exit Assessment

    Official summary results of the 2026 Caribbean Primary Exit Assessment

    For the 2025–2026 academic cycle, Grenada’s Ministry of Education, through its Educational Testing and Examinations Unit, has successfully concluded all components of the annual Caribbean Primary Exit Assessment (CPEA), releasing full results alongside universal secondary school placements aligned with the government’s flagship education policy.

    First introduced across the Caribbean in 2012 to replace the older National Common Entrance Examination, the CPEA was developed by the Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC) in partnership with regional education ministries to evaluate core skills of graduating primary school students, combining continuous assessment across Grades 5 and 6 with a standardized final external examination. This year’s assessment opened with internal assessment components in September 2025, and wrapped up with the external written papers on May 13 and 14, 2026. Eligibility was extended to all students who turned 11 years of age on or before September 1, 2025, and under the Universal Secondary Education Policy reinstated by the Ministry of Education in 2023, every student completing the CPEA is guaranteed a spot in secondary education.

    A total of 1,711 students (876 male, 835 female) registered for the 2026 CPEA, with all registered candidates completing the mandatory internal assessment component. The external assessment was completed by 1,709 students – 876 male and 833 female – all of whom have now been assigned to secondary schools for the 2026–2027 academic year. The CPEA weights the internal assessment (which includes class projects, book reports, writing portfolios, teacher-evaluated skills practice, and unit tests) at 40% of a student’s total score, while the external 50-question multiple-choice examination covering four core subjects accounts for the remaining 60%.

    Overall, 1,601 of the 1,709 students who completed the full assessment scored 50% or higher to pass the examination, split evenly between 802 male and 799 female students. Just 108 students, or 7% of all test-takers, scored below the 50% pass mark, with 74 male and 34 female students in this group.

    Breaking down performance by assessment component, the external examination saw 1,293 students (619 male, 674 female) score 50% or higher, while 416 students scored below the pass threshold. Subject-level analysis of external assessment national mean scores shows broad improvement across most core subjects from 2025 to 2026. Language Arts posted the most significant gain, rising from a national mean of 60.34 in 2025 to 64.13 this year, taking the top spot for performance improvement. Social Studies also recorded steady growth, climbing from 62.61 to 64.27 to maintain consistent strong results, while Science saw a minor uptick from 63.06 to 64.29, holding steady relative to previous years. The only major outlier was Mathematics, which saw the national mean drop sharply from 55.16 in 2025 to 52.58 in 2026, marking the largest single-year decline across all subjects and signaling a clear need for targeted curriculum and instruction support in this area.

    For the internal assessment, which all 1,711 registered candidates completed, 1,673 students scored 50% or higher (844 male, 829 female), with just 38 students falling below the pass mark. Subject performance mirrored the external assessment trends: Language Arts posted the highest national mean at 83.37, followed closely by Social Studies at 83.13 and Science at 82.56. Once again, Mathematics recorded the sharpest year-over-year decline, dropping from 82.86 in 2025 to 80.70 in 2026, reinforcing the need for focused intervention in mathematics instruction across Grenada’s primary schools.

    All 1,709 students who completed the external assessment have been assigned to secondary schools across the country, with gender distribution varying by institution. Single-gender schools include Grenada Boy’s Secondary School (167 male placements), Presentation Brothers College (70 male placements), Anglican High School (105 female placements), St Joseph’s Convent Grenville (99 female placements), and St Joseph’s Convent St George’s (100 female placements). St Andrew’s Anglican Secondary School recorded the largest total placement with 135 students, followed by Grenada Boy’s Secondary School with 167 and Happy Hill Secondary School with 98. Individual primary schools will receive customized placement lists for their Grade 6 graduates in the coming days.

    For families seeking reassignment to a different secondary school than the one initially assigned, the Ministry of Education has outlined strict eligibility and procedural rules. Reassignment requests will only be approved if the requested school has available space, adhering to the mandated 1:35 teacher-to-pupil ratio, following a vacated spot from another student, or if a student has a documented medical or psychological need that requires a transfer, or the family has moved residence closer to the requested school (with official proof required).

    All reassignment requests must be submitted electronically via a link that will be published at a later date; the Ministry will not accept hard copy requests, and families without access to digital tools can contact the official help desk at (473) 440-2737 for assistance. Requests go through a multi-step review process: first evaluated by a school-level transfer committee, which submits recommendations to the Office of the Chief Education Officer no later than two weeks after results are released – late submissions will not be accepted. Recommendations are then collated by the Ministry’s Planning Unit before being reviewed by a central CPEA Oversight Committee, which makes final approval decisions. All applicants will receive written notification of the outcome, and no transfers will be approved to schools that have already reached their maximum capacity.

