Toute l'actu sur la protection de l'environnement

Category: Energie renouvelable

Total 17 Posts

The 2023 report on the development goals (SDGs) in Africa notes that the continent is lagging behind in progress towards the targets of SDG7. Namely, to ensure access for all to reliable, sustainable and modern energy services at an affordable cost by 2030. In 2018, only 20% of the electricity produced in Africa came from renewable sources.

Africa is lagging behind in progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), defined and adopted by the Member States of the United Nations (UN), to improve living conditions around the world. In terms of clean and affordable energy (SDG 7), the 2023 Africa SDG Assessment Report notes that electrification rates have increased, but the use of clean cooking fuels and technologies remains limited. In addition, the transition from fossil fuels to renewable energies is slow.
Despite its rich potential for renewable energies, particularly solar thermal and photovoltaic energy, geothermal energy and hydraulic resources, Africa’s electricity supply remains precarious and uneven. According to the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), in 2018, less than half the population had access to electricity. Of the electricity produced in Africa that year, only 20% came from renewable sources.
Irena estimates that between 2000 and 2020, 2.8 billion dollars were invested in renewable energies worldwide. Only 2% of this investment was made in Africa, and less than 3% of the world’s jobs in this type of energy system are on the continent.
Increasing investment in renewable energies
To make up for Africa’s lag on MDG7, the report calls for increased funding for infrastructure and technologies to boost sustainable energy production in Africa.
Entitled « Accelerating recovery from the coronavirus pandemic (Covid-19) and the full implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the African Union’s Agenda 2063 at all levels », The 2023 Report on Sustainable Development in Africa was published on the sidelines of the 78th United Nations General Assembly by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the African Union Commission (AUC), the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) and the African Development Bank (AfDB).
At the World Summit on Climate Ambition, held on 20 September 2023 in New York in the United States of America, UN Secretary-General António Guterres also called for the acceleration of the ecological transition in Africa. In his appeal, supported by Greenpeace, Guterres also called on nations to make ambitious commitments to phase out fossil fuels. According to IRENA, nearly 70% of Africa’s total electricity production currently comes from coal, natural gas and oil.
Fanta Mabo

C’est la plus grande mobilisation de ces 10 dernières années. Des centaines de militants climatiques, déployés et harangués par Greenpeace à travers plus de 550 manifestations menées dans 60 pays dont le Cameroun, et la République Démocratique du Congo. Les militants de Greenpeace expriment ainsi leur soutien à l’appel lancé par le Secrétaire des Nations Unies. Les 20 septembre dernier lors des travaux de 78eme Assemblée générale des Nations Unies, Antonio Guterres a exhorté les chefs d’Etats à la prise d’engagements ambitieux, pour l’élimination progressive des combustibles fossiles, notamment le pétrole et charbon.
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Dans cette nouvelle production d’Environnementales, le point sur la mobilisation contre la pollution plastique et les énergies fossiles, organisée le 15 septembre dernier à Yaoundé par les militants de Greenpeace Afrique. Egalement dans cette édition, les explications d’Oulie Keita. Au lendemain de sa participation au premier Sommet africain sur le climat, achevé le 6 septembre dernier à Nairobi au Kenya, la directrice exécutive de Greenpeace Afrique pointe du doigt la responsabilité des pays industrialisés dans le dérèglement climatique.
Mesdames et messieurs, chers auditeurs, chers internautes, bienvenu dans environnementales.


Greenpeace exige la transition vers les énergies renouvelables

C’est la plus grande mobilisation de ces 10 dernières années. Des centaines de militants climatiques, déployés et harangués par Greenpeace à travers plus de 550 manifestations menées dans 60 pays dont le Cameroun, et la République Démocratique du Congo. Les militants de Greenpeace expriment ainsi leur soutien à l’appel lancé par le Secrétaire des Nations Unies. Les 20 septembre dernier lors des travaux de 78eme Assemblée générale des Nations Unies, Antonio Guterres a exhorté les chefs d’Etats à la prise d’engagements ambitieux, pour l’élimination progressive des combustibles fossiles, notamment le pétrole et charbon.

L’Assemblée générale constitutive de la Kikot Hydro Power Company (KHPC) a lieu ce 25 septembre 2023 à Yaoundé. Constituée par l’État du Cameroun et la société publique française Électricité de France (EDF), la KHPC a pour mission, la construction et l’exploitation d’un projet hydroélectrique de 550 Kilowatts (le plus puissant du Cameroun), à Kikot, localité située dans la région du Littoral.

Kikot Hydro Power Company (KHPC), est une sorte de joint-venture. Une Coentreprise, dont les actions sont détenues à la fois par le gouvernement camerounais à travers son ministère de l’économie, et celui de France, à travers l’entreprise publique française, Électricité de France.

Ces deux entités se mettent ensemble dans le cadre d’une entreprise commune. La KHPC voit le jour, quatre ans, après la signature du protocole d’accord y relatif. Elle a pour objectifs principaux, la construction et l’exploitation du projet hydroélectrique de Kikot, prévu sur le fleuve Sanaga, dans le département de la Sanaga-Maritime, région du Littoral.

