-4.1 C
New York
Monday, March 2, 2026
Home Blog Page 394

Top 20 Rankings for the New England Region in Week #1 of 2025

0

2025 NEW ENGLAND REGION HIGH SCHOOL
WEEK #1 TOP 20 RANKINGS

Rank School Name City, State Record Previous Recent Results through 9/14
1 Phillips Academy Andover Andover, Massachusetts 1-0-0 1 9/13 vs Dexter Southfield- 8-1 W
2 Uxbridge High School Uxbridge, Massachusetts 3-0-0 2 9/5 vs East Greenwich- 10-0 W, 9/8 @ Acton-Boxborough- 4-0 W, 9/12 vs Medfield- 7-1 W
3 Watertown High School Watertown, Massachusetts 4-0-0 3 9/3 @ Lexington- 6-1 W, 9/5 @ Burlington- 6-0 W, 9/9 vs Belmont- 2-1 W, 9/12 @ Wilmington- 7-0 W
4 Walpole High School Walpole, Massachusetts 5-0-0 4 9/2 vs Wellesley- 6-1 W, 9/4 @ Milton- 2-0 W, 9/8 vs Framingham- 10-0 W, 9/10 @ Needham- 7-0 W, 9/13 vs Winchester- 6-1 W
5 Rice Memorial High School South Burlington, Vermont 5-0-0 5 8/29 @ Spaulding- 7-0 W, 9/3 vs Mt. Mansfield- 5-0 W, 9/6 @ Champlain Valley Union- 3-0 W, 9/9 @ Burlington- 5-0 W, 9/12 vs Woodstock- 6-1 W
6 Middlesex School Concord, Massachusetts 2-0-0 6 9/10 @ Winsor- 9-1 W, 9/13 vs New Hampton School- 5-0 W
7 Belmont High School Belmont, Massachusetts 3-1-0 11 9/3 vs Melrose- 9-0 W, 9/5 vs Reading Memorial- 2-1 W, 9/9 @ Watertown- 1-2 L, 9/11 @ Arlington- 6-0 W
8 Sandwich High School East Sandwich, Massachusetts 4-0-0 7 9/3 vs Cohasset- 3-0 W, 9/5 @ Duxbury- 6-0 W, 9/11 vs Barnstable- 6-0 W, 9/13 vs Manchester Essex- 7-0 W
9 Somerset Berkley Regional High School Somerset, Massachusetts 3-0-0 8 9/2 @ Old Rochester- 5-0 W, 9/4 vs Durfee- 10-1 W, 9/11 @ Seekonk- 10-1 W
10 Andover High School Andover, Massachusetts 2-0-1 9 9/6 vs Beverly- 5-0 W, 9/8 vs St. Mary’s Lynn- 0-0 T, 9/13 @ Newton North- 4-0 W
11 Cheverus High School Portland, Maine 1-0-1 10 9/5 vs Biddeford- 4-4 T, 9/11 vs Sanford- 4-1 W
12 Londonderry High School Londonderry, New Hampshire 5-0-0 NR 8/29 @ Merrimack- 4-1 W, 9/3 @ Windham- 1-0 W, 9/9 @ Memorial Man Central- 10-1 W, 9/10 vs Goffstown- 4-1 W, 9/12 vs Keene- 1-0 W
13 Nashoba Regional High School Bolton, Massachusetts 3-0-0 OC 9/3 vs Westford Academy- 7-0 W, 9/8 vs Algonquin Regional- 2-0 W, 9/10 @ Shrewsbury- 4-1 W
14 Belfast Area High School Belfast, Maine 3-0-0 15 9/6 vs Leavitt Area- 3-1 W, 9/9 vs MCI- 2-0 W, 9/12 vs Old Town- 2-1 W
15 Brewer High School Brewer, Maine 1-0-0 17 9/6 vs Edward Little- 1-0 W
16 Franklin High School Franklin, Massachusetts 4-0-1 18 9/3 vs Oliver Ames- 5-1 W, 9/5 vs King Philip Regional- 2-1 W, 9/8 @ Concord-Carlisle- 0-0 T, 9/9 @ Foxborough- 3-0 W, 9/11 @ Taunton- 7-0 W
17 Keene High School Keene, New Hampshire 4-1-0 13 8/29 @ Exeter- 4-0 W, 9/3 vs Pinkerton- 4-2 W, 9/8 vs Winnacunnet- 3-1 W, 9/10 @ Timberlane- 4-0 W, 9/12 @ Londonderry- 0-1 L
18 Deerfield Academy Deerfield, Massachusetts 1-0-0 19 9/13 @ Berkshire School- 5-4 W OT
19 Williston Northampton School Easthampton, Massachusetts 1-0-0 20 9/13 vs St. Mark’s School- 7-0 W
20 Cushing Academy Ashburnham, Massachusetts 2-0-0 NR 9/10 vs Thayer- 7-0 W, 9/13 vs Governors Academy- 4-3 W
OC Biddeford High School Biddeford, Maine 2-0-1 OC 9/5 vs Cheverus- 4-4 T, 9/9 vs Gorham- 4-3 W, 9/11 vs Thornton Academy- 3-2 W 2OT
OC Canton High School Canton, Massachusetts 4-0-0 OC 9/3 @ Attleboro- 5-0 W, 9/5 @ Foxborough- 2-0 W, 9/9 vs Sharon- 9-0 W, 9/11 vs North Attleboro- 10-1 W
OC Hopkinton High School Hopkinton, Massachusetts 4-0-1 NR 9/3 @ Dedham- 3-0 W, 9/5 vs Holliston- 7-1 W, 9/8 vs Westwood- 4-0 W, 9/10 vs Ashland- 4-1 W, 9/12 vs Natick- 0-0 T
OC Messalonskee High School Oakland, Maine 4-0-0 NR 9/4 vs Lewiston- 3-2 W, 9/6 vs Camden Hills Regional- 3-0 W, 9/8 vs Oxford Hills- 7-0 W, 9/11 vs Brunswick- 4-0 W
OC Noble & Greenough School Dedham, Massachusetts 0-1-0 NR 9/13 vs Agnes Irwin School (PA)- 1-2 L
OC Pinkerton Academy Derry, New Hampshire 4-1-0 OC 8/28 vs Windham- 5-3 W, 9/3 @ Keene- 2-4 L, 9/5 vs Memorial-Man. Central- 10-1 W, 9/8 @ Goffstown- 6-0 W, 9/10 vs Dover- 5-1 W
OC Skowhegan Area High School Skowhegan, Maine 3-0-0 NR 9/4 vs Oxford Hills- 5-0 W, 9/9 vs Mt. Blue- 2-1 W, 9/12 vs Leavitt Area- 13-0 W
OC St. Mary’s Lynn Lynn, Massachusetts 3-0-1 NR 9/2 @ Danvers- 5-0 W, 9/4 vs Peabody- 6-0 W, 9/6 @ Monomoy- 1-0 W, 9/8 @ Andover- 0-0 T
OC The Governor’s Academy Byfield, Massachusetts 0-1-0 12 9/13 vs Cushing Academy- 3-4 L

