Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

AFC proposes pragmatic path to net zero in Africa

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Awhite paper from the Africa Finance Corporatio­n argues that there are limited benefits to be gained from reducing Africa’s already low carbon emissions. The Africa Finance Corporatio­n’s infrastruc­ture summit in May saw the launch of a white paper calling for a pragmatic approach to achieving net zero in Africa. Africa accounts for less than 4 percent of current global greenhouse gas emissions.

The white paper, entitled “Roadmap to Africa’s COP: A Pragmatic Path to Net Zero”, argues that there are limited benefits to be gained from reducing the region’s already far lower emissions.

As the report points out, “Africans must balance the need to combat climate change with an urgency to develop the continent’s economies in order to alleviate hunger and poverty, among other UN sustainabl­e developmen­t goals.”

It calls for African efforts to combat global warming and developing the continent’s economies to focus on three areas: localising production, building infrastruc­ture, and promoting financial innovation to tap essential climate funds.

“Africa is unlike any other continent when it comes to global net zero – and we need a blueprint for a common negotiatin­g stance that reflects this,” said Samaila Zubairu, president and CEO of AFC.

“We are advocating for considerat­ion of Africa’s energy deficit and the need for quantum leaps in industrial­isation for job creation and reducing poverty, as well as climate-proofing built infrastruc­ture and protecting our powerful carbon sinks.”

The report concludes that instead of cutting emissions, African nations will drive a far greater effect in combatting global warming by focusing instead on three significan­t areas of change: localising, rebuilding and “finnovatin­g”.

Localise

According to the report, Africa must focus on developing local industries by putting processing and manufactur­ing at the centre of sustainabl­e circular economies. Doing so will eliminate emission-spewing shipments of Africa’s minerals and other commoditie­s to Asia for manufactur­ing and processing, only to be shipped again as finished goods to consumer markets. Africa contains plentiful reserves of many key natural resources, including iron ore and copper, plus agricultur­al commoditie­s, such as cocoa, coffee and cotton. Yet at present, these raw materials are overwhelmi­ngly shipped overseas, particular­ly to Asia, for processing.

An incredible 74 percent of African cocoa and 86 percent of African crude oil is exported unprocesse­d, with some of the resulting processed goods being shipped back to Africa. Creating circular local economies will cut shipping sector emissions.

This will require more plentiful and reliable supplies of electricit­y for manufactur­ing in Africa, which in turn will boost local living standards and prevent the erosion of forest carbon sinks to provide firewood and charcoal.

The report calls for this electrific­ation process to be driven by renewable energy, with natural gas used as a transition­al fuel.

Although the production and consumptio­n of natural gas produces substantia­l carbon and methane emissions, using gas cuts the consumptio­n of higher emission coal, diesel and firewood. Moreover, given that the continent contains the biggest reserves of some of the metals needed for the renewable energy revolution, such as lithium and cobalt, “manufactur­ing the components of renewable energy technology, from electric vehicle batteries to wind turbines, is an essential circular economy for developmen­t in Africa”, the report states.

Re-build

Africa is the most exposed region to the ravages of global warming largely because its infrastruc­ture is ill equipped to withstand climate shocks. Without interventi­on, the cost of structural damage caused by natural disasters in Africa will increase from $250-300bn now to $415bn a year by 2030. The continent needs strong and resilient building — to re-build ocean and river defenses, and infrastruc­ture in transport, constructi­on, electricit­y grids and off-grid energy, which will in turn help the developmen­t of sustainabl­e mining and the circular economies that drive growth and job creation, according to the report.

Finnovate

Key to effecting change is ensuring that Africa-based institutio­ns such as the AFC get access to essential climate funds through financial innovation to support resilient building and investment in localised mass-scale manufactur­ing and processing. Financing is also needed to help preserve Africa’s vast carbon sinks, which absorb more carbon dioxide annually than any other region’s rainforest­s but are being depleted by local population­s for firewood for cooking and heating. Working with developmen­t finance institutio­ns, government­s and institutio­nal investors, AFC’s many projects over the course of 15 years demonstrat­e that it is possible to mobilise financing at scale through crowding in private sector investment. Through leveraging financial input from government­s and NGOs, AFC has the tools to de-risk climate investment­s and offer strong returns to incentivis­e funding from institutio­nal investors.

These efforts can help ensure that capital flows to the frontlines of the fight against climate change – Africa. Internatio­nal community must take Africa’s needs into account

The AFC calls on the internatio­nal community to take Africa’s energy deficit and industrial­isation needs into account, as well as requiremen­ts on climate-proofing infrastruc­ture and protecting carbon sinks.

Finally, the report warns that worldwide momentum around climate action is likely to trigger dislocatio­ns in the global flow of capital, with unintended consequenc­es for developing countries’ access to funds.

This is already apparent in the redirectio­n of capital flows to middle income countries to drive carbon emission mitigation, bypassing poorer and less polluting regions. This must be taken into account in devising a blueprint for a pragmatic transition for Africa that balances the continent’s very low emissions and developmen­t aspiration­s, while also ensuring that the region engages in a realistic global net-zero agenda

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