Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The cash crop is usually cultivated in the southern coastal regions of the country, near the towns of Mtwara, Kilwa and Dar es Salaam. The sale and marketing of the product is run by the Cashewnut Board of Tanzania, through various farmer co-operatives. [21]
Dar es Salaam is home to a number of other hydrocarbon-based industrial operations, such as the Tanzania International Petroleum Reserves Limited (TIPER) near Vijibweni, Kigamboni MC. The entire city of Dar es Salaam has both formal and impromptu garages, which contribute to the hydrocarbon contamination of the soil.
Mbuligwe, Stephen E. and Gabriel R. Kassenga. 2004 Feasibility and strategies for anaerobic digestion of solid waste for energy production in Dar es Salaam city, Tanzania. Resources, Conservation and Recycling 42(2): 183-203. Schaller, Neill. 2003 The concept of agricultural sustainability. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 46(1-4): 89-97.
With a land area of 271 km2, the Msimbazi basin makes up roughly one fifth of Dar es Salaam's total land area and is home to an estimated 1.6 million people (27% of the city's total population). The basin extends from the river's headwaters in the Pugu Forest Reserve eastward over a stretch that becomes more urbanized as the river gets closer ...
What is more, there is a proposed route, shorter by some 500 km, to the east between Lubumbashi and Dar es Salaam." "The European Union (EU) and the U.S. are not currently leaders in EV technology ...
Numerous crops can be cultivated because to the rich soil and abundant rainfall in the district. The primary crop farmed in Kisarawe is cassava, which is both a food crop and a source of income. The best cassava in the area is grown in Kisarawe, and the biggest cassava markets are in Dar es Salaam, Kibaha, Mkuranga, and Rufiji. [7] [8] [9]
In 2018, Dar es Salaam scored 0.631 (medium category) on the Human Development Index (HDI). The city's HDI has increased every year since 1992, and it ranked higher than any other region in the country except for one. [39] Dar es Salaam is the second-fastest-growing city in the world and could have a population as high as 12.9 million by 2030. [36]
It is bordered to the north by Dar es Salaam's Kigamboni, Temeke and Ilala Districts. To the east by the Mafia Channel, to the south by Kibiti District, and to the west by Kisarawe District. The district is comparable in size to the land area of Samoa. [2] The town of Mkuranga serves as its administrative capital.