The post 2025 Week #1 New England Region Top 20 Rankings appeared first on MAX Field Hockey.

Utilizing Energy from Salt and Fresh Water

0

Imagine generating power not from sunlight or wind, but from the simple mixing of fresh and salt water. This is the quiet promise of osmotic energy, a renewable energy source generated where river meets ocean. The idea has been around for decades, but only now is it flowing into real-world use.

The principle behind osmotic potential is deceptively simple. When fresh and salt water are separated by a semi-permeable membrane, water molecules naturally move across the barrier to balance the difference. That flow builds up pressure strong enough to spin a turbine. No combustion, no emissions. And unlike wind or solar, there is no dependence on weather or daylight, making it capable of running continuously.

The first real push came in 2009, when the Norwegian company Statkraft built one of the world’s first prototype osmotic power plants. The four-kilowatt demonstration model proved the concept could generate electricity, but due to costs the technology mostly lingered in labs and small pilots.

Now, for only the second time since development of those prototypes, a full-scale facility has opened in Fukuoka, Japan. Built by a consortium including the National Institute for Materials Science and local partners, it’s the world’s second osmotic power facility designed for continuous output following the launch of another plant in Denmark in 2023. While considered modest in scale, it will generate around 880,000 kilowatt-hours per year – enough to power 220 households or offset the energy needs of a desalination plant.

What sets the Fukuoka facility apart from any prior iterations of the technology is not the amount of energy it generates, but how it applies physics to infrastructure. By pairing with a desalination plant, it taps into concentrated brine waste that would otherwise be discarded, creating a sharper salinity contrast than rivers naturally provide. Those stronger gradients boost efficiency and grounds osmotic generation in existing systems rather than the lab.

