WATCH: 15% of African GDP lost due to climate change

Members of the Turkana community unblocking an irrigation canal to provide water to their sorghum crops in an arid dry area in Nanyee, near Lodwar, Turkana County, Kenya. Picture: Luis Tato/AFP

Members of the Turkana community unblocking an irrigation canal to provide water to their sorghum crops in an arid dry area in Nanyee, near Lodwar, Turkana County, Kenya. Picture: Luis Tato/AFP

Published Sep 15, 2022

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Africa has steadily been losing from 5-15% of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita growth due to the impacts of climate change but still requires around $1.6 trillion between 2022 and 2030 to meet its nationally determined contributions, says African Development Bank Group Acting Chief Economist and Vice President Kevin Urama.

Speaking at a panel discussion titled “African Countries Ownership in Determining Climate Agenda,” on the sidelines of the Egypt International Cooperation Forum in Cairo on Wednesday, Urama urged developed nations to bridge the “climate financing gap”.

Several senior officials represented the bank at the event, notably its vice president for power, energy, climate and green growth, Dr Kevin Kariuki, and its vice president for the private sector, infrastructure and industrialisation, Mr Solomon Quaynor.

“Collectively, African countries received only $18.3 billion in climate finance between 2016 and 2019,” Urama said. “This results in a climate finance gap of up to $1288.2 billion annually from 2020 to 2030.”

Climate change severely affects Africa, while the continent contributes to only 3% of global emissions.

“The global community must meet its $100 billion commitment to help the developing countries and African economies to mitigate the impacts of climate change and to adapt to it,” Urama said.

He said that the best way to cope with the negative impacts of a changing climate is by investing in climate adaptation in the context of sustainable development, adding that gas must remain included in the continent’s plan for the gradual transition to clean energy.

Urama highlighted that since the 1850s, countries have managed to transition away from coal, and used gas as a transition to cleaner energy. He also affirmed that Africa had great potential in terms of green investment opportunities that the private sector, including banks, could tap into.

Egyptian Environment Minister Yasmine Fouad highlighted Egypt’s National Strategy for Alignment for both climate mitigation and adaptation which is based on five key pillars.

Fouad explained that “the first pillar focuses on how we can adopt a low greenhouse path, which centres on the sectors around renewable transport, gas, industry and waste. The second one relates to adaptation and how best to make the communities more resilient. The third and fourth ones are focused on how to protect coastal zones and have more accessibility and availability of water. The last one is about the need for developing more smart and integrated concoctions and that's the stereotype of a strategy on climate”.

She added that in order to fight climate change, we cannot rely on the government alone, nor the private sector alone but on an integration between the government, civil society and the private sector.

Ghada Wally, Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and Director-General of the United Nations Office in Vienna said that “women and young people, are among Africa’s best assets and stressed the importance of exploring avenues to tap into this significant asset for the sake of the continent’s sustainable development.”

The African Development Bank explains that Nationally Determined Contributions or “NDCs” are submitted by countries under the Paris Agreement of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

They represent climate action pledges that aim to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees C, to 1.5 degrees C, over pre-industrial levels.

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