Greenpeace Afrique a annoncé le 5 juin 2024, le lancement officiel du Mouvement Camerounais pour la Justice Climatique (MCJC), une coalition regroupant près de 40 organisations de la société civile à travers les 10 régions du Cameroun. Ce mouvement vise à coordonner les efforts locaux pour lutter contre la déforestation et promouvoir des actions concrètes en faveur de la protection de l’environnement au Cameroun.
Le lancement du Mouvement camerounais pour la justice climatique (MCJC), a été marqué, le 5 juin 2024-Journée mondiale de l’environnement, par une marche pacifique à Yaoundé, réunissant environ 500 participants, qui ont remis une lettre au ministre camerounais de l’environnement de la protection de la nature et du développement durable (Minepded), exhortant le gouvernement à intensifier ses efforts de protection des forêts et à adopter des mesures concrètes contre la déforestation massive qui menace les écosystèmes locaux.
Cette mobilisation fait suite à un atelier national tenu à Kribi en avril 2024, où les préoccupations des communautés locales et autochtones ont été recueillies et intégrées dans les doléances présentées au gouvernement. Le Dr. Fabrice Lamfu, chargé de la campagne Forêt chez Greenpeace Afrique, a souligné l’urgence d’une réponse collective face à l’ampleur croissante des pressions environnementales au Cameroun : « la planète est confrontée à une multitude de défis, des industries polluantes à la déforestation rapide. Le MCJC représente une première étape cruciale pour amplifier nos voix et nos actions en faveur de la protection de notre patrimoine naturel commun. ».
Des Mouvements qui se généralisent en Afrique
Avant le Cameroun, le modèle du Mouvement pour la Justice Climatique a été lancé avec succès en République Démocratique du Congo et sera bientôt étendu au Ghana, marquant ainsi un engagement renforcé des pays d’Afrique de l’Ouest et centrale pour une action climatique coordonnée et efficace.
Dans une déclaration publiée le 4 juin 2024, le MCJC affirme clairement ses objectifs. À savoir, promouvoir l’adaptation au climat, défendre la justice climatique et renforcer la collaboration entre les divers acteurs impliqués dans la protection de l’environnement. Ce mouvement s’engage également à soutenir la recherche et l’innovation pour développer des solutions spécifiques aux défis climatiques locaux, tout en plaidant pour des politiques climatiques robustes aux niveaux local, national et international.
La mise en œuvre du MCJC sera supervisée par un comité de pilotage dédié, chargé de coordonner les activités, d’évaluer les progrès et de garantir la transparence et la responsabilité dans toutes les initiatives entreprises.
Le Cameroun a perdu 3,7% de sa couverture forestière totale durant les 18 dernières années
Le Cameroun, avec sa riche biodiversité et ses vastes forêts, est confronté à des défis majeurs liés aux changements climatiques, exacerbés par la déforestation accrue qui compromet l’avenir des générations futures. En avril 2024, Greenpeace Afrique, en collaboration avec des organisations nationales et internationales de la société civile, a adressé une lettre à plusieurs gouvernements étrangers pour alerter sur l’urgence de la situation et plaider pour des mesures internationales de soutien.
La déforestation au Cameroun présente des chiffres alarmants, comme le révèlent les rapports récents du ministère des forêts et de la faune, du Minepded et de la World Resources Institute (WRI). Entre 2002 et 2020, le pays a perdu 708 000 hectares de forêts primaires humides, représentant une diminution de 3,7% de sa couverture forestière totale. Cette perte équivaut à 48% de la superficie forestière totale du Cameroun. Les années 2014, 2017 et 2020 ont particulièrement marqué des pics de déforestation, mettant en danger un écosystème crucial pour la biodiversité régionale et la stabilité climatique.
De plus, la déforestation s’est concentrée principalement dans le domaine forestier non permanent, qui a subi des pertes massives représentant 80% en 2020 et 78,6% en 2021 de la perte totale. Ces pertes sont souvent liées à la satisfaction des besoins de base comme l’accès à la nourriture et à l’énergie, mettant en lumière les défis socio-économiques auxquels sont confrontées les populations locales dépendantes des ressources forestières.
Greenpeace Afrique a annoncé le 5 juin 2024, le lancement officiel du Mouvement Camerounais pour la Justice Climatique (MCJC), une coalition regroupant près de 40 organisations de la société civile à travers les 10 régions du Cameroun. Ce mouvement vise à coordonner les efforts locaux pour lutter contre la déforestation et promouvoir des actions concrètes en faveur de la protection de l’environnement au Cameroun.
Zimbabwe declared a state of national disaster on Wednesday 3 April 2024 due to the devastating drought that has hit large parts of southern Africa. President Emmerson Mnangagwa issued an urgent appeal for humanitarian aid, pointing out that more than 80% of the country is experiencing below-normal rainfall, leaving millions in need of food assistance.