Still, hurdles remain. Pumping losses and membrane fouling can erode efficiency, and advanced membranes are expensive.

“While energy is released when the salt water is mixed with fresh water, a lot of energy is lost in pumping the two streams into the power plant and from the frictional loss across the membranes,” said Professor Sandra Kentish of the University of Melbourne in a recent interview with The Guardian. “This means that the net energy that can be gained is small.”

Precisely the sort of challenges that pushed companies such as Statkraft to shutter its prototype after a few years.

While the Fukuoka facility doesn’t claim to have solved all of the issues, it shows that osmotic power can be folded into real-world infrastructure. Advances in membrane and pump technology are reducing the losses, Kentish noted, and Japan’s use of concentrated brine from desalination increases the energy available. That integration marks an engineering milestone – and underscores the core attraction of osmotic power: its reliability.

Unlike solar or wind, osmotic power can run continuously wherever fresh and saltwater meet; at estuaries, desalination plants, even inland salt lakes. Researchers say the global potential is vast, potentially one day rivaling hydropower if costs continue to come down. The launch of the Fukuoka plant signals renewed interest in exploring this emerging energy source.

And while osmotic power may never match the scale of solar or offshore wind, parity isn’t required for impact. As energy grids diversify, steady background renewables will matter more than ever, especially when they can plug into existing infrastructure.

In Fukuoka, salt and fresh water are already driving turbines, turning a long-studied concept into a working source of power. A modest step, showing osmotic power edging closer to real-world relevance.

Sources: Science Japan, The Guardian

The founder of Spanx kept her company under wraps for a year, transforming $5,000 into a $1.2 billion empire.

0
  • Spanx founder Sara Blakely turned her $5,000 savings from selling fax machines into a shapewear empire. By keeping her idea secret early on, hustling inside department stores, and never taking outside investors, she built the brand entirely on her own terms. Her scrappy, rule-breaking tactics ultimately paid off—culminating in a $1.2 billion payout when she sold the company in 2021.

Building the next-big-thing requires entrepreneurs to make a lot of bets—on their idea, starting team, and even business name. But for Spanx founder Sara Blakely, the ultimate bet came from betting on herself.

“Don’t ever underestimate the importance of storytelling. You are your greatest competitive advantage,” Blakely tells Fortune. It’s a mantra that helped her take her $5,000 in savings from selling fax machines and turn it into a $1.2 billion women’s shapewear empire.

When she first started Spanx, she deliberately kept her idea hidden—even from her closest friends and family.

“Ideas are the most vulnerable in the moment you have them. I waited a year before I told any friends or family what I was working on and that’s because I didn’t want ego to have to get involved too early,” Blakely added to the School of Hard Knocks in an interview released earlier this week.

Blakely admitted that hearing inevitable negative comments, like “why hasn’t anybody already done it?” or “the big guys will knock you off in six months” would have crushed her dreams—and landed her right back in the career she was trying to escape.

“Had I heard those things the moment that I had the idea, I would probably still be selling fax machines,” the 54-year-old said.

How Blakely built a $1.2 billion empire on ‘unhinged’ behavior

For Blakely, her all-out bet on herself ultimately had massive rewards. 

She grew Spanx over the course of two decades into a brand found in clothing stores around the globe and notably never took any outside investors. When she finally decided to sell in 2021, she reaped the entire $1.2 billion reward—a 240,000x growth on her initial $5,000 investment.

But Blakely hasn’t shied away from being open about fighting tooth and nail to get her business off the ground; As well as keeping it a secret to block out any naysayers, she did whatever it she could within her powers to get the brand noticed.

In her early years, that meant personally going inside Neiman Marcus department stores and moving her product closer to the checkout counter—away from what she called the “sleepiest corner of the store.” And while she admitted it probably wasn’t allowed, it didn’t stop her.

“I always say, ask for forgiveness not permission,” she said.

This self-described “unhinged” behavior didn’t stop there. On her journey to success, she also rode around with a “SPANX” license plate, signed up for British billionaire Richard Branson’s reality TV show, and even paid her friends to go into department stores and buy her product so “it wouldn’t tank.”

“You gotta do what you gotta do,” Blakely wrote on Instagram.

Fortune Global Forum returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh. CEOs and global leaders will gather for a dynamic, invitation-only event shaping the future of business. Apply for an invitation.

