Toute l'actu sur la protection de l'environnement

Tag: climate change in africa

Total 67 Posts

As part of its « Alliance for Biodiversity Protection and Development » project, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has signed a partnership agreement with Sofibanque to support the development of inclusive and sustainable small and medium-sized enterprises in the Haut-Uele province of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). This partnership aims to improve living conditions for local communities and reduce pressure on natural resources around Garamba National Park and the Kibali gold mine.
In the province of Haut-Uele, in the north-east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the lack of employment opportunities in the formal sector and the poor diversification of business sectors are hampering economic development and damaging biodiversity. Faced with a lack of opportunities, local populations are turning to poaching, illegal logging and artisanal gold mining.
To reverse this trend, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has signed a partnership between its « Alliance for the Protection of Biodiversity and Development » (APBD) project, implemented by Adam Smith International (ASI), and Sofibanque, a commercial bank based in Kinshasa. The project aims to improve the living conditions of local communities and reduce pressure on natural resources around Garamba National Park and the Kibali gold mine.
USAID’s APBD project will achieve its objectives by mobilizing the resources of public and private partners, in the form of subsidized interventions, partnerships and cost-sharing agreements, or as an intermediary between third parties. These interventions are structured around four components. Improving access to economic and financial opportunities, sustainable private sector development, capacity building for responsible artisanal mining, and integrated and effective management of Garamba National Park.
« By combining the experience and financial products provided by Sofibanque with the expertise of ASI and Global Communities in supporting SMEs, the APBD project aims to demonstrate that supporting local small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) is a powerful way of diversifying the local economy and creating jobs. In addition, it is a means of creating market opportunities that will encourage communities to engage in more sustainable livelihoods and reduce their pressure on the protected areas of Garamba National Park, » said Kevin Kiffer, APBD Project Manager.
The APBD project is the second of its kind to be launched in Haut-Uele province in the space of 7 months. In May 2023, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) office in the DRC, the Korean Embassy, and the DR Congolese Ministry of the Environment launched the Integrated Program for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) in Haut-Uélé province. Funded by the Republic of Korea ($9 million) and the UNDP ($1 million), the project aims to combat climate change and improve economic conditions for indigenous populations.
Fanta Mabo

DRC: Haut-Uele hosts new Usaid-funded resilience project

As part of its « Alliance for Biodiversity Protection and Development » project, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has signed a partnership agreement with Sofibanque to support the development of inclusive and sustainable small and medium-sized enterprises in the Haut-Uele province of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). This partnership aims to improve living conditions for local communities and reduce pressure on natural resources around Garamba National Park and the Kibali gold mine.