Zimbabwe joins its neighbours Zambia and Malawi in facing unprecedented drought due to the El Niño weather phenomenon. This situation is jeopardising the food security of millions of people, with disastrous consequences for farmers and rural populations. The southern African country declared a state of national disaster on Wednesday in response to the severe drought affecting large parts of southern Africa. The declaration comes after similar measures were taken by neighbouring Zambia and Malawi, highlighting the scale of the humanitarian crisis in the region.
The President of Zimbabwe, Emmerson Mnangagwa, has launched an urgent appeal for international aid, pointing out that more than 80% of the country is experiencing below-normal rainfall due to drought linked to the El Niño weather phenomenon. This situation has devastated crops and left millions of people in need of food assistance. « Due to the drought caused by El Niño, more than 80% of our country has received below normal rainfall », explained President Mnangagwa, before adding that « the country’s top priority is to guarantee food for all Zimbabweans. No Zimbabwean should succumb or die of hunger ».
Nearly 20% of the country’s population affected by famine
According to the authorities, 2.7 million people, or almost 20% of the country’s population, are expected to go without food this year in Zimbabwe. The first few months of the year are traditionally known as the « lean season », when households run out of food while waiting for the new harvest. However, with the continuing drought, there is little hope of replenishing food stocks this year.
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has already set up a food aid programme for almost 2.7 million people for the period from January to March. However, President Mnangagwa has warned that even more people are likely to need food aid in the coming months.
Zimbabwe, once a grain exporter and regional breadbasket, has turned to aid agencies in recent years to stave off mass starvation due to extreme weather conditions such as heatwaves and floods. The declaration of a state of national disaster by President Mnangagwa will enable humanitarian organisations to mobilise additional international support to meet the urgent needs of the population.
The current food crisis in southern Africa is the result of a persistent drought exacerbated by El Niño, a natural climatic phenomenon that warms parts of the Pacific Ocean every two to seven years and has varying effects on the global climate. In southern Africa, it generally causes below-average rainfall, but this year’s drought was the worst in decades. Fanta Mabo
Zimbabwe declared a state of national disaster on Wednesday 3 April 2024 due to the devastating drought that has hit large parts of southern Africa. President Emmerson Mnangagwa issued an urgent appeal for humanitarian aid, pointing out that more than 80% of the country is experiencing below-normal rainfall, leaving millions in need of food assistance.
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
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.
The fund designed to finance climate « loss and damage » in vulnerable countries was adopted on Thursday 30 November 2023, on the first day of the 28th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP28) in Dubai. The establishment of this fund is the practical expression of the main promise made at COP27 in Egypt, where the mechanism was approved in principle but not adopted. Nearly six countries have already announced their contributions to this fund, but we are still a long way from the 100 billion dollars expected by developing countries.
This is good news for African countries. The fund designed to finance climate « loss and damage » in vulnerable countries was adopted on Thursday 30 November 2023, in the early hours of the 28th United Nations Climate Conference (COP28), which is being held in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates until 12 December 2023. This historic decision, which was greeted by a standing ovation from delegates from the nearly 200 participating countries, implements one of the main resolutions of COP27 in Egypt last year, where the fund was approved in principle, but its much-debated contours had not yet been defined.
« I congratulate the parties on this historic decision. It’s a positive signal for the world and for our work. We have made history today… The speed with which we have done so is unprecedented, phenomenal and historic », declared Sultan Al Jaber, the Emirati President of COP28.
According to the text adopted, the loss and damage fund is due to start operating in 2024. It will be hosted for four years by the World Bank, although this is contrary to the wishes of developing countries. The latter had opposed this option, criticising the financial institution for being in the hands of Westerners and unsuited to their needs.
All eyes on the $100 billion mark
Once it was adopted, the Fund for Loss and Damage began to be set up as soon as possible. The United Arab Emirates immediately announced a contribution of 100 million dollars. Germany followed with the same amount. Japan pledged 10 million dollars, the United States 17.5 million and the United Kingdom 40 million pounds (around 50 million dollars). According to several European Union (EU) negotiators, France and Denmark are on the verge of announcing an initial start, « in the region of a few hundred million dollars ». In addition, the European Commission and other EU member states have pledged contributions. However, industrialised countries and companies still have until 2 December 2023 to declare their bids.
On the ground in Dubai, negotiators from developing countries are now wondering how much the Loss and Damage Fund will be endowed with. The amounts announced so far are still far from the 100 billion dollars expected by the nations with the lowest CO2 emissions. Boris Ngounou
The fund designed to finance climate « loss and damage » in vulnerable countries was adopted on Thursday 30 November 2023, on the first day of the 28th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP28) in Dubai. The establishment of this fund is the practical expression of the main promise made at COP27 in Egypt, where the mechanism was approved in principle but not adopted. Nearly six countries have already announced their contributions to this fund, but we are still a long way from the 100 billion dollars expected by developing countries.
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
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.