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New Roadmap Aims to Turn Ethiopia’s Green Ambitions into Thriving Climate Startups
01 February 2026
Beyond Business as Usual, Ethiopia Bets on an Entrepreneurial State
31 January 2026
Ethio Telecom Goes Public on Pressure, Performance, and Competition
29 January 2026
27 January 2026
What the Next Five Years Could Hold for Digital Finance in Ethiopia
12 January 2026
In Ethiopia’s Homes, an Invisible Workforce Waits for the Law to Catch Up
Ethiopia’s Redevelopment Dilemma: Growth, Compensation, and Fragile Land Rights
Addis Ababa paid over 7.4 billion Birr in compensation in just six months of urban resettlement. Experts warn one-time payouts don’t rebuild livelihoods when land rights remain legally fragile.
By Daniel Metaferiya
Why Some Ethiopian Startups are on the Move to Rwanda
Ethiopian startups are increasingly looking beyond Addis and finding opportunity in Kigali. Faster registration, clearer rules, and investor-friendly policies are driving a quiet shift toward Rwanda.
Designed for Whom? The Mirage of Women-Centric Digital Finance in Ethiopia
Closing Ethiopia’s gender gap in digital finance won’t happen with slogans. “Women-centric” DFS too often means minor tweaks to products never designed around women’s real lives.
By Etenat Awol
Ethiopia’s green ambitions are clear. Turning them into viable climate businesses has been harder. A new roadmap, validated this week, outlines how the country could close that gap.
The policy’s most ambitious shift targets the state itself, linking government productivity losses to rigid procedures, weak problem-solving culture, and inefficient use of resources.
While Ethio telecom is already feeling increased regulatory pressure, recent policy shifts suggest its current challenges are less a momentary strain and more a sign of what lies ahead.
By Kaleab Girma
An analysis of Ethiopia's National Digital Payments Strategy (2026-2030) and what it reveals about the ecosystem's next chapter.
In Addis Ababa, thousands of young women keep households running, yet remain outside Ethiopia’s labor law. No contracts. No minimum wage. Little protection.
By Blen Hailu