  • Antigua and Barbuda Champions a Strong, Independent OAS at 56th General Assembly

    Antigua and Barbuda Champions a Strong, Independent OAS at 56th General Assembly

    Against a backdrop of rising global pressure on multilateral cooperation, the 56th Regular Session of the Organization of American States (OAS) General Assembly opened in Panama City, Panama, where Sir Ronald Sanders, Head of Delegation and Ambassador of Antigua and Barbuda, delivered a compelling, values-driven address outlining key priorities for the inter-American body.

    In his opening remarks, Ambassador Sanders made a clear case for the OAS’s irreplaceable role in the Western Hemisphere. As the only regional institution that brings together nearly all independent American states for consistent dialogue, collaborative problem-solving and collective action, he emphasized that no alternative body can fill the space the OAS occupies. With unilateral action increasingly replacing coordinated global problem-solving across the world, he reaffirmed Antigua and Barbuda’s steadfast commitment to the core principles laid out in the OAS Charter. “We will continue to support this Organization in practice, by applying its rules consistently, safeguarding its independence, and ensuring that it serves all Member States fairly,” Sanders stated.

    Shifting focus to institutional governance and reform, the ambassador underscored that the institutional independence of the OAS Secretary General and the broader Secretariat stands as a fundamental Charter principle, critical to maintaining the organization’s internal institutional balance. He noted that accountability is equally vital to the OAS’s effective functioning, but stressed that any oversight must be carried out through pre-established mechanisms, aligned with Charter procedures, and guided by collective decisions made by all member states. On the topic of long-term institutional reform, Sanders left no room for ambiguity: reform efforts must prioritize strengthening the organization as a whole, and any changes must move forward through the collective, jointly agreed procedures set by member states, with the end goal of building a more effective OAS rather than undermining its capacity.

    Turning to the ongoing humanitarian and security crisis in Haiti, Sanders described the extreme levels of violence and instability faced by ordinary Haitians as unacceptable, highlighting that women and girls across the country remain at disproportionate and grave risk. He confirmed Antigua and Barbuda’s full backing for the UN-authorized Multinational Gang Suppression Force, pointing out that the deployment comes at the formal request of Haiti’s own national authorities. The ambassador called on all American states to mount a coordinated, collective response to transnational criminal networks operating within Haiti’s borders, arguing that drug trafficking, illicit cross-border financial flows, illegal weapons movements, and the movement of criminal actors must be disrupted and halted entirely. He urged global stakeholders to identify, sanction, and prosecute any individuals or entities that finance and back gang activity, regardless of whether they operate inside or outside of Haiti. “We must act together to restore security and democratic governance, in the interest of Haiti and of the Hemisphere as a whole,” Sanders said.

    In closing, Sanders laid out his vision for the future of the OAS: a strong, independent, adequately resourced organization that truly represents all peoples of the Americas. The permanent, inclusive forum for dialogue that the OAS provides — a rules-based space where governments can engage with mutual respect even when they hold differing positions — must be strengthened, not weakened, he argued. In final remarks, Sanders reaffirmed that this commitment to collective, multilateral action through a reformed, inclusive OAS is the clear right path forward for the region.

  • Accreditation Board Expands Capacity Through Training and Digital Modernization

    Accreditation Board Expands Capacity Through Training and Digital Modernization

    Antigua and Barbuda’s National Accreditation Board (ABNAB) has launched an ambitious push to overhaul the nation’s quality assurance and accreditation infrastructure, rolling out targeted training and preparatory workshops to boost institutional capacity and secure global recognition for the country’s regulatory frameworks.

    This initiative sits at the core of ABNAB’s long-term strategic vision to build a contemporary, high-efficiency accreditation ecosystem that can underpin consistent standards development and rigorous quality oversight across all sectors of the Caribbean nation. Unlike incremental tweaks to existing processes, the board’s approach seeks to create a foundational structure that aligns with global benchmarks while addressing local development priorities.