The Agenda and Expectations for Trump’s UK Visit: A Breakdown of the Schedule | Business and Economy Updates

0

Great Britain is set to roll out the red carpet for Donald Trump this week, honouring the president of the United States with something no other American leader has ever received: a second state visit.

Trump is set to arrive in London late on Tuesday for a visit that coincides with tough trade negotiations between the US and many of its key trading partners, including the United Kingdom. During his stay, both countries plan to announce several deals on technology and civil nuclear energy, and British leaders hope to finalise an agreement on metal tariffs.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

Trump and his wife, Melania, will be treated to royal pageantry throughout their two-day stay, including a ceremonial welcome from King Charles at Windsor Castle. The British government is confident that royal soft power will appeal to Trump’s sense of flamboyance.

The state visit will include a glittering banquet and a procession in a horse-drawn carriage. For his part, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer hopes Trump’s visit will offer a measure of distraction from simmering speculation about his leadership amid plummeting approval ratings and high-profile resignations.

Lord Mandelson’s recent sacking as UK ambassador to the US, following new revelations concerning his friendship with child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, has already cast a diplomatic pall over Trump’s visit. The president’s own links to Epstein have also generated plenty of headlines in recent weeks.

When and where

Trump will officially be welcomed to the UK on Tuesday evening by US Ambassador Warren Stephens, British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper and Viscount Hood, the king’s lord-in-waiting. On Wednesday morning, the royal activities will begin, with a formal greeting by the king and Queen Camilla, along with Prince William and Princess Catherine, at Windsor Castle. Later that day, he will enjoy a royal salute at the castle and a flypast from the Red Arrows and the carriage procession.

The president will then be treated to lunch with the extended royal family before laying a wreath at Queen Elizabeth II’s tomb in St George’s Chapel.

On Wednesday night, Trump will be the guest of honour at a formal state banquet at the castle.

The president will bid farewell to the royals on Thursday morning before he meets Starmer.

Trade tops agenda

Starmer will host Trump at Chequers, his country residence, on Thursday to discuss various matters, including security in Ukraine. Starmer’s ultimate aim, however, is to ensure that Trump makes good on his promise to lower tariffs on steel and aluminium.

A view of Chequers, the official country residence of the UK prime minister, near Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire [File: Peter Nicholls/Reuters]

The UK was the first country to sign a bilateral trade agreement with the Trump administration in May. Under that deal, the US planned to reduce tariffs on aluminium and steel from 25 percent to zero, but that has not happened yet.

“When it comes to steel, we will make sure that we have an announcement as soon as possible,” Business Secretary Peter Kyle told the BBC on Sunday. Other ministers have expressed optimism that a deal on base metals can be secured during Trump’s visit.

The two countries are also expected to sign a multibillion-dollar deal to develop small nuclear projects, which could, in some cases, help to power new artificial intelligence data centres. On Monday, Starmer announced a joint US-UK project to build a fleet of small modular reactors.

“The UK-US relationship is the strongest in the world,” a representative from Starmer’s office told reporters. “This week, we are delivering a step change in that relationship.”

Investment deals?

A major talking point will be a new potential technology partnership, involving enhanced US investment in the UK and greater British cooperation with Silicon Valley on AI and quantum computing.

That had been Lord Mandelson’s priority and something he described in his outgoing letter to embassy staff last week as his “personal pride and joy” that he claimed would “help write the next chapter of the special relationship” between the US and the UK. Mandelson’s permanent replacement has yet to be named, but James Roscoe is serving as interim ambassador to the US.

Nvidia, OpenAI and Google are expected to announce investment deals as part of the partnership, according to the Reuters news agency. Meanwhile, the British government recently secured 1.25 billion pounds ($1.7bn) in private investment pledges from PayPal and Bank of America.

Elsewhere, private equity firm Blackstone plans to invest 100 billion pounds ($136bn) into British assets over the next decade, with a focus on physical infrastructure. The investment will be part of a previously announced $500bn package of investment into Europe.

Why is this trip significant?

This is Trump’s second visit to the UK in the last two months, following his trip to Scotland in July, but this week marks his second state visit, which no other US president has ever enjoyed. In 2019, Trump was hosted for a state visit by Queen Elizabeth II.

The timing is not ideal. Mandelson was sacked as the UK’s ambassador to the US on September 11, after emails were published that revealed he urged Epstein to fight for early release from prison in 2008.

