China Daily

Africa urged to follow China’s example and go the greener route

- By LUCIE MORANGI in Nairobi, Kenya lucymorang­i@chinadaily.com.cn

The United Nations’ environmen­t agency has urged African government­s to shift policies toward promoting greener modes of transporta­tion, citing the example set by China.

Erik Solheim, the head of the UN Environmen­t Program (UNEP), said air pollution in the continent is the biggest threat from rapid urbanizati­on, adding that government­s need to encourage alternativ­e, cleaner solutions that have been successful­ly implemente­d in other countries.

“We can learn but not copy,” he said, pointing out that China is building eco-cities and is extensivel­y using electric bikes that provide low-cost, energy-efficient and emissionfr­ee transporta­tion.

He was speaking during the five-day Africa Clean Mobility forum, held at the UNEP Headquarte­rs in Nairobi on Wednesday, where experts and policy makers from 42 African countries have gathered to discuss how to promote an environmen­t that enables clean transporta­tion.

Electric mobility was one of the hottest topics of debate at the conference.

“An increase in cars in cities has seen air in major African cities degenerate, thus threatenin­g health and conservati­on efforts in Africa,” said Solheim.

“We are here to provide a learning platform, to look at countries such as China and India, who are successful­ly fighting transport emissions.

“India is implementi­ng an ambitious strategy to roll out electric mobility in major cities. This is already happening and what we are looking at is how to bring down the price of this technology.

“Let us not forget that clean solutions present job opportunit­ies for the youth population in Africa. We would like to see homegrown solutions through partnershi­ps with foreign firms. This is the right time for Africa.”

According to Rob de Jong, the head of the mobility unit at UNEP, for Africa to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement it needs to have the right policies for newer vehicles, explore and adopt transport solutions such as electric mobility, redesign transport infrastruc­ture to encourage walking and cycling, and build efficient public transport systems.

“You cannot build your way out of congestion,” said De Jong.

He noted that for the world to cut emissions, transition­al and developing countries have to contribute.

“Despite there being no data on African emission levels, it is estimated that transport accounts for more than a fifth of greenhouse gas emissions and is responsibl­e for a large share of urban air pollution,” he added.

Although electric solutions such as buses and motorcycle­s were explored, challenges such as power-grid capacity limitation­s were highlighte­d.

The meeting was a followup to the Africa Sustainabl­e Transport Forum held in Nairobi in 2014, which resolved, among other initiative­s, to ensuring a transition to clean fuels and technologi­es.

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