    A central pillar of the modernization effort is the full integration of digital technology into every stage of ABNAB’s accreditation workflows. Board leaders explain that this digital shift is designed to elevate three critical attributes of the institution’s work: greater transparency for participating institutions and stakeholders, faster processing times that cut administrative bottlenecks, and more agile responsiveness to emerging sector needs. Beyond operational improvements, the digital overhaul will also create a more robust governance structure for managing all accreditation and quality assurance activities across the country.

    ABNAB officials emphasize that digital transformation is non-negotiable for keeping the nation’s accreditation systems adaptable to changing national regulatory demands and evolving international standards. As global supply chains, cross-border education, and international trade increasingly require verified, globally-aligned quality assurance, outdated analog processes would leave Antigua and Barbuda at a competitive disadvantage, they note.

    To bring this digital and operational overhaul to fruition, ABNAB has brought together a cross-functional team of experts: digital development consultant Kenlie Browne has partnered with veteran accreditation consultant Perliter Walters-Gilliam and in-house ABNAB staff to refine, test, and strengthen the institution’s updated accreditation processes. This collaborative model, board representatives say, combines external technical expertise with local institutional knowledge to deliver a system tailored to Antigua and Barbuda’s unique context.

    ABNAB has framed the public-private collaborative effort as a pivotal milestone in the nation’s journey to modernize its approach to standard-setting, quality oversight, and institutional capacity building. The board’s strategic focus extends far beyond resolving immediate gaps in current operations: leaders note the work is intended to lay a durable, sustainable foundation that will support long-term economic and social growth for the nation.

    Ongoing work is specifically designed to keep Antigua and Barbuda’s accreditation systems aligned with the latest international best practices, while directly advancing the country’s national development goals across sectors including education, tourism, trade, and professional services. As the modernization and digital transformation initiatives move forward, ABNAB has committed to sharing regular public updates on progress with stakeholders and the general public.

  • Garbage Collection Delayed in Five Islands, Radio Range and Herberts

    Garbage Collection Delayed in Five Islands, Radio Range and Herberts

    Residents of three communities in Antigua — Five Islands, Radio Range, and Herberts — are facing unexpected disruptions to their regular residential waste collection schedules, the National Solid Waste Management Authority (NSWMA) has confirmed. In an official public advisory released to local communities on Wednesday, the governing body confirmed that scheduled waste pickups in all three areas have been pushed back from their originally planned timelines. While the NSWMA has not released any public details explaining what caused the service disruption, it moved quickly to assure affected households that crews are already working to resolve the underlying issue. According to the advisory, the authority aims to clear all backlogged waste collections by Thursday, June 25, to return services to their standard routine as soon as possible. Expressing gratitude to impacted residents for their cooperation amid the inconvenience, the NSWMA called on anyone who has experienced extended delays or a complete missed pickup to reach out directly to its dedicated customer support hotline. The hotline, reachable at 562-1347, is set up to log resident reports and address individual concerns related to the disrupted service. As of the advisory’s release, the NSWMA remains focused on clearing the backlog and restoring full, normal operations for all affected communities.

  • Regulators urge customers to have backup communication options following major Flow outage

    Regulators urge customers to have backup communication options following major Flow outage

    A nearly 19-hour total connectivity blackout for thousands of Flow customers across Dominica and St. Lucia has prompted regional telecommunications regulators to issue a formal call for residents and businesses to prepare backup communication strategies, to buffer against the crippling impact of future unplanned network disruptions.

    The widespread service shutdown began at approximately 5:30 p.m. local time on Sunday, June 21, and stretched into midday the following day, with full network access only restored by 12:40 p.m. on June 22, according to a joint statement released by the National Telecommunications Regulatory Commissions (NTRCs) of Dominica and St. Lucia, alongside the Eastern Caribbean Telecommunications Authority (ECTEL).

    Preliminary investigations into the root cause of the outage trace the failure back to a critical fault along a core fibre transmission line connecting Guadeloupe and Antigua, a key route that supports connectivity for Flow customers across the two affected Eastern Caribbean islands. At the height of the disruption, Flow issued an immediate public notice confirming the technical fault, and reassured users that technical teams were working around the clock to bring services back online.

    In the wake of the restoration, regulators confirmed they have launched a formal inquiry, requesting a full detailed report from Flow that outlines exactly what led to the extended outage. For its part, Flow has already committed to rolling out targeted upgrades to boost its network resilience and lower the probability of similar large-scale disruptions in the future. Proposed improvements under consideration include alternative routing solutions, a full industry audit of existing network route redundancies, and the construction of new parallel fibre pathways to add critical backup capacity to the core network.

