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Kenya’s Ruto urges Africa to seize climate financing opportunities

2023.09.04 06:23

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© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: People cross a flooded area in Muloza on the border with Mozambique after the aftermath of Tropical Cyclone Freddy, around 100 km outside Blantyre, Malawi, March 18, 2023. REUTERS/Esa Alexander/File Photo

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By Duncan Miriri

NAIROBI (Reuters) -Kenyan President William Ruto on Monday urged delegates to Africa’s first climate summit to see the crisis as a unique opportunity for the continent to attract large-scale investments.

Organisers say they anticipate hundreds of millions of dollars in deals to be announced at the three-day summit in Nairobi, during which they aim to showcase Africa as a destination for climate investment rather than a victim of floods, drought and famine.

African leaders are pushing market-based financing instruments such as carbon credits and debt-for-nature swaps in a bid to mobilize funding that they say has been slow to arrive from rich-world donors.

“For a very long time we have looked at this as a problem. It is time we flipped and looked it from the other side,” Ruto told delegates.

“We must see in green growth not just a climate imperative but also a fountain of multi-billion dollar economic opportunities that Africa and the world is primed to capitalise,” he said.

Several speakers at the summit, however, said they had seen little progress toward accelerating climate financing. Africa has received only about 12% of the finance it needs to cope with climate impacts, according to a report last year by the non-profit Climate Policy Initiative.

“There hasn’t been any success for an African country in attracting climate finance,” said Bogolo Kenewendo, a United Nations climate adviser and former trade minister in Botswana.

She said Africa’s struggles attracting capital persisted despite significant improvements to the investment environment in many countries, largely because of a perception the continent is too risky.

“We need a complete overshaul of the global financial infrastructure,” she said.

More than 20 presidents and heads of government are expected to attend the summit from Tuesday. They plan to issue a declaration outlining Africa’s position ahead of a U.N. climate conference later this month and the COP28 U.N. summit in the United Arab Emirates from late November.

INVESTMENTS

Companies and governments began announcing investments and financing commitments.

One of the top lenders in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rawbank, and global energy trader Vitol announced a $20 million investment in renewable energy, clean cooking and forest conservation in Congo.

Britain said UK-backed projects worth 49 million pounds ($62 million) would be announced over the course of the summit. Germany announced a 60-million euro ($64.76 million) debt swap with Kenya to free up money for renewable energy and sustainable agriculture.

Many African campaigners have opposed the summit’s approach to climate finance, saying it advances Western priorities at the expense of the continent.

They say carbon credits, which allow polluters to offset emissions by funding green activities, are a pretext for wealthier countries and corporations to continue polluting.

“Africa needs funding from countries that have got rich off our suffering. They owe a climate debt,” said Mohamed Adow, the director of energy at the Power Shift Africa think tank.

About 500 people marched in dowtown Nairobi on Monday to protest the summit’s agenda and demand financial compensation for climate damage from rich countries.

African leaders have also been calling for debt relief to help free up money to spend on renewable energy, conservation and adaptation.

A new working paper released by the Debt Relief for Green and Inclusive Recovery Project found that sub-Saharan African countries face annual debt servicing costs that are nearly the same as their climate finance needs.

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