Trump’s friendship with Epstein has also exposed him to damaging scrutiny, including from his support base. Democrats in the House of Representatives recently released a birthday letter he allegedly wrote to Epstein in 2003, which Trump has denied writing.

For his part, Starmer hopes the pomp of a state visit will offer cover for his own domestic challenges, including criticism about him proscribing the Palestine Action group as a “terror organisation”.

Following missteps on welfare reform, a slapdash cabinet reshuffle and poor economic growth, several lawmakers are increasingly questioning Starmer’s judgement, especially with Nigel Farage’s populist Reform UK party surging ahead in the polls.

Starmer’s main goal will be to champion any wins secured during Trump’s visit.

But the president’s stay will also face challenges as local protests are expected in opposition to Trump’s stay at Windsor Castle.

Members of the public walk along the Long Walk in Windsor Great Park, outside of Windsor Castle, west of London [File: Adrian Dennis/AFP]
Members of the public walk along the Long Walk in Windsor Great Park, outside of Windsor Castle, west of London [File: Adrian Dennis/AFP]

The prime minister will also try to convince Trump that Russia’s incursion of 20 drones into Polish airspace last Wednesday was not an accident, as Trump has suggested.

Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski rejected that theory on September 12 during a news conference in Kyiv. “We don’t believe in 20 mistakes at the same time,” he said.

Finally, Starmer’s spokesperson said there would also be announcements on deepening cultural ties, including promoting basketball in the UK and developing partnerships between heritage and art institutions.

Record labels and Internet Archive reach settlement in copyright lawsuit regarding vintage vinyl record streaming

0

Major record labels including Universal Music Group and Sony Music Entertainment have reached a confidential settlement with the nonprofit Internet Archive, ending a two-year legal battle over its digitization and streaming of vintage vinyl recordings.

The parties filed a joint notice in California federal court on Monday (September 15), requesting that Judge Maxine Chesney pause all case deadlines while they complete the settlement terms.

They expect to formally dismiss the lawsuit within 45 days, according to the filing, which you can read in full here.

“The Parties request that the Court vacate any upcoming deadlines while the performance of certain settlement terms is pending,” the court document read.

It added: “Once performance of certain terms of the settlement is complete, the Parties shall file a Stipulation of Dismissal of the entire action with prejudice. The Parties expect to file the Stipulation of Dismissal within 45 days.”

In a blog post on Monday, Chris Freeland, Director of Library Services at Internet Archive, wrote: “[B]oth parties have advised the Court that the matter has been settled. The parties have reached a confidential resolution of all claims and will have no further public comment on this matter.”

The settlement concludes a dispute that began in 2023 when UMG Recordings, Capitol Records, Concord, Sony Music and Arista Music sued the San Francisco-based Internet Archive over its “Great 78 Project.”

The initiative encourages donations of 78-rpm records from the 1890s through 1950s, which the Archive then digitizes and makes available online.

“[B]oth parties have advised the Court that the matter has been settled. The parties have reached a confidential resolution of all claims.”

Chris Freeland, Internet Archive

As MBW previously noted, “78s” were the standard format for vinyl records until the 1950s, and according to George Blood, an audio engineer involved in the project, there are some 3 million of these recordings that could eventually make their way into the collection.

The project presents a problem for recording companies and music publishers, as much of the music remains under copyright and continues to be commercially exploited.

The record companies accused the Archive of operating an “illegal record store” that violated copyrights on “thousands of works” by artists including Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby, Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Miles Davis and Louis Armstrong, among others.

Specific recordings cited in the lawsuit included Crosby’s White Christmas, Benny Goodman’s Sing, Sing, Sing, Buddy Holly’s Peggy Sue, Chuck Berry’s Roll Over Beethoven, Sinatra’s I’ve Got the World on a String, Nat King Cole’s The Christmas Song and more.

The lawsuit listed 2,749 copyrighted tracks, which it describes as an “illustrative and non-exhaustive list of some of plaintiffs’ works infringed by defendants through the Great 78 Project.”

The Archive defended its actions under fair use doctrine, arguing the project aims to “ensure the survival of these cultural materials for future generations to study and enjoy.”

Judge Chesney had previously rejected the Archive’s argument that some copyright claims were time-barred, allowing the case to proceed toward trial before the settlement was reached.