Motorists and generators are cited as the main sources of air quality deterioration in Lagos State, Nigeria. In a statement issued on 15 January 2024, the local government stresses the need for green and improved air throughout the state to ensure healthy living.
On Monday 15 January 2024, in Lagos, Nigeria, the Lagos Environmental Protection Agency (LASEPA) issued a statement noting that current air quality in many parts of the state is poor. According to IQAIR, a platform that publishes real-time data on air quality, the air pollution index in Lagos is currently 152 US AQIs, 13.4 times higher than the concentration of PM2.5 particles recommended by the World Health Organisation (WHO).
PM2.5 are fine particles, emitted mainly during combustion processes. They have a diameter of 2.5 microns (μm). Like all particles, they are made up of a mixture of different chemical compounds.
Stressing the need for green and improved air throughout the State to ensure a healthy life, Dr Babatunde Ajayi, Director General of LASEPA said that such a high level of air pollution is dangerous for human health. Residents of the affected areas could suffer from respiratory diseases such as lung infections, asthma, cystic fibrosis, mesothelioma, pulmonary hypertension and runny noses, among others.
Second leading risk factor for death in Africa
Having identified emissions from generators in residential areas and vehicle emissions as the main causes of poor air quality in certain regions, LASEPA is urging people to switch to biofuels, which are safer and more environmentally friendly than diesel or petrol.
The agency is also advocating reducing the number of vehicles on the roads by carpooling or preferring public transport to people putting their cars on the road every day.
This situation is becoming more widespread across the continent. According to the report on « The state of air quality and its effects on health in Africa » recently produced by the State of Global Air initiative, air pollution is the second most common risk factor for death in Africa. In 2019, for example, air pollution contributed to 1.1 million deaths, 63% of which were linked to exposure to household air pollution (HAP).
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The United Nations (UN) presents Africa as the epicentre of the world’s humanitarian crises in 2024. Of the 26 countries for which the United Nations is calling for the mobilisation of 46.4 billion dollars in international aid, fourteen are in Africa. The multiplication of climatic disasters and their corollaries of armed conflict have forced more than 130 million people into urgent need of humanitarian assistance.
Because of the consequences of climate disruption, Africa will be the scene of the world’s major humanitarian crises in 2024. In its analysis of the 20 countries in the world where the humanitarian situation could deteriorate further in 2024, the American non-governmental organisation (NGO) International Rescue Committee (IRC) notes that 11 of these countries are in Africa. They include Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso, Mozambique, Nigeria, the Central African Republic (CAR), the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Sudan, South Sudan, Ethiopia and Somalia.
For the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef), the number of African countries to be closely monitored in 2024 goes beyond 11. Of the 26 countries for which Unicef is requesting the mobilisation of 46.4 billion dollars in international aid this year, fourteen are on the continent. The biggest crises are concentrated in three countries: Ethiopia, Sudan and the DRC, where the population affected varies between 20 million and 26 million, depending on the country.
The consequences of climate change
This concentration of global humanitarian crises in Africa also has a climatic origin. Here, most humanitarian crises arise from vulnerability to the effects of climate change and armed conflict. « They are increasingly occurring in the same regions and at the same time. More than half the conflicts that have broken out since 1995 have occurred in the countries most exposed to global warming and least able to adapt to it », explains the IRC.
In a report presented on 24 May 2023 in Geneva, Switzerland, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) establishes a causal link between climate change and the rise in armed conflicts in Africa. The report, entitled « On the Road to Extremism in Africa: Pathways to Recruitment and Disengagement », identifies the causes of the explosion in the activities of non-state armed groups, and points the finger at the climate crisis as a catalyst for the escalation of violence on the continent.
Fanta Mabo

AFRICA: climate causes the most serious humanitarian crises of 2024

The United Nations (UN) presents Africa as the epicentre of the world’s humanitarian crises in 2024. Of the 26 countries for which the United Nations is calling for the mobilisation of 46.4 billion dollars in international aid, fourteen are in Africa. The multiplication of climatic disasters and their corollaries of armed conflict have forced more than 130 million people into urgent need of humanitarian assistance.

Expected on 12 December 2023, the agreement on the Global Budget reached at COP28 was finally adopted on 13 December in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The text calls on countries to « make a transition away from fossil fuels » and to accelerate this action « in this crucial decade, in order to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050 ». Afrik21 looks back at this declaration without Nassim Oulmane, Acting Director of Technology, Climate Change and Natural Resources at the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA).

Boris Ngounou (BN): What do you think of the agreement on the Global Budget reached at COP28?

Nassim Oulmane: For the first time, the COP has called for transitional action to move away from fossil fuels. For Africa, which accounts for less than 4% of all cumulative and current emissions, the challenge is to ensure that climate change does not reduce our chances of developing and achieving our Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the objectives of Africa’s Agenda 2063. To achieve this, the remaining carbon budget must be adjusted to give Africa the space it needs to build and secure its development and transformation trajectory.

This objective can only be achieved if industrialised nations begin immediately to phase out fossil fuels, while helping developing countries, particularly in Africa, to invest in transitional fossil fuels in order to strengthen their capacity to make the transition to green energy. It is important to replace unilateral, uncoordinated actions that create barriers to these pathways with concerted, multilateral efforts to facilitate these goals. We must always bear in mind that 600 million Africans still have no access to energy. As a result, the dual climate and development challenge facing African countries requires the promotion of investment in transitional energies, particularly gas, to ensure that the continent rapidly closes the energy access gap and industrialises at the pace needed to meet its development goals and facilitate the transition to clean energy. It is fundamentally the just energy transition that we are seeking, as part of a global phase-out based on common but differentiated responsibilities and in the light of national circumstances. This is the fair and equitable result that a united approach to the COPs must produce.

At the Dubai climate summit, the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) organised a plethora of panels and sessions on the SDGs and adaptation to climate change in Africa. How would you assess this?

The ECA has indeed organised numerous events to bring Africa’s unique voice to the fore and better explain the continent’s positions and needs to the rest of the world. Financing remains the main obstacle to a global and inclusive climate response. It is of course frustrating that the target of providing $100 billion a year in climate finance has still not been met. It is also frustrating that the parties were unable to agree on the new collective quantified financing target at COP28. Despite this, many promising pledges and initiatives were announced at the climate summit held in Dubai from 30 November to 12 December 2023.

