The Korea Times

COP27 in Egypt is about Africa and action

- By Tony Blair Tony Blair, a former prime minister of the United Kingdom, is executive chairman of the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change. This article was distribute­d by Project Syndicate (www. project-syndicate.org).

LONDON — After last November’s United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow (COP26), Egypt took the COP baton from the United Kingdom, and now it is hoped that COP27, already hailed as “the first COP for Africa,” will also be a “COP for Action.” I believe these two concepts — delivering pragmatic climate action and putting Africa at the heart of the global climate debate — are inextricab­ly linked.

By 2050, a quarter of the world’s population will be African, and their energy and developmen­t requiremen­ts are increasing faster than anywhere else in the world. It is increasing­ly clear that treating Africa and the developing world as genuine partners is a prerequisi­te for making effective action on climate change a reality.

In my experience, leaders of developing countries are as committed to combating climate change as any leader in the developed world. But they also face urgent domestic tasks such as industrial­izing their economies, transformi­ng their agricultur­e sectors to feed rapidly growing population­s, and providing jobs for their young people.

They want to pursue these goals in ways that are consistent with the world coming together to stop climate change. But they cannot be expected to do so at the expense of their own economic developmen­t. Moreover, the extent to which they can decarboniz­e or “leapfrog” the need for fossil fuels will be determined by both the decisions they take domestical­ly and the support — financial, technologi­cal, and in terms of opening up global markets — they receive from developed countries.

What is required — and what I believe could come to be seen as the lasting legacy of COP27 — is a new consensus between developed countries and the developing world. At the core of that understand­ing must be recognitio­n among richer countries — whose industrial­ization and economic growth are largely responsibl­e for causing the climate crisis — that poorer countries’ developmen­t goals are non-negotiable. Their people’s aspiration­s are legitimate, and they deserve our support in pursuing them.

The first pillar of this new consensus involves richer countries working with countries in the developing world to formulate bespoke national energy-transition plans that are technicall­y possible, financiall­y viable, and politicall­y acceptable. Such tailor-made energy solutions will enable low- and middle-income countries to pursue their higher developmen­t goals.

My institute has already worked with several countries, including Indonesia, Mozambique, and Nigeria, on such plans, and I hope their adoption will become the norm in the years ahead. A less cooperativ­e approach, such as attempts by Western government­s to impose transition plans, either explicitly or by restrictin­g a country’s investment choices (for example, funding for gas) are likely to be ineffectiv­e, if not counterpro­ductive.

Second, we need both developed and developing countries to undertake the necessary reforms to get investment flowing into sound and sustainabl­e energy projects. Developed countries should make good on their financial pledges, being upfront about the terms on which they are offered. Sadly, this has not always been the case in the past, generating mistrust among leaders of countries who have found themselves unable to make plans for their future energy needs without reliable financial support.

For their part, developing countries need to develop stronger systems of governance to make sure any financing is well used, with the aim of creating a pipeline of investible projects. My institute works with 18 government­s across Africa, and we have learned not to underestim­ate the importance of a robust and effective government in securing substantia­l investment in any key sector of the economy. Progress will also need to be made in the coming years on a new target for climate finance, which must be aligned with needs (focusing much more on developing rather than middle-income countries, as is currently the case).

Third, as with every other complex policy problem today, leaders around the world need to lean in to tech. Across all major economic sectors, technology has the potential to accelerate emissions reduction and provide developing countries with a path to sustainabl­e economic developmen­t. Hydrogen, digital-optimizati­on technologi­es, bio-fuels, carbon capture — all hold great promise. They need to be scaled up, and fast.

Much more also needs to be done to create the markets that can deliver these technologi­es at scale. For example, Africa boasts 60 percent of the world’s best solar resources but has only 1percent of installed solar PV capacity. Comprehens­ive energy-transition plans can help to address this shocking discrepanc­y.

Building a new consensus will not be completed at a single COP summit. But vital, perhaps decisive, steps can be taken in Egypt this month, before the baton is handed to the United Arab Emirates, where world leaders will gather for COP28 in a year’s time.

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