Last year, the Internet Archive lost its appeal in a lawsuit against major book publishers — Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins Publishers, John Wiley & Sons  and Penguin Random House — that accused it of illegally scanning copyrighted works and providing access to them to the public online for free.

Music Business Worldwide

Robert Redford, Hollywood Star, Passes Away at 89

0

US acting legend Redford, known for roles in The Sting and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, has died at the age of 89.

In a statement, his publicist Cindi Berger, said: “Robert Redford passed away on September 16 at his home at Sundance in the mountains of Utah – the place he loved, surrounded by those he loved. He will be missed greatly. The family requests privacy.”

The Oscar-winning star of Out of Africa was also known for founding the Sundance Film Festival in Utah.

He won an Academy Award for best director in 1980 for Ordinary People. Redford announced he was retiring from acting in 2018, having said in 2016 that he was “tired of acting.”

Redford’s other roles included The Candidate, All the President’s Men and Indecent Proposal.

It was Butch Cassidy that made Redford an overnight star but he was never comfortable with his tag as a good-looking charmer.

Challenge from the Client

0



Client Challenge



JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

Please enable JavaScript to proceed.

A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.

Trump to Make Second State Visit to U.K.

0

new video loaded: Trump Gets a Second State Visit to the U.K.

By Mark Landler, Nikolay Nikolov, Jon Hazell, Christina Shaman and Stephanie Swart

President Trump will be in the U.K. this week in an unprecedented second state visit. Mark Landler, the London bureau chief of The New York Times, describes the efforts the British are making to stay on Trump’s good side, and what they hope to get in return.

Stellantis issues recall for more than 53,000 Alfa Romeo vehicles in the US

0


Stellantis recalls over 53,000 Alfa Romeo vehicles in the US

Malawi Presidential Elections: Candidates and Issues in Focus – Agriculture News

0

Malawians are voting to elect their next president amid a deepening economic crisis in one of Africa’s poorest and most climate-vulnerable countries.

The small Southeast African nation has been hit with double-digit inflation that has caused food prices to skyrocket for several months now. It came after intense drought events last year. Earlier, in 2023, Cyclone Freddy, which struck the region, hit Malawi the hardest, killing more than 1,000 people and devastating livelihoods.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

In Tuesday’s election, voters are also choosing parliamentarians and local councillors across 35 local governments.

Malawi is most known for its tourist hotspots, such as Lake Malawi, Africa’s third-largest freshwater lake, as well as nature and wildlife parks.

The country has a population of 21.6 million. Lilongwe is the capital city, and Blantyre is the commercial nerve centre.

Here’s what to know about the elections:

How does voting happen?

The elections began in the morning on Tuesday and will end by evening.

Some 7.2 million people are registered to vote across 35 local government authorities, according to the electoral commission.

To emerge as president, a candidate must gain more than 50 percent of the vote. If not, then a run-off must be held. Presidential results will be published by September 24.

A total of 299 constituency parliament members and 509 councillors will be elected. Parliamentary results will be published by September 30.

Who are the key contenders?

Seventeen presidential candidates are running for the post. However, the race is largely considered a two-horse race between incumbent President Lazarus Chakwera and former leader Peter Mutharika.

Malawi Congress Party supporters hold a poster showing President Lazarus Chakwera at a campaign rally in Blantyre, on September 7, 2025 [Thoko Chikondi/AP]

Lazarus Chakwera: The 70-year-old president and leader of the ruling Malawi Congress Party (MCP) is hoping to secure his second and — per the constitution —  final term.

The former preacher’s win in 2020 was historic, after a court ruled that there were irregularities in the 2019 election, and ordered a re-run. Chakwera’s win in that second vote marked the first time in African history that an opposition candidate won a re-run election.

However, Chakwera’s tenure has been marked by high levels of inflation and, more recently, fuel shortages. There have also been numerous allegations of corruption, particularly nepotism, against him. In 2021, the president made headlines when he appointed his daughter, Violet Chakwera Mwasinga, as a diplomat to Brussels.

In his campaigns, Chakwera has asked for more time to work on easing the country’s current economic stagnation. He and officials in his government have also blamed some of the hardships on last year’s drought, a cholera outbreak between 2022 and 2024, and the devastation of Cyclone Freddy in February 2023.

Supporters point out that Chakwera has already overseen major road construction work across Malawi and restarted train services after more than 30 years.

He previously ran in 2014, but was unsuccessful.