    Regional regulators say they will conduct a thorough review of Flow’s proposed mitigation measures, before expanding the assessment to broader resilience reforms that would cover all telecommunications operators operating across ECTEL’s member contracting states. In their statement, the regulatory bodies acknowledged the extensive disruption the blackout inflicted on local communities, noting that the outage hit particularly hard for users who depend on constant, uninterrupted connectivity for daily work, medical services and critical business operations.

    “We will continue to monitor the situation and review the information provided by the operator to ensure that appropriate steps are taken to improve long-term service reliability,” the joint statement read. “Beyond the reforms operators implement, we encourage all members of the public to proactively develop their own backup and redundant communication plans, to prepare for any future unexpected outages.”

    The agencies also reaffirmed their ongoing commitment to fostering a stable, reliable telecommunications ecosystem that serves all users across the Eastern Caribbean region, and pledged to uphold full transparency around the causes of and responses to any future network outage incidents.

  • Antigua and Barbuda Signs Agreement with WATO to Introduce Household Water Recycling Systems

    Antigua and Barbuda Signs Agreement with WATO to Introduce Household Water Recycling Systems

    The twin-island Caribbean nation of Antigua and Barbuda has finalized a strategic partnership agreement with the Water and Wastewater Technology Organization (WATO), marking a major step forward in the country’s efforts to strengthen long-term water security amid growing climate pressures. The collaboration centers on rolling out distributed household-level water recycling systems across both populated islands, a solution designed to reduce reliance on overstretched freshwater aquifers and costly reverse osmosis desalination operations that currently meet most of the nation’s urban demand.

    As a small island developing state, Antigua and Barbuda has long ranked among the world’s most water-scarce countries, with prolonged drought events worsening in frequency and intensity due to regional climate change. Existing water infrastructure, built decades ago, struggles to keep up with growing demand from both the permanent residential population and the country’s key tourism sector, which draws millions of visitors annually. This has forced the government to implement costly, unpopular water rationing measures during dry seasons that disrupt both daily life and economic activity.

    Under the terms of the new agreement, WATO will provide technical expertise, modular system design support, and initial capacity building for local construction and maintenance teams. The organization will also help Antigua and Barbuda secure international climate financing to cover the upfront capital costs of widespread deployment, making the systems accessible to low and middle-income households that would otherwise struggle to afford the upgrade. Pilot installations are scheduled to launch within the next six months in community housing developments on Antigua, with full national rollout planned over the next five years.

    Once fully deployed, the household recycling systems will capture and treat greywater from sinks, showers, and laundry for reuse in garden irrigation, toilet flushing, and other non-potable applications. Government analysts project that the initiative will cut residential freshwater demand by as much as 40%, freeing up existing supplies for potable use and reducing the strain on national water infrastructure during peak drought periods. The project is also expected to deliver broader economic benefits, including lower average household water bills and reduced government spending on energy-intensive desalination operations.

    Environmental advocates have welcomed the agreement as a progressive model for small island nations grappling with climate-driven water scarcity, noting that decentralized recycling solutions are often more cost-effective and resilient than large-scale centralized infrastructure projects. Officials from Antigua and Barbuda’s Ministry of Water and Energy say the partnership aligns with the country’s updated National Climate Action Plan, which prioritizes nature-based and innovative technological solutions to build climate resilience across all sectors of the economy.

  • 655 million people still living without electricity

    655 million people still living without electricity

    As energy security and affordable energy have become top global development priorities, the world faces stark, uneven gaps in meeting the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal 7 (SDG 7): universal access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy by 2030. The 2026 edition of *Tracking SDG 7: The Energy Progress Report*, which includes newly released 2023 and 2024 data, outlines both promising advances in sustainable energy and alarming setbacks that put the 2030 target at severe risk without urgent systemic action.

    According to the report, more than 655 million people across the globe still live without any access to electricity, while two billion people rely on toxic, polluting fuels and outdated technologies for daily cooking — a hazard that causes an estimated 3 million premature deaths annually from household air pollution. The burden of these energy gaps falls disproportionately on Sub-Saharan Africa, where more than 560 million people lack electricity and 970 million do not have access to clean cooking infrastructure. While most regions of the world are on a trajectory to approach universal energy access, progress in electrification across Sub-Saharan Africa has slowed sharply, and the report finds the region must triple its current pace of expansion to hit the 2030 SDG 7 target. The gap in rural Sub-Saharan Africa has grown substantially, from 376 million unserved people in 2010 to 447 million in 2024, and projections indicate the number of people in the region lacking clean cooking access will hit 1 billion by 2027.

