Blurred vision
It is said that the first casualty in times of war and conflict is truth. Media coverage often serves the interests of those behind the outlets. In Egypt, the unclear vision of those making economic plans adds to an already murky scene.
Many observers believe the economy has been used as a political tool since the revolution, either to raise public fears of from post-revolution tremors, or to flirt with people by announcing popular decisions.
To begin with, before the economic situation got bad, the media blew the threat of demonstrations by workers nationwide out of proportion. In attempts to dissuade the public from demonstrating, the media said there was a threat that the production wheel would be broken. In fact, workers demonstrated because they were demanding rights they had long been deprived.
Then in March, the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) sent shivers down Egyptians' spines when it announced pessimistic economic figures. The inaccuracy of the statements stirred many objections, pushing the SCAF to try and clarify later.

Hammitt also saw the potential to operate the plant's three dual-fuel (biogas or natural gas) boilers entirely on biogas. Initially, WRA focused on local food processing industries for codigestion feedstocks. “We worked with soybean oil refiners and