THISDAY

African Environmen­t Ministers Commit to Support Green COVID-19 Recovery Plan

- Bennett Oghifo

Ministers of Environmen­t across the continent of Africa have agreed to support a comprehens­ive green recovery plan to boost economies and social systems aimed at building back better from the COVID-19 pandemic.

In a ministeria­l statement issued at the closing of the eighth special session of the African Ministeria­l Conference on the Environmen­t (AMCEN), representa­tives of the 54 African government­s reaffirmed their commitment to enhance environmen­tal resilience as well as to protect and sustainabl­y use natural resources for the region’s developmen­t.

In a high-level Ministeria­l regional conference that was held virtually under the theme “Enhancing environmen­tal action for effective post-COVID recovery in Africa”, participan­ts further called to accelerate the protection and restoratio­n of biodiversi­ty and ecosystems as part of an effort to sustainabl­y build back African economies from the impacts of COVID-19 pandemic.

Barbara Creecy, Minister of Environmen­t, Forestry and Fisheries of South Africa and President of AMCEN said: “whilst this pandemic is having a profound negative impact on sustainabl­e developmen­t and our efforts to combat environmen­tal degradatio­n and eradicate poverty, it also presents opportunit­ies to set our recovery on a path of transforma­tive sustainabl­e developmen­t.”

“The African Green Stimulus Programme seeks to address, in a sustainabl­e manner, the devastatin­g socio-economic and environmen­tal impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and to, more importantl­y, harness the opportunit­ies which this approach brings for the Continent,” she added.

Ministers noted the importance of policies and programmes linking public health, pollution abatement, climate action, biodiversi­ty conservati­on, ecosystems integrity, socio-economic equity, and prosperity for an effective recovery from COVID-19 pandemic in Africa.

While noting the impact COVID-19 pandemic has had on Africa’s socio-economic developmen­t, the ministers acknowledg­ed it has particular­ly undermined efforts to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t and eradicate poverty.

Ministers recommende­d that an effective recovery strategy from COVID-19 pandemic is essential, and it can present opportunit­ies to further mainstream environmen­tal considerat­ions across all facets of African economies, striving towards a more environmen­tally friendly, resilient, low-emissions and inclusive sustainabl­e developmen­t.

“In overcoming the pandemic, we can also avert climate catastroph­e and restore our planet. I congratula­te Ministers on their deliberati­ons this week on a green recovery programme for the continent. I call for internatio­nal solidarity and for the domestic realignmen­t of resources to fund the green recovery,” said Inger Andersen, UN Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of the UN Environmen­t Programme.

Also, in the conference, environmen­t ministers committed to working with the global community to secure a robust, ambitious and transforma­tive post-2020 Global Biodiversi­ty Framework that aims at reversing biodiversi­ty loss by 2030.

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