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The
future is extremely bright for Angola
which is about twice the size of Texas. The result of a long civil war was declared over
by Angola's defense ministry in August 2002, while UNITA officially
disbanded its militant faction. Solidifying the war’s
end was the conclusion of operations by the United
Nations mission in Angola, in February 1999, which
was aimed at overseeing the peace process. In May 2003,
the United
States lifted
its sanctions against UNITA and Angola clearing the way for multi sector U.S. investment.
U.S. and International
oil companies have operated in Angola for decades and the
resilient relationships are only increasing. Nearly
95% of Angola's economy is based
on the extraction of two natural resources: oil and
diamonds. With US$7.7B in oil export earnings, the size
of Angola’s oil industry makes up most of the country's economy.
Alarming realities are in the agriculture
sector, which makes up only 7% of GDP, but makes up
over 85% of the countries employment. However, Angola must leverage technology,
diversify its economy, strengthen finance
and banking, and grow multiple sectors outside oil,
gas, and diamonds while reducing poverty.
Our
approach is to develop projects, technology transfers,
investments and import/export activities under a socio-economic
architecture and detail design of projects. Grina will
provide the global best practices and advanced economic
models to manage the effectiveness of projects &
policies. This includes economic equilibrium and multi-market
consideration and well as demand creation.
What
separates Grina Technologies from most companies is
that they only look for their specific interests and
are not interested in the dependencies of any activities,
let alone think about multi-lateral, mutual benefit,
sustained trading.
Latest
News: We are in negotiations with the Government
of Angola for socioeconomic growth in diverse sectors
and massive infrastructure development. Our immediate
goals are to architect growth, both in micro and macro-enterprises,
in multiple sectors such that it reduces their dependence
on oil, gas, and diamonds, and reducing the wide ranging
poverty, while achieving regional goals. Contact
us to see how your organization can benefit in this
massive socioeconomic reconstruction.
GDP:
US$23.17B(2004) Import: US$4.896B(2004) Export: US$12.76B(2004)
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