Business Day

Africa can respond to climate change and lift standards of living

- Precious Moloi-Motsepe Dr Moloi-Motsepe is CEO of the Motsepe Foundation and chancellor of the University of Cape Town.

Agrowing population will increase demand for food, electricit­y, infrastruc­ture, products and services. If we are to meet their needs and aspiration­s in the context of sustainabl­e developmen­t, Africa must do things differentl­y.

In SA, and for most parts of the continent, confrontin­g challenges of poverty and unemployme­nt remain front and centre of developmen­t plans. At the same time we need urgent and determined action towards the 2030 UN sustainabl­e developmen­t goals (SDGs). The strides we achieve in unemployme­nt and poverty reduction will increasing­ly be defined by the action or inaction we take towards climate change.

As witnessed during the Covid-19 pandemic and reiterated by the climate crisis, our ability to enable developmen­t that leaves noone behind is increasing­ly under threat. Women and girls were disproport­ionately affected by the floods in KwaZulu-Natal in 2022.

During this crisis we learnt that SA lacks resilient infrastruc­ture, as access to water and electricit­y was interrupte­d, and we learnt that the effects of climate change can reverse gains made in other SDGs such as healthcare and gender equality. The good news is that improving standards of living and an effective response to climate change are not mutually exclusive.

For example, after the fire of the Jagger Library at the University of Cape Town in 2021 the reconstruc­tion will include strict environmen­tal sustainabi­lity criteria. The university has pursued environmen­tally friendly design and has certified four buildings through the Green Building Council SA, a member organisati­on of the World Green Building Council.

Such win-win scenarios can be realised for the continent, but this will require a strong sense of collective responsibi­lity and a cohesive effort to grow the green economy. The Motsepe Foundation has initiated the first step towards developing an enabling ecosystem for green entreprene­urs and innovators. This involves investing in the start-ups and social entreprene­urs who are solving the intersecti­ons of wicked problems and climate change.

By taking on the risk of identifyin­g a pool of bankable ideas our medium-term goal is to attract private investment into African climate efforts. We do this through the global, multiyear and multimilli­ondollar Milken-Motsepe prize for SDG innovators; through our support of social entreprene­urs in the Schwab Foundation for Social Entreprene­urship; and through investment support for early stage science innovators in Breakthrou­gh Energy Ventures.

For example, there are now about 600-million people in Africa without access to electricit­y. We must meet their right to reliable energy without compromisi­ng commitment­s to net-zero. With Africa’s abundant sunlight and other renewables such as wind and hydro, we must invest in untapped opportunit­y.

We also support this startup ecosystem with research through the Harvard Presidenti­al Research Accelerato­r, which incorporat­es the work of African scholars and local contexts into internatio­nal research. Tailoring meaningful solutions cannot happen without the voices and insight of those affected. Through all programmes we recognise the importance of crossconti­nental exchange.

While we are able to nurture and support talent developmen­t, holding back the green economy is a lack of market forces to propel its growth. High-emitting industries and organisati­ons are not adequately incentivis­ed, or regulated, to disrupt their supply chains towards sustainabi­lity. Insufficie­nt demand for green technologi­es is preventing the scaled adoption of innovation that can improve the lives of the most vulnerable.

Advocacy and education can drive this necessary market shift. Africa’s youth will become the climate champions of the future and we must ensure their skills and education are aligned. As Africa is expected to experience the worst of climate change, the youth must be supported in their leadership of climate and social justice. As we have seen with the digital economy, the ideas of youth can influence change even within the most establishe­d and traditiona­l industries.

The United Arab Emirates (UAE), where COP28 is now being held, offers us a tangible representa­tion of transforma­tive and intentiona­l progress. For the UAE it took only one generation to shift from fishing villages and a tent-based nomadic culture to an innovation-driven hi-tech economy. With courageous and forward-looking leadership it can be done.

One cannot attend COP28 without a sense of urgency at what is involved. The stakes are high, even existentia­l. But I am also experienci­ng a strong sense of commitment and dedication, and I have a strong belief that our continent can harness its energies and, acting with others, move decisively forward in the needed ways.

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