Malawi elections
Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) leader and presidential candidate Peter Mutharika speaks to supporters at a campaign rally in Zomba, Malawi, on September 10, 2025 [Thoko Chikondi/AP]

Peter Mutharika: The 85-year-old leader of the opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) is looking to make a comeback after his earlier second-term bid was defeated by Chakwera in 2020.

A former law professor, Mutharika has campaigned on the economic gains he said Malawi witnessed under him, arguing that things were better during his tenure than under the present leadership. He led Malawi from 2014 to 2020.

While he is credited with lowering inflation and kickstarting major infrastructure projects, Mutharika also faced corruption scandals in his time. In 2018, Malawians took to the streets to protest his alleged involvement in a bribery scandal that had seen a businessman pay a 200,000 kickback to his party. Mutharika was later cleared of wrongdoing.

Critics have speculated about Mutharika’s age, noting that he has not been particularly active during the campaign. Mutharika is the brother of former President Bingu wa Mutharika, who died in office in 2012.

Other notable presidential contenders include:

  • Joyce Banda – Malawi’s only female president from 2012 to 2014, from the People’s Party. She was formerly vice president under Bingu wa Mutharika.
  • Michael Usi – the former vice president who is from the Odya Zake Alibe Mlandu party.

What’s at stake in this election?

Struggling economy

Although Malawi exports tobacco, tea, and other agricultural products, the country is largely aid-dependent. It is also under pressure from accumulated external debt.

For Malawian voters, rising prices of food and everyday items are the most pressing issue on the ballot. Food costs have gone up by about 30 percent in the past year, but salaries have largely stayed the same. Meanwhile, the costs of fertiliser for the 80 percent of Malawians who survive on subsistence farming have risen.

Economists chalk up the stagnation crisis to a lack of foreign currency, which has limited crucial imports, including fertilisers and fuel.

Presently, the country is facing severe fuel shortages, with hundreds queuing up at fuel stations daily. Chakwera has blamed corrupt officials, who he says are deliberately sabotaging the fuel markets, for the problem.

In May, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) terminated a $175 million loan programme after it failed to give early results. Only $35 million had been disbursed. There will likely be negotiations for a new IMF programme after the elections, officials have said.

Earlier, in February, disgruntled citizens took to the streets Lilongwe and Blantyre in protest against the rising cost of living. Some voters, particularly the young people, feel that not much will change whether they vote or not.

While Mutharika has campaigned on his economic record while in office, Chakwera has pledged a cash transfer programme of 500,000 Malawi kwacha ($290) for newborns, which they can access at the age of 18.

Workers move bags of fertilizer donated to Malawi by Russian company Uralchem in Mkwinda, Lilongwe, Malawi March 6, 2023 REUTERS/Eldson Chagara
Workers move bags of fertiliser donated to Malawi by a Russian company [File: Eldson Chagara/Reuters]

Corruption

Corruption crises have riddled both Mutharika and Chakwera’s governments, something many Malawians say they are tired of.

While Chakwera has talked tough on fighting graft since becoming head of state in 2020, he has faced criticism for nepotism scandals and for handling corruption cases selectively.

Meanwhile, candidate Joyce Banda has also promised to fight corruption if elected. As president, Banda fired her entire cabinet in 2013, following news that some government officials were caught with large amounts of cash in their homes.

Drought and extreme weather

Malawi is one of the most climate-vulnerable countries, although it does not contribute significantly to emissions. With the majority of people relying on subsistence farming for food, extreme weather events often hit Malawi especially hard.

Climate activist Chikondi Chabvuta told Al Jazeera that governments in the past have not invested enough in building systems, such as food systems, that can absorb climate shocks. Women and girls, in particular she said, are often most affected by the double whammy of weather disasters and inflation that often follows.

“Creating a buffer for the people impacted should be a priority because science is telling us these events are going to get worse,” Chabvuta said. “Life for Malawians has to get better by policies that show seriousness,” in tackling environmental challenges, she added.

Millions of people were impacted for several months in 2024, after a severe regional drought destroyed harvests, driven by El Nino weather patterns.

According to the World Food Program, hundreds of thousands across the country were forced to rely on food assistance for survival as Malawi declared an emergency.

In February 2023, Cyclone Freddy, which was one of the deadliest storms to hit Africa in the last two decades, caused 1,216 fatalities. It also wiped out crops and caused similar food shortages.