Le projet énergétique situé à 60 kilomètres de Yaoundé aura une capacité maximale de production estimée à 550 kilowatts d’électricité, soit la plus puissante du Cameroun. Le coût du projet s’élève à environ 650 milliards de FCFA. La mobilisation de ce financement est annoncée pour l’année prochaine. Le démarrage des travaux sur le terrain est prévu pour 2025,  alors que la mise en service du barrage interviendra en 2030.

Le modèle de gestion du projet hydroélectrique de Kikot s’inscrit dans le domaine des Partenariats Public Privé (PPP) identifiés dans la Stratégie Nationale de développement (SND30) du Cameroun. Ce mode de partenariat est d’ailleurs celui qui a permis le lancement des travaux de l’aménagement hydroélectrique de Nachtigal dans la région du centre. Un barrage d’une capacité de 420 MW, dont la mise en service intégrale est prévue pour l’année prochaine.  

L’orientation du gouvernement camerounais vers les Partenariats Public Privé, est en effet, une correction aux précédents échecs  rencontrés dans la construction des infrastructures hydroélectriques au Cameroun. Il s’agit entre autres des projets Mekin et de Mêmve ELe dans la région du sud, et du barrage de Bini à Warrak, dans la région de l’Adamaoua. 

Boris Ngounou

Infrastructure énergétique : Une nouvelle société de développement hydroélectrique voit le jour au Cameroun

L’Assemblée générale constitutive de la Kikot Hydro Power Company (KHPC) a lieu ce 25 septembre 2023 à Yaoundé. Constituée par l’État du Cameroun et la société publique française Électricité de France (EDF), la KHPC a pour mission, la construction et l’exploitation d’un projet hydroélectrique de 550 Kilowatts (le plus puissant du Cameroun), à Kikot, localité située dans la région du Littoral.

Long ignored and plundered by essentially capitalist exploitation, Africa’s natural capital is now emerging as a guarantee of a green economy and an opportunity for global climate action. Studied, quantified and sustainably developed, the potential of Africa’s natural capital offers opportunities that complement private capital flows and official development assistance.
Today, Africa is at a crossroads in terms of mobilising the financial resources needed to achieve its sustainable development ambitions, and to combat and adapt to climate change. The continent must choose between nature-based financing approaches and traditional financing models that have become obsolete.
According to estimates by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), official development assistance has stagnated significantly since 2010, even falling to its lowest level in Africa, reaching 34 billion dollars in 2022. Access to international capital markets, meanwhile, has remained fairly restrictive and very costly due to investors’ high perception of risk. However, Africa, which needs $33 billion a year to adapt to climate change, is currently receiving only around $6 billion, according to data from the African Development Bank (AfDB).
Yet Africa is not short of options. As well as mobilising the private sector, it could take advantage of its enormous potential in terms of natural capital. This asset represents between 30% and 50% of the total wealth of African countries, although it is not often taken into account in economic measures such as the calculation of gross domestic product (GDP). Yet this capital offers essential assets for promoting inclusive, green growth in the face of climate change.
A rich and varied potential
Natural capital is made up of everything in ecosystems, with the exception of people and their property. It includes all the natural resources that are directly useful to humans or that they can develop technically and economically, such as water, energy, forests, mineral deposits, agricultural land and fisheries. It also includes hidden ecosystem services, such as air and water quality, protection against natural disasters, pollution control, pollution elimination and wildlife habitat.
Data compiled by the AfDB demonstrate the wealth of Africa’s natural capital. Around 30% of all the world’s mineral reserves are found on the continent, including 60% of cobalt reserves and 90% of platinum group metal reserves. The continent makes a substantial contribution to the world’s annual production of six key minerals: 80% of platinum, 77% of cobalt, 51% of manganese, 46% of diamonds, 39% of chromium and 22% of gold.
The continent also holds 7% of the world’s natural gas and oil reserves. In addition, Africa has over 60% of the world’s undeveloped arable land and is home to 13% of the world’s population, 60% of whom are under the age of 25, making it the world’s youngest population. Around 75% of African countries have access to the sea, offering huge opportunities in the blue economy, whose global potential, if managed sustainably, is estimated at around 1,500 billion dollars.
The climate component
In Central Africa, for example, natural capital offers many more opportunities. This means making sustainable use of the potential of the Congo Basin, which covers 530 million hectares, 70% of Africa’s forest cover, 6% of the world’s forest area and 91% of Africa’s dense rainforests. In terms of energy, the Congo Basin represents 17 million megawatts of renewable energy potential and almost 125,000 megawatts of hydroelectricity.
As the world’s second largest forest (after the Amazon), the Congo Basin absorbs 750 million tonnes of CO2 every year, according to the Central African Forest Commission (COMIFAC). This decisive role in global climate regulation can be used by countries in the sub-region to negotiate debt-for-nature contracts. This technique, invented by the American biologist Thomas Lovejoy, considered to be the godfather of biodiversity, ultimately consists of exchanging part of the foreign debt for local investments aimed at protecting the environment. The debt-for-nature swap is often presented as a debt relief technique for developing countries. It involves extending payment terms, reducing interest rates, granting new loans at lower rates than conventional, and even cancelling debts.
The debt-for-nature mechanism has been expanding in Africa for some time. In June 2023, Portugal announced that it would swap $153 million of Cape Verde’s debt for investments in nature. At the beginning of August 2023, Gabon concluded its own agreement, worth 450 million dollars with the Bank of America (BofA), for the protection of part of its marine ecosystem. This is the second operation of its kind on the continent after the Seychelles.
The AfDB Initiative
To improve the way natural capital is taken into account on the continent, on 9 September 2021 the AfDB launched a new initiative on integrating natural capital into development finance in Africa (Natural Capital for African Development Finance, NC4-ADF).
This 2-year programme promotes best practices for integrating natural capital into the development finance architecture. Another focus is on how to get rating agencies to integrate green growth and natural capital considerations into sovereign risk and credit ratings for African countries.
NC4-ADF is supported by the World-Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) through its dedicated agency (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit, GIZ), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the Mava Foundation, the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) and the Economics for Nature (E4N) partnership, which aims to put natural capital at the heart of economies.
Fanta Mabo

