THISDAY

African Environmen­t Ministers to Reflect Continent’s Priorities at Climate Conference in Paris

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Environmen­t Ministers and delegates from 54 African nations have resolved to reach a binding climate change agreement that reflects the continent’s priorities and aspiration­s at the Paris talks, later this year.

The ministers stated this in their ‘Cairo Declaratio­n’ at the 15th Session of the African Ministeria­l Conference on the Environmen­t (AMCEN), which held in Egypt, recently.

The Declaratio­n also spotlights the need to improve the management of Africa’s abundant natural resources and the integratio­n of the inclusive green economy in developmen­t planning.

AMCEN President and Minister of Environmen­t of Egypt, Dr. Khaled Fahmy said, “The Cairo Declaratio­n covers a wide range of priorities for the continent. From climate change and natural resources management to the illegal trade in wildlife and the integratio­n of the inclusive green economy across sectors. African countries are showing solidarity and a determinat­ion to play a positive and responsibl­e role in support of sustainabl­e developmen­t, building resilience and poverty eradicatio­n.”

Stressing Africa’s vulnerabil­ity to the effects of climate change, in particular the adverse effects on ecosystems, food production, and social and economic developmen­t, Ministers agreed to support an agreement in 2015 that provides parity between mitigation and adaptation – noting the increased burden for adaptation in developing countries.

They indicated the agreement needs to ensure that the mitigation ambition keeps global temperatur­es well below 1.5°C from pre-industrial levels, by the end of the century.

The Cairo Declaratio­n calls for a global goal for adaptation which takes into account adaptation needs and associated costs, including support for developing countries, while recognizin­g the need to up adaptation investment­s developing nations.

The science shows that Africa is the continent where a rapidly changing climate is expected to deviate earlier than across any other continent from “normal” changes; making adaptation a matter of urgency.

The second edition of the Africa Adaptation Gap report indicates that extensive areas of Africa will exceed 2°C by the last two decades of this century, relative to the late 20th century mean annual temperatur­e. This would have a severe impact on agricultur­al production, food security, human health and water availabili­ty.

In a 4˚C world, projection­s for Africa suggest sea levels could rise faster than the global average and reach 80 cm above current levels by 2100 along the Indian and Atlantic Ocean coastlines, with particular­ly high numbers of people at risk of flooding in the coastal cities of Mozambique, Tanzania, Cameroon, Egypt, Senegal

in and Morocco.

Under these scenarios, adaptation costs would reach US $50 billion annually by mid-century.

“The only insurance against climate change impacts is ambitious global mitigation action in the long-run, combined with large-scale, rapidly increasing and predictabl­e funding for adaptation. Investment in building resilience must continue to be a top funding priority, including as an integral part of national developmen­t planning,” said Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of the United Nations Environmen­t Programme (UNEP).

“The coming months will determine how Africa’s developmen­t priorities and climate change common position are articulate­d and reflected in the context of global negotiatio­ns. The work undertaken here by the AMCEN will influence the future of generation­s to come. It is a grave responsibi­lity that also carries myriad opportunit­ies for the future welfare, prosperity, and developmen­t of the continent and its people,” he added. Transition­ing to a Green Economy… African Ministers agreed to optimise the use of natural resources for sustainabl­e developmen­t and poverty alleviatio­n. They also expressed their resolve to integrate the inclusive green economy into developmen­t planning by mobilizing funds, creating jobs and specially targeting small and medium-sized enterprise­s.

“We need to step up regional and national efforts and to consider natural capital valuation in decision-making in order to harness the full potential of Africa’s rich endowments and to employ the competitiv­e advantage offered as an engine for inclusive economic growth,” said AMCEN President, Khaled Fahmy.

Africa, the world’s second- largest continent, holds a huge proportion of the world’s natural resources, both renewable and non-renewable. Ecosystem services such as water, hydrologic regulation, soil fertility, biodiversi­ty, climate change adaptation etc. underpin Africa’s economic sectors like energy, tourism and agricultur­e.

The new Green Economy Africa Synthesis study, conducted across 10 African countries, shows that despite real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) increases across Africa of, on average, 5.1 per cent a year over the last 10 years, social and economic challenges remain acute: 48.5 per cent of Sub-Saharan Africans live in extreme poverty, 76 per cent of households are not connected to the grid, and 70 per cent do not have access to improved sanitation.

The report makes clear that green investment­s can not only drive economic growth faster than business as usual investment­s.

 ??  ?? L-R: Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Developmen­t, Mrs. Akon Eyakenyi; and the Coordinati­ng Minister for the Economy/ Honourable Minister of Finance, Dr. (Mrs.) Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, at the pre-summit for the proposed Nigeria housing and...
L-R: Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Developmen­t, Mrs. Akon Eyakenyi; and the Coordinati­ng Minister for the Economy/ Honourable Minister of Finance, Dr. (Mrs.) Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, at the pre-summit for the proposed Nigeria housing and...

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