    Against these sobering gaps, the report does highlight encouraging momentum in several key areas of sustainable energy transition. Renewable energy continued its rapid global expansion, now accounting for more than 30% of total global electricity consumption. Per capita renewable energy generation capacity hit a new global record of 544 watts — enough to power an average household refrigerator. International public financial flows directed to clean energy projects in developing countries saw a slight uptick, rising from $24.4 billion in 2023 to $24.6 billion in 2024. Global energy efficiency improvements also continued, bringing global energy intensity down to 3.76 megajoules per U.S. dollar of GDP.

    Despite these gains, the report warns that overall progress remains far too slow to meet 2030 targets, and deep structural inequities persist across regions and income groups. For 2024, the global electricity access rate stagnated at 92%, with annual growth half the average rate recorded over the previous decade. Clean cooking access remains the largest unmet energy challenge, with a stark urban-rural divide: 89% of urban residents have access to clean cooking solutions, compared to just 56% of rural populations. If current trends hold, 1.8 billion people will still rely on polluting fuels like wood, charcoal, kerosene and coal for cooking by 2030.

    Per capita renewable energy capacity also reflects massive global inequality: low-income countries average just 33.6 watts per person, compared to 1,224 watts per person in high-income nations. While renewables lead growth in electricity generation, their penetration in heating and transport remains severely limited. Progress on energy efficiency has also slowed, dropping from 2.4% annual improvement in 2022 to just 1.5% in 2023 — far below the pace needed to align with SDG 7 targets, widening the gap between climate and energy ambition and on-the-ground implementation.

    Financing remains one of the most persistent barriers to progress, particularly for the world’s poorest nations. International public clean energy financing to least developed countries fell 11% between 2023 and 2024, dropping to just $3.7 billion. Even when energy infrastructure is built, affordability blocks widespread access: millions of low-income households cannot cover connection fees, wiring costs or ongoing basic energy service charges even when grids reach their communities. The report also notes that 80% of international public clean energy financing in 2024 came in the form of debt-based instruments, a problematic structure at a time when many developing nations face crippling debt burdens and rising interest rates. Grants accounted for just 13% of total financing, while equity financing and risk guarantees made up only 2% and 5% respectively.

    In response to these challenges, the report frames accelerated deployment of domestic renewable energy as a dual solution: it strengthens both energy security and affordability, while advancing long-term climate and sustainable development goals. Distributed renewable solutions, including off-grid solar systems and small-scale mini-grids, have already emerged as cost-effective pathways to expand electricity access, currently serving hundreds of millions of people across low- and middle-income countries. For clean cooking, renewable alternatives like electric stoves, bioethanol and biogas are gaining traction as scalable options that diversify accessible clean cooking pathways for unserved communities.

    To get back on track for SDG 7 by 2030, the report outlines core cross-cutting priorities: stronger political leadership, improved coordination across government sectors, and targeted focus on the low-income countries and marginalized communities most at risk of being left behind. Clear, consistent policy frameworks and sustained implementation, the report argues, are critical to diversifying national energy mixes, scaling renewable energy, reducing dependence on fossil fuel imports, and building macroeconomic resilience against global energy market and supply chain disruptions. Targeted subsidies, creative local financing mechanisms, and prioritization of the lowest-cost electrification solutions will be essential to ensure low-income households are not locked out of access.

    Francesco La Camera, Director-General of the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), one of the report’s lead organizations, emphasized that recent global energy shocks have underscored the value of rapid renewable energy deployment. “Countries with strong renewable energy capacity are better positioned to withstand economic and supply disruptions,” La Camera noted. “Accelerating the deployment of cost-competitive domestic renewables must now be central to strengthening both energy security and economic resilience, while pursuing SDG 7. To achieve this, the international community must prioritise affordable and tailored financial support, particularly for least developed countries facing the greatest barriers to access.”

    The report will be officially presented to global policymakers at a special launch event on 8 July 2026, following an in-depth review of SDG 7 progress at the UN High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development in New York, the global body that oversees progress on all Sustainable Development Goals. IRENA, an intergovernmental agency leading global cooperation on the renewable energy transition, counts 172 member states with 13 additional countries in the process of accession. The agency provides technical expertise, capacity building, investment facilitation and coordination for global partnerships to advance climate action, sustainable development, universal energy access and resilient economies.

