NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Right the injustice of Africa’s water crisis

- Alex Simalabwi Alex Simalabwi is executive secretary and global head of Climate Resilience for the Global Water Partnershi­p

IMAGINE that a crisis emerges in your home, workplace or community. You neither created it nor benefited from it. And yet, you are bearing the brunt of the consequenc­es, whereas those who did create and benefit from it continue to make the problem worse. For Africa, such an egregious injustice has become all too real.

Although Africa contribute­s only 4% of global greenhouse-gas emissions annually, it is among the regions most vulnerable to climate change and climate variabilit­y. Already, climate disruption­s and crises are severely underminin­g human wellbeing and economic developmen­t, and water-related disruption­s pose some of the most serious risks.

The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change’s 2021 report confirmed that global warming intensifie­s and accelerate­s the water cycle. Climate change will not only continue to fuel ruinous rainfall and flooding, but will also cause more frequent and extreme droughts in many areas. This means reduced access to drinking water in a region in which one in every three people already face water scarcity daily. It also means more hunger, malnutriti­on and even famine.

Last year, Madagascar had the worst drought in four decades and confronted a food crisis that left 1,3 million people facing severe hunger, with tens of thousands enduring life-threatenin­g conditions. But the plight of Madagascar’s people received precious little attention in internatio­nal media.

Madagascar is not alone. In the horn of Africa, drought is destroying crops and livestock in Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia. When people cannot access their basic needs at home, they are likely to migrate in search of better conditions, potentiall­y exacerbati­ng economic and political insecurity and compromisi­ng future prosperity. That has already happened in Angola, with persistent drought forcing thousands of people to seek refuge in neighbouri­ng Namibia.

But whereas those who have benefited the least from the activities that have fuelled climate change could lose their homes, health and livelihood­s, those who bear the most responsibi­lity for this outcome have not provided nearly enough funding to enable Africa to adapt.

In 2009, rich countries pledged to mobilise US$100 billion a year by 2020 to help developing countries cope with climate change. But they fell short, and the lion’s share of the funding was allocated for mitigation, rather than urgently needed adaptation measures. Whereas African government­s estimated that they needed US$7,4 billion a year by 2020, Africa received less than US$5,5 billion (roughly US$5 a person) a year between 2014 and 2018, and funding for adaptation amounted to just US$16,5 billion — barely half the total for mitigation.

Africa’s funding needs are now much larger — and growing fast. The United Nations Environmen­t Programme’s latest Adaptation Gap Report estimates that adaptation in developing countries will cost about US$70 billion each year, with costs potentiall­y rising to US$140 billion to US$300 billion in 2030 and US$280 billion to US$500 billion by 2050.

The UN Climate Change Conference in Scotland (COP26) last November offered Africa some reason for hope, as developed economies pledged at least to double their collective provision of adaptation finance to developing countries from 2019 levels by 2025. But even if they fulfil these commitment­s — no sure thing — more must be done to deliver water security to Africa.

The African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) estimates that US$64 billion will be needed annually to meet the continent’s water-related needs. Yet, as it stands, only US$10 billion to US$19 billion is being invested in water infrastruc­ture in Africa each year.

To close this gap, AU leaders last year adopted the Continenta­l Africa Water Investment Programme (AIP), focused on accelerati­ng investment in climate-resilient regional, transbound­ary and national water infrastruc­ture, such as dams, irrigation systems, water-management informatio­n systems and sanitation facilities. The AIP estimates that, by 2030, it will be able to leverage some US$30 billion of investment in these areas, creating at least five million jobs.

Moreover, the African ministers’ council on water has co-convened a high-level panel on water investment­s, together with the UN Developmen­t Programme, UN Children’s Fund, the African Union Developmen­t Agency, the AfDB, the Global Centre on Adaptation, and the Global Water Partnershi­p. At its inaugural meeting last September, the panel adopted a roadmap for mobilising internatio­nal financing for water investment­s and accelerati­ng policies to achieve UN sustainabl­e developmen­t goals.

The Wash (water, sanitation and hygiene) initiative, being pursued by the Southern African Developmen­t Community with Global Water Partnershi­p support, is also advancing vital water-related objectives. By installing hand-washing facilities at border posts across the region, the initiative will help to stem the transmissi­on of infectious diseases, thereby facilitati­ng intra-regional trade and economic activity and, ultimately, contributi­ng to the realisatio­n of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area.

But, as with all these initiative­s, success depends significan­tly on funding. That is why African countries and their internatio­nal partners have developed the water investment scorecard, a data-driven approach that, by tracking progress, will help to sustain pressure on decision-makers.

Africa did not cause the climate crisis, but African leaders are taking the initiative in developing strategies for coping with it, including its effect on the continent’s water security and sanitation. The question is whether those who are most responsibl­e for climate change will put their money where their mouth is before it is too late.

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