AFRICA: natural capital is gradually being taken into account

Long ignored and plundered by essentially capitalist exploitation, Africa’s natural capital is now emerging as a guarantee of a green economy and an opportunity for global climate action. Studied, quantified and sustainably developed, the potential of Africa’s natural capital offers opportunities that complement private capital flows and official development assistance.

Increasing investment in the clean energy sector is one of the twelve recommendations contained in the Niamey Declaration. The document was adopted at the end of the 9th edition of the African Regional Forum on Sustainable Development (FRADD-9), which was held from 28 February to 3 March 2023 in Niamey, the capital of Niger. The central theme of the three-day event was « accelerating inclusive and green recovery from multiple crises and the integrated and full implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and Agenda 2063 ».

The Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), the UN system and other development partners are called upon to remain mobilised behind African states in the pursuit of local resource-based industrialisation, including the promotion of a mineral value chain for lithium-ion batteries in Africa. This is the main recommendation of the Niamey Declaration, adopted on 2 March 2023 in the Nigerian capital, at the end of the ninth African Regional Forum on Sustainable Development (FRADD-9).  

This recommendation is the second of a total of twelve. Its theme is similar to that addressed by the first recommendation, on transformative initiatives favourable to a green revival of economic growth. On this point, the President of Niger called on the developed countries. « Climate change, coupled with demographic dynamics, has created challenges in many African countries that need to be addressed if Africa is to make progress towards achieving the sustainable development goals. Developed countries must play their part in ensuring that African countries have access to climate finance, particularly with regard to the Sahel Climate Fund, » says Mohamed Bazoum.

The Loss and Damage Fund

In addition to issues related to access to water and sanitation, the preservation of biodiversity and the sharing of scientific knowledge, FRADD-9 participants insisted on the respect of international agreements and the implementation of major resolutions in the fight against climate change. This is the case of the Loss and Damage Fund, adopted at COP27 in Egypt. The Niamey declaration states: « Let the efforts undertaken to create a Loss and Damage Fund bear fruit so that resources can be mobilised to compensate for the increasing losses of infrastructure, ecosystems and livelihoods due to extreme climatic phenomena that are severely affecting the continent ».

The 9th FRADD also calls on the international community to meet its obligations under the Paris Agreement and to redouble its efforts to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions so that humanity can continue to live in a stable climate system.

The ninth session of the Forum was held under the theme: « Accelerating Inclusive and Green Recovery from Multiple Crises and the Full and Integrated Implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and Agenda 2063: The Africa We Want of the African Union ». This theme is closely linked to the theme of the 2023 High Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development meeting, namely « Accelerating recovery from the Coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic and the full implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development at all levels ». The meeting is being held from Monday 10 July to Wednesday 19 July 2023 in New York, United States of America.

Garama Saratou Rabiou Inoussa, Niger’s Minister of the Environment, Urban Hygiene and Sustainable Development, in her capacity as Chair of FRADD-9, will present the forum’s recommendations at the upcoming global gatherings on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and climate. In addition to the July meeting in New York, these include the SDG Summit on 19-20 September 2023, the UN General Assembly’s Week of High-Level Segment, COP28 and global, regional and sub-regional fora on the accelerated implementation of the UN 2030 Agenda and the African Union’s Agenda 2063.

Boris Ngounou

FRADD-9: increasing investment in clean energy projects

Increasing investment in the clean energy sector is one of the twelve recommendations contained in the Niamey Declaration. The document was adopted at the end of the 9th edition of the African Regional Forum on Sustainable Development (FRADD-9), which was held from 28 February to 3 March 2023 in Niamey, the capital of Niger. The central theme of the three-day event was « accelerating inclusive and green recovery from multiple crises and the integrated and full implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and Agenda 2063 ».