  • Temporary traffic restrictions: Seamoon bridge, St Andrew

    Temporary traffic restrictions: Seamoon bridge, St Andrew

    Drivers and local residents in St. Andrew are preparing for upcoming travel disruptions, as the national Ministry of Infrastructure, Public Utilities, Civil Aviation and Transportation has formally announced a week-long set of temporary traffic limits on Seamoon Bridge to enable critical structural repairs.

    The scheduled maintenance work is set to launch on Monday, June 29, 2026, with work teams carrying out minor repairs to the bridge’s structure daily between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Government officials emphasized that the temporary access rules are a mandatory safety measure to allow crews to complete the preservation work efficiently and without incident.

    For the full duration of the repair period, all heavy-duty commercial vehicles including large freight trucks will be banned from crossing the span. While light passenger vehicles, private cars and public buses will still be permitted to traverse the bridge, motorists should plan for significant travel delays and are urged to build extra time into their daily commutes.

    Officials noted that local residents living in the immediate area affected by the restrictions will receive all possible accommodation to minimize disruptions to their daily routines. All road users crossing the bridge during the work window are advised to reduce travel speeds, remain alert to changing conditions, follow posted temporary traffic signage, and adhere to all directions from on-site traffic management personnel.

    The Ministry has issued a formal apology to all those impacted by the upcoming travel changes, noting that the upgrades are critical to extending the lifespan of the Seamoon Bridge and protecting long-term public safety for all users. It thanked the public in advance for their patience, cooperation and understanding while the necessary infrastructure work is carried out.

    This announcement was carried by NOW Grenada, which notes that it is not liable for the opinions, statements or third-party content included in contributor-submitted public announcements, and provides a reporting channel for users to flag any content that violates platform guidelines.

  • Saint Lucia welcomes Squash Open back after 13-year hiatus

    Saint Lucia welcomes Squash Open back after 13-year hiatus

    After 13 years without a major national competitive squash event, the island nation of Saint Lucia marked a significant milestone for the sport this June, when Fair Helen welcomed athletes and fans to the 2026 Saint Lucia Squash Open, held from June 18 to 21 at the Saint Lucia Yacht Club along scenic Reduit Beach in Gros Islet.

    Organized by the Saint Lucia Squash & Racquets Association, the four-day tournament brought together 28 competitors from across the globe, with five international participants traveling from as far as Canada, the United Kingdom, and neighboring St. Vincent and the Grenadines to join local contenders. The event was structured into three distinct competitive divisions: Juniors, Women’s, and the flagship Open Championship, delivering three straight days of fast-paced, high-stakes matches that kept spectators engaged.

    In the lead-up to the first serve, Christopher Thakur, president of the Saint Lucia Squash & Racquets Association, shared his vision for the tournament and the future of the sport on the island in an interview with St Lucia Times. Highlighting that Saint Lucia already boasts a strong, diverse pool of talent spanning junior, intermediate, and senior player levels, Thakur emphasized his hope that the revived tournament would help squash reclaim its popular standing as a go-to competitive sport across the nation.

    When the final match concluded, international competitors claimed several top honors across the divisions. In the Open Championship, Kevin Bailey of St. Vincent and the Grenadines took first place, with Saint Lucia’s own Carlos Segovia securing second and Josh DeFreitas of Saint Lucia finishing third. Bailey was also named the tournament’s Top Foreign Player, while Segovia earned the title of Top Local Player. In the Open Consolation draw, Canada’s Vanessa Steinwall claimed first place, followed by host nation representatives Chris Thakur in second and Everistus Jn Marie Jr in third.

    Steinwall continued her winning streak in the Women’s division, claiming the top spot with fellow Canadian Allison LeBer taking second and Saint Lucia’s Monique Devaux rounding out the top three. In the Juniors division, Michel Khalifeh claimed first place, with Cypriani Norville of Saint Lucia in second and Christian Sidonie of Saint Lucia in third.

    The revival of the Saint Lucia Squash Open comes at a pivotal moment for the global squash community: the sport was recently granted official Olympic status, and will make its debut as a medal sport at the 2028 Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles, California. For emerging squash programs like Saint Lucia’s, the timing of the tournament’s return offers a unique opportunity to grow local talent, build interest in the sport, and develop competitors who could one day compete on the world’s biggest sporting stage.