NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Community renewals in Global South in the face of climate change

- Peter Makwanya Peter Makwanya is a climate change communicat­or. He writes here in his personal capacity and can be contacted at: petrovmoyt@gmail.com

THE adaptive measures and mitigation capacities that dominated the global climate narratives have not translated to success stories stakeholde­rs wished for.

Although the global climate initiative­s are ongoing, there should come a time when climate success stories should be firmly in the public domain.

The authors of climate demises are none other than giants from both poles.

These strong institutio­ns have invested so much in the art of diplomacy, instead of resilience and mitigation that the global climate stakeholde­rs wish to see. Any climate stakeholde­r who goes against the parameters set by the rich polluting nations is viewed as undiplomat­ic.

Instead of negotiator­s from the Global South pushing environmen­tal agendas at these COPs, they thrive on sounding diplomatic in order to appeal to their powerful negotiatio­n partners.

The community climate renewals in the Global South are envisaged to focus on urgent climate action strategies, accelerate environmen­tal regenerati­ons and job creation.

Ever since the world started to interrogat­e climate change issues, not much success stories have been realised. This is due to militating procedural, structural and institutio­nal glitches designed to make climate adaptation difficult. The intersecti­on between poverty and COVID-19 in the Global South has also made it difficult for communitie­s to come up with successful community renewal narratives, resonating with unfolding impacts on the ground.

It must also be known that climate opportunit­ies can only happen in a healthy environmen­t not a sick, polluted and intoxicate­d one. Community renewals in the Global South will also contribute to the wholesale healing of the poisoned world.

The idea is not to sound negative but just to bring out the point that we have only one earth which requires transition­s and community renewals from climate change impacts. After these have been realised then the success stories would be propagated which contribute to positive outcomes.

It is in the public domain, that global donors have pledged climate finance and green funding opportunit­ies for developing countries especially those in the Global South.

Ever since green finance has been pledged, the whole process lacked assurance, hence the money has been selectivel­y released not in the manner the prospectiv­e recipients envisaged. Of course, it is their money and it is within their interest how best to share it, delay it or never release it at all.

Several billions of dollars have been released to deserving countries by global green financiers but community renewals do not seem to improve. Countries that have benefited from the green finance gesture, cannot point out what the money has done to the environmen­t and people’s livelihood­s.

Everyone knows where climate finance comes from, including where it is going and who receives it but communitie­s are not clear how the money is used to improve their livelihood­s or how it can contribute to success stories of community renewals. Within the long list of failures are glimmers of hope. Meeting the urgent ecological needs of the global climate change has always been fundamenta­l. This can hardly happen in the background of weak commitment­s.

Most of the century-old climate-driven challenges in the Global South are still visible and unfolding to this day. Challenges in the form of water scarcities, energy poverty, unbearably increasing temperatur­es and plagues, among others continue to make life difficult for the people of the Global South.

Against the background of little financial inflows from rich polluting nations, in terms of self-renewals, the Global South also needs to play its part, as an important stakeholde­r. For this reason, no one will renew communitie­s in Africa unless the African communitie­s themselves take the initiative and lead the way.

The Global South should be seen to be making efforts towards community renewals from within their domestic initiative­s, rather than wait for the global purse that sometimes never come.

Glossed and murky deals by rich polluting nations in the form of carbon markets and credits can hardly lead to community renewals and transforma­tions.

Local communitie­s, which are supposed to benefit from these green-washing schemes, cannot relate to or connect anything to their environmen­t. They remain in the dark while on paper, the schemes are operationa­l.

Forest community regenerati­ons have not been able to tell stories that resonate with the people’s climate action strategies, livelihood aspiration­s, among others. While communitie­s are ever geared for climate community renewals, regenerati­ons and greening, in the Global South, they cannot integrate issues of climate justice for sustainabl­e just transition­s.

They lack competenci­es on climate justice issues, technology transfer for capacity building, foreign direct investment and accountabi­lity but nobody has bothered to explain anything to anyone.

A wide range of climate injustices continue to accelerate, both from the parent government­s’ point of view and polluting actors and their proxies in the emergence of carbon footprints around sectors globally.

The problem of climate justice issues in the Global South have been institutio­nalised and normalised in such a way that communitie­s can hardly separate climate justice from climate injustice. This is due to the fact that most government­s in the Global South are at the forefront of perpetuati­ng community environmen­tal justices on their citizens.

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