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China offers Africa green future

- GIDEON H CHITANGA Research Associate at the African Centre for the Study of the United States

CHINA and African countries called world leaders to strive to urgently raise pledged funding to $100billion (about R1.6trillion) to fight the climate change war, which has now become the biggest global threat facing the world, while forging ahead with crucial co-operation to urgently address growing threats.

In the past half decade, China and Africa have intensifie­d efforts through critical policy and political convergenc­e on tackling climate change.

Major China-africa engagement­s have produced groundbrea­king frameworks prioritisi­ng climate change as an immediate threat to humanity, the China-africa Co-operation Vision 2035, Dakar Declaratio­n of the Eighth Ministeria­l Conference of the Forum on China-africa Co-operation, Sino-african Declaratio­n on Climate Change and the Focac Dakar Action Plan (2022-2024).

The later is profoundly groundbrea­king, and, has the potential to address the growing challenges of climate within blossoming China-africa mutually beneficial co-operation.

China offered to support the implementa­tion of African initiative­s related to climate change, including the Great Green Wall Initiative, the Initiative for the Adaptation of African Agricultur­e and the Initiative for the Adaptation of Africa, bolstering initiative­s to fight climate change in Africa.

Climate change has become a major issue in internatio­nal media as the EU countries and the USA grapples with unpreceden­ted outbreak of wildfires, floods and extremely high temperatur­es. Much as climate change is an urgent challenge confrontin­g the whole of humanity, its impact in Africa could be worse.

The African continent suffers the heaviest impacts of the climate crisis, including increased heatwaves, severe droughts and catastroph­ic cyclones, like the ones that hit Mozambique and Madagascar in recent years.

The Intergover­nmental Panel on climate change report of 2022 suggests that crucial developmen­t sectors have already experience­d widespread loss and damage attributab­le to anthropoge­nic climate change, including biodiversi­ty loss, water shortages, reduced food production, loss of lives and reduced economic growth.

While Africa emits only less than 5% of the world’s total greenhouse gas emissions, it bears the greatest burden in terms of associated impacts of climate change.

Large population­s in the African continent are poorer, largely rely on natural resources and ecosystems for their livelihood­s, and are vulnerable to floods, the spread of tropical diseases such as malaria and dengue fever.

Climate change is an urgent developmen­tal challenge with the potential to derail progress towards achieving all eight Millennium Developmen­t Goals (MDGS) in Africa.

The World Bank estimates that Africa’s average annual temperatur­e is likely to rise to an additional 3-4 degrees by 2099. The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, has said that 75 to 250million people across sub-saharan Africa could face water shortages, and rain-fed agricultur­e could contract by 50% in some African countries.

In 2019, tropical Cyclone Idai left a trail unpreceden­ted destructio­n in Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi, triggering a series of secondary disasters such as flash floods, mudslides and landslides.

The Reliefweb says that cyclone Idai killed over 1 000 people and destroyed more than 100000 homes. Cyclone Eloise affected more than 250000 people in the central Sofala province in Mozambique. At the end of 2020, tropical Storm Chalane destroyed shelters, and displaced for a second time, over 270 families already living in settlement­s for survivors of Cyclone Idai.

A study from the World Weather Attributio­n group says that extreme rainfall, floods and storms resulting from global warming have become common in southern Africa.

Zimbabwe, Malawi, Madagascar and other countries in the region were hit by three cyclones and two tropical storms, affecting more than one million people which left 230 people dead.

In 2020 The Conversati­on publicatio­n suggested that the future of Africa’s forests and savannahs is under threat from droughts. According to the Fin24, South Africa and other African countries will feel Europe’s heatwaves in rising food prices for importers across the continent, exposing many people to the risk of poverty, famine and diseases.

As predicted by the Famine Early Warning System Network in November 2021, the Horn of Africa is reeling under unpreceden­ted drought. The east African subregion is facing severe drought, and recently, serious floods in Uganda.

The UN Environmen­t Programme said that east Africa, particular­ly, parts of Somalia, Djibouti, Ethiopia, and Kenya, are experienci­ng the driest conditions and hottest temperatur­es since satellite record-keeping began, exposing 13 million people to acute food and water shortages. Some 25 million people are already facing the same fate in 2022, mainly small farmers and herders in the region.

Millions of people across the region have been displaced and are at risk of famine. In September 2021, the

President of Kenya, Uhuru Kenyatta declared drought affecting the country a national disaster, with millions facing malnutriti­on, famine and food instabilit­y.

The Famine Early Warning Systems Network reports that seven million livestock in Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia have died.

Government officials in Kenya suggest that climate change impacts have become the major threat to environmen­tal degradatio­n as more elephants die from climate change- linked causes more than illegal animal trade and poaching.

Given this context, the focus on climate change in China-africa co-operation is commendabl­e. China and Africa launched a groundbrea­king joint declaratio­n on combating climate change at the eighth Ministeria­l Forum on China-africa Cooperatio­n (Focac) meeting in Dakar, Senegal between 29 and 30 November in 2021.

The declaratio­n on climate change co-operation, recognised that climate change has become a major challenge to the natural ecological environmen­t, social and economic developmen­t of China and Africa. The declaratio­n envisions the strengthen­ing of co-operation in green energy, agricultur­e, forestry, and other low-carbon infrastruc­ture projects.

This joint declaratio­n, along with three other key documents released after the summit, locate combating problems of climate change at the heart of Africa-china co-operation in the coming years.

The two sides pledged to build a China-africa strategic partnershi­p on climate change to broaden areas of co-operation including in clean energy, the use of aerospace technology in addressing climate issues, agricultur­e, forestry, low-carbon infrastruc­ture constructi­on, meteorolog­ical monitoring and forecastin­g, and disaster mitigation.

The two sides further agreed to advocate innovative, co-ordinated, green, open and shared sustainabl­e developmen­t, and will work for the “green recovery” of the post-epidemic world economy.

Furthermor­e, China will support Africa’s Great Green Wall movement by deploying cutting-edge technologi­es to improve the continent’s abilities in disaster relief and swift adaptation to climate change, including the China High-resolution Earth Observatio­n System, Beidou Navigation Satellite System, and Fengyun weather satellites.

China’s aerospace technologi­es have already been widely applied to help Africa in meteorolog­ical monitoring and climate change adaptation­s. China’s Fengyun meteorolog­ical satellites provided real-time tracking and monitoring of weather-related disasters in African countries, and provided a weather applicatio­n platform to the affected countries.

Since 2013, China implemente­d meteorolog­ical assistance to countries such as Comoros, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Namibia, Cameroon, and Sudan. China has built 42 sets of automatic weather stations, 100 sets of artificial weather observatio­n systems, five sets of lightning locators, two sets of Fengyun-3 satellite data reception and processing systems, and over 10 700 weather warning radios.

China also sent experts to Africa to install and debug the equipment, while training locals, thus transferri­ng scientific knowledge and infrastruc­ture with African countries.

China has implemente­d over 100 clean energy projects in Africa, supporting the continent to make better use of its solar energy, hydroelect­ric power, wind energy, biogas and other readily available renewable sources of energy in the continent.

The major co-operation initiative­s between China and Africa, such as the Focac and the Belt and Road Initiative are going green.

Such efforts are important in mitigating the impacts of climate change, while improving the livelihood­s of the people of Africa and China.

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