However, many of these initiatives will not materialise unless adequate, accessible, predictable and new funding is made available as a matter of urgency. It was important for these panels to point out that the funding gap is enormous. Between 5.8 and 5.9 trillion dollars will be needed to implement nationally determined contributions (NDCs) between now and 2030, 215 to 387 billion dollars are needed each year for adaptation, and 4.3 trillion dollars for investment in clean energy. These are colossal sums that will not be easily accessible from existing public funds. It is clear that making affordable finance available, restructuring debt, encouraging new and innovative forms of finance, and reforming international financial institutions and systems will make it possible to achieve the MDGs and combat climate change.

Another subject discussed by these panels concerns carbon markets.

The historic consensus reached at COP 28 calling on the parties to move away from fossil fuels will certainly increase demand for carbon credits, strongly stimulated by the increased commitments of public and private investors to reduce residual carbon emissions from energy systems, industry, built infrastructure and transport in particular. This demand will not be met by the current supply of credits on all the existing markets, which represents a huge gap. Thanks to their vast carbon sinks in tropical forests and other terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, and their high potential for renewable energy production, African countries will be able to generate and trade credible and additional high-quality credits to fill these supply gaps and help accelerate the transition to a low-carbon economy.

They will also be able to generate additional revenues to support adaptation, resilience, the SDGs and other priorities in their development plans. To enable African countries to exploit these opportunities effectively and fully, the ECA is working with partners such as the Congo Basin Climate Commission to set up high-integrity regional carbon markets that generate additional and credible credits, and preserve environmental integrity. We also had panels on the blue economy and the Great Blue Wall initiative, and with the African Islands Climate Commission to make the blue economy a pillar of the continent’s development and of Africa’s climate action.

COP28 also saw the establishment of the « loss and damage » fund, with an initial contribution of around 725 million dollars, according to the AfDB. In your opinion, what needs to be done to ensure that this fund quickly meets the needs of African countries, which are still the most vulnerable to natural disasters and the consequences of climate change?

On the very first day of the conference, the COP28 Presidency paved the way by pledging $100 million for the operationalisation and initial capitalisation of the « Loss and Damage » fund ($200 million was needed to make the fund operational). By the second day of the international meeting, nearly $725 million had been pledged to the new fund. After almost three decades of negotiations on the creation of the fund, this is a considerable step forward and demonstrates the host’s intention to achieve concrete results at the end of COP 28.

 However, it should be noted that $725 million is a far cry from the estimated $3 trillion needed to address the loss and damage caused by climate change and to build resilience. The financing needs are much greater. Much also remains to be done to define the fund’s operating rules, in particular its governance, the methods for assessing damage and quantifying compensation, the disbursement procedures, etc. The ECA has been at the forefront of helping African states to build resilience into their economies, ecosystems, infrastructure and livelihoods through initiatives such as support for the development and implementation of NDCs, capacity building for the integration of climate information into infrastructure and investment planning, and the conceptualisation of the African Climate Change Strategy.

The ECA has also facilitated the development of a tool based on a climate model to predict and assess losses and damage in African countries, which has enabled a better assessment of the needs of African countries. Today, it is important to develop innovative tools based on methodologies that are accepted and agreed at multilateral level so that the operationalisation of this fund can rapidly respond to the emergencies and needs of the continent which, I would remind you, is the most vulnerable and the most impacted by the consequences of climate change. This is what we are working on with our partners.

                                                                                                            Interview by Boris Ngounou

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Nassim Oulmane: « Adequate, accessible and new funding is urgently needed ».

Expected on 12 December 2023, the agreement on the Global Budget reached at COP28 was finally adopted on 13 December in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The text calls on countries to « make a transition away from fossil fuels » and to accelerate this action « in this crucial decade, in order to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050 ». Afrik21 looks back at this declaration without Nassim Oulmane, Acting Director of Technology, Climate Change and Natural Resources at the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA).

Plutôt que delà sortie des énergies fossiles (pétrole en tête), il faut se contenter d’une  »transition hors des énergies fossiles  » aux sortir de la COP28 de Dubaï. Mais pourquoi donc?
La COP28 émiratie qui s’est tenue à Dubaï du 30 novembre au 12 décembre 2023 a livré son verdict. Annoncée comme étant le point de rupture avec les énergies fossiles, elle a plutôt consacré une nouvelle prouesse langagière. Les pays du Monde entier sont désormais appelés à  »transitionner » hors des énergies fossiles  »’. Une prudence dans le verbe qui ne peut que satisfaire les thuriféraires de l’industrie petro-gazière mondiale.

