Texarkana Gazette

IMF and World Bank are urged to boost funding for African nations

- TAIWO ADEBAYO

ABUJA, Nigeria — Many poor countries in Africa face the harshest effects of climate change: severe droughts, vicious heat and dry land, but also unpredicta­ble rain and devastatin­g flooding. The shocks worsen conflict and upend livelihood­s because many people are farmers — work that is increasing­ly vulnerable in a warming world.

Climate challenges are at the root of vulnerabil­ities faced by conflict-ridden countries in Africa’s Sahel region, such as Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Niger and northern Nigeria, experts say. Adapting to these challenges could cost up to $50 billion per year, according to the Global Commission on Adaptation, while the Internatio­nal Energy Agency estimates the clean energy transition could cost as much as $190 billion a year — overwhelmi­ng costs for Africa.

Countries have limited space in their budgets, and borrowing more to fund climate goals will worsen their considerab­le debt burdens, argue African leaders, who are seeking a rapid boost in financing.

Some leaders suggested that this week’s meetings of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the World Bank in Marrakech, Morocco, would be “a good place to start” a conversati­on about Africa’s financial challenges and its ability to handle climate shocks.

It comes amid criticism that the lending institutio­ns are not taking climate change and the vulnerabil­ities of poor countries enough into account in their funding decisions.

The global financial system “is now outdated, dysfunctio­nal and unjust,” said a New York Times opinion column by Kenyan President William Ruto, African Developmen­t Bank President Akinwumi Adesina, African Union Commission chairman Moussa Faki and Patrick Verkooijen, chief executive of the Global Commission on Adaptation.

It’s outdated because internatio­nal financial institutio­ns “are too small and limited to fulfill their mandate. Dysfunctio­nal because the system as a whole is too slow to respond to new challenges, such as climate change. And unjust because it discrimina­tes against poor countries,” the leaders wrote.

In recent years, climate funding to Africa has increased, with recognitio­n that the continent is least responsibl­e for emissions but most at risk from climate change because of a lack of financing and ability to cope. Major developmen­t banks have increasing­ly recognized climate change as an economic threat.

During a panel in Marrakech this week, IMF economist Daniel Lee said the organizati­on is “mainstream­ing climate change in policy advice, capacity developmen­t and lending.” He did not detail the size or breakdown of funding.

Lee pointed to an IMF program that launched last year to help poor countries address problems like climate change. Only one African country — Rwanda — has gotten financing from the program: $319 million over three years.

Like African leaders, experts say climate financing to the continent has been insufficie­nt and particular­ly difficult to get for countries in the Sahel that lack stable and recognized government­s, with many of them led by military juntas.

“The reality has fallen short of expectatio­ns,” said Carlos Lopes, a professor at the Mandela School of Public Governance of the University of Cape Town, South Africa. “A significan­t portion of funding goes toward mitigation efforts, while adaptation, a top priority for the continent, receives less attention and support.”

In Niger, thousands of hectares of arable land is being lost to soil erosion and dry conditions. It’s led farmers and livestock herders to battle for resources and reduces economic opportunit­ies, helping armed groups recruit, said Idayat Hassan, senior Africa program fellow at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

 ?? ?? Workers remove weeds July 14 from a rice farm outside Kano, Nigeria. (AP photo/sunday Alamba)
Workers remove weeds July 14 from a rice farm outside Kano, Nigeria. (AP photo/sunday Alamba)

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