Mmegi

Five climate change messages from Africa for COP26

It is vital for African nations to pressure heavy emitters while lobbying for assistance from wealthy nations in mitigating the effects of climate change, writes

- NICHOLAS WESTCOTT* (Daily Maverick) *Westcott is a Research Associate at the Centre for Internatio­nal Studies and Diplomacy, SOAS, University of London

The outcome of the global climate change conference, COP26, and the world’s willingnes­s to take the tough decisions necessary to contain global warming, will have bigger consequenc­es for Africa than for most other continents. It is in Africa that the impact is already most destabilis­ing. And yet the continent’s 54 countries will struggle to make themselves heard. The critical negotiatio­ns will, as usual, be between the big economies; the United States (US), European Union, China and India. A recent conference jointly hosted by the Royal African Society, Internatio­nal Crisis

Group and Africa Confidenti­al on Climate, Conflict and Demography in Africa sought to give African countries a louder voice. It identified five key messages for African government­s, some for them to take to COP26, others for them to take home and act on themselves. Each needs attention if African government­s are to be able to mitigate, adapt to and manage climate change in the coming critical decade.

Measure change

African countries need to measure the scale of environmen­tal change better, to understand what is happening. The continent is already on the front line of the impact of climate change, despite having contribute­d almost nothing to the problem. Increasing­ly erratic patterns of rainfall have caused both droughts and floods across Southern Africa, devastatin­g tropical storms including Cyclone Idai hit Mozambique in 2019, while locust swarms caused desperate food shortages in the Horn of Africa. Combined with rapid population growth in many African countries, pressure on both natural and human resources has steadily increased. Shortages of farmable land, intensifyi­ng urbanisati­on and growing competitio­n between farmer and herder communitie­s all put strain on traditiona­l mechanisms for managing local conflicts. These strains need to be measured, so African communitie­s can prepare better to manage the changes. Countries with existing expertise must help.

Put pressure on emitters

African government­s’ top priority at COP26 must be to pressure the big emitters of carbon to take faster action to slow and stop climate change. The US, Europe, China and India need to speed up their transition out of fossil fuels. If Africans focus simply on getting more money, they will still have to pay for climate change in terms of the consequenc­es. The stresses that climate change brings can very quickly worsen existing social, economic and political tensions and turn them into violent conflict. There is evidence that this is already happening around Lake Chad, in the Sahel and in the Horn of Africa.

Money matters

Of the $100-billion per year pledge, confirmed in Paris, only a fraction has been delivered. Few African government­s have the financial or administra­tive resources to undertake the scale of mitigation and adaptation action necessary to manage the pressures created by climate change. This lack of resources and capacity also explains why Africa attracts a disproport­ionately small percentage of available climate finance, only around three percent. With too few credible or eligible projects to attract investors, they tend to put the money elsewhere. So multilater­al agencies and foreign government­s must help too.

Coordinate efforts

African government­s themselves must take a whole-of-government approach to tackling climate change. Too many leave it to the environmen­t ministry and fail to mobilise all department­s — finance, defence, transport, energy, industry — to take the necessary actions. A lack of resources does not absolve them from policy incoherenc­e. It is domestic political pressure on national government­s more than internatio­nal obligation­s or summits that will decide how far countries are willing to go to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Public pressure on climate issues themselves is often weak in Africa, but the practical consequenc­es — the increased conflict, the political discontent — speak louder than words. Government­s would be wise to listen and start making changes.

Target investment

The money itself needs to be invested in the right things: a fair energy transition, education to develop the skills needed for climate response, and action to sustain biodiversi­ty, forests and the natural environmen­t by making it economical­ly viable for the people who live there.

African countries certainly need to invest wherever they can in renewable energy. But that alone will not solve the “energy starvation” that is inhibiting developmen­t and worsening poverty and conflict on the continent, as Nigerian Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo argued at our conference. Developed countries, including China, can better afford to transition more swiftly to cleaner power and need to support Africa’s own efforts to do the same.

What happens in Africa rightly concerns the whole world. The conference in Glasgow will provide an invaluable platform for African countries. What they say as equal members of the global community should be listened to. Real action is more urgent for African countries than those that can better cope with the environmen­tal stresses and political strains that climate change causes. If people can no longer find a living in their own countries, they will have little choice but to move elsewhere or be pushed into conflict that will risk spreading to neighbouri­ng regions. So it is in everyone’s interest to support African countries in addressing their climate challenges.

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