À commencer par le Président de la COP28 qui après avoir frappé son marteau pour valider le texte final de cette COP28 affichait béatement un sourire de satisfaction. SULTAN AL JABER, patron d’ADNOC, la principale compagnie petro-gazière des Emirats Arabes Unis avait de quoi se réjouir. Car de la transition à la sortie réelle des énergies fossiles, il n'y a qu'un délai qui n'engage réellement que ceux qui veulent y croire. Ce qui a fait dire au Secrétaire Général de l'Organisation des Nations Unies Antonio Gutterez que: '' À ceux qui se sont opposés à une référence claire à l'élimination progressive des combustibles fossiles dans le texte de la COP28, je tiens à dire qu'une élimination progressive des combustibles fossiles est inévitable, qu'ils le veuillent ou non. Espérons que cela n'arrive pas trop tard''.

La COP28 devait se clôturer mardi, mais d'intenses négociations ont eu lieu pendant la nuit et ont forcé la conférence à continuer plus longtemps. Les discussions portaient sur la question de savoir si le résultat final inclurait un appel à la ''réduction progressive '' où à ''l'élimination progressive '' des combustibles fossiles comme le pétrole, le gaz et le charbon qui réchauffent la planète. Élimination progressive indispensable pour limiter le réchauffement climatique à 1.5 °C tel que fixé par l'Accord de Paris de 2015.

Les négociateurs de la COP28 se sont également mis d'accord sur des engagements visant à tripler la capacité des énergies renouvelables et à doubler l'efficacité énergétique d'ici 2030 et ont réalisé des progrès en matière d'adaptation et de financement. Un fonds ''Perte et dommages '' destinés à soutenir les pays du Sud dans leurs efforts contre les effets néfastes du réchauffement climatique a été annoncés. Il sera doté par les pays du Nord à hauteur de 700 milliards USD : les pays en développement devront montrer patte blanche pour bénéficier de ces financements en défendant des projets écologiquement viables. La Banque Mondiale s'est quant à elle dite prête à mettre chaque année 9 milliards de dollars pour financer des projets liés au climat entre 2024 et 2025.

Mais alors, y a-t-il de quoi donner aux pays africains des moyens pour construire leur industrie verte en opérant aussi leur révolution techno-industrielle vers les énergies renouvelables ? En tout cas, l'énergie solaire se propose comme alternative. Si la Nature a gâté nos pays d'Afrique équatoriale en termes de soleil, il faudra des moyens technologiques colossaux pour pouvoir exploiter cette énergie de manière efficace et efficiente et alimenter à la fois les entreprises et les ménages d'Afrique en énergie électrique.

Moyens qu'il revient aux Africains et à eux seuls de se doter sans attendre l'aumône des pays industrialisés et des bailleurs de fonds qui n'ont aucun intérêt à voir l'Afrique jouir d'une autonomie énergétique et encore moins d'une autonomie industrielle et d'une prospérité économique pourtant indispensables pour créer de la richesse pour nos enfants et des emplois pour nos femmes et nos hommes. Dans ce cas, il faudra encore envisager exploiter nos réserves de pétrole et de gaz au Cameroun pour pouvoir non seulement générer des revenus conséquents pour le développement industriel voulu par la SND30 ( Stratégie Nationale de Développement 2030) , mais aussi opérer une transition écologique hors des énergies fossiles à travers des projets écoresponsables , sans perturber les équilibres économiques et sociaux.

LEONEL AKOSSO

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BILAN DE LA COP28

Plutôt que delà sortie des énergies fossiles (pétrole en tête), il faut se contenter d’une  »transition hors des énergies fossiles  » aux sortir de la COP28 de Dubaï. Mais pourquoi donc?
La COP28 émiratie qui s’est tenue à Dubaï du 30 novembre au 12 décembre 2023 a livré son verdict. Annoncée comme étant le point de rupture avec les énergies fossiles, elle a plutôt consacré une nouvelle prouesse langagière. Les pays du Monde entier sont désormais appelés à  »transitionner » hors des énergies fossiles  »’. Une prudence dans le verbe qui ne peut que satisfaire les thuriféraires de l’industrie petro-gazière mondiale.