At the end of this year, world leaders are expected to come forward
with updated, more ambitious national climate plans under the Paris
Agreement. Though buried deep within the legalese of the Paris
Agreement, this point of process is both a critical test and a
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
Research from the New Climate Economy shows that bold climate action
could deliver at least $26 trillion in global economic benefits between
now and 2030. It could also generate over 65 million new low-carbon jobs
by 2030, a number equivalent to the combined workforces of the United
Kingdom and Egypt today; avoid over 700,000 premature deaths from air
pollution compared with business-as-usual, and generate an estimated
$2.8 trillion in government revenues in 2030 through subsidy reform and
carbon pricing alone.
Delivering the benefits of a new climate economy requires ambitious
action across key economic systems, creating the conditions for the
phaseout of coal and rapid scale-up of renewables in the energy sector;
investing in shared, electric, and low-carbon transport in cities;
scaling up sustainable food and land use systems, including forest
landscape restoration; targeting investment to resilient water
infrastructure; and reducing emissions from key industrial value chains,
such as plastic.
However, if the world fails to step up climate action, continuing on our current climate trajectory could force 100 million people into extreme poverty by 2030. Africa is the most exposed region to the adverse effects of climate change despite contributing the least to global warming.
The region is already disproportionately feeling the impacts related to a changing climate.
Devastating cyclones affected 3 million people in
Mozambique, Malawi, and Zimbabwe in the spring of 2018. GDP exposure in African nations vulnerable to extreme climate patterns
is projected to grow from $895 billion in 2018 to about $1.4 trillion in
2023—nearly half of the continent’s GDP.
If fairness was the only goal, the impetus to act would lie solely with developed economies. Make no mistake, the big emitters absolutely must step up their domestic climate action, and quickly. But building the new climate economy is also a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that
every African nation should prioritize and claim a stake in.
This opportunity is why, despite historically negligible
carbon emissions, despite only accounting for 2 percent of world coal
demand, and despite the lack of leadership from some developed
countries, many African countries are now making serious efforts to
transition towards low-carbon technologies, low-carbon and resilient
infrastructure, and low-carbon tax systems.
Morocco has built the world’s largest concentrated solar facility to
help achieve the country’s goal of 52 percent renewable energy mix by
2030. The advanced 6,000-acre solar complex, Noor, serves as a clean energy source for around 2 million Moroccans, and provides pivotal job opportunities as the country transitions away from the fossil fuel industry. The solar complex is also offering training programs for women for
entrepreneurial and agricultural activities and is recruiting women in
decision-making roles to guide project activities
South Africa’s Carbon Tax Act, which places specific levies on greenhouse gases from fuel combustion and industrial processes and emissions, came into effect in June 2019. By 2035, the carbon tax could reduce the country’s emissions by 33 percent relative to the baseline.
Furthermore, South Africa’s recent renewable energy auctions have led
to solar and wind prices lower than those of the national utility or
from new coal plants. Often regarded as the continent’s clean energy trailblazer, much of
what has been learned through South Africa’s renewable energy
procurement process can influence similar developments across Africa.
My own country, Nigeria, which struggles with electricity access for a majority of its population has set a renewable energy
target of 30 percent by 2030. This goal underscores the potential for both grid-based and
decentralized renewable energy investments to deliver energy access and
climate change benefits simultaneously. Notably, off-grid solutions—like
M-Kopa and Lumos that deliver electricity to thousands of households on the continent—and mini-grids are important options in both unserved rural areas and underserved urban areas. Natural resource-rich African countries, like Nigeria, should see renewables as a central part of achieving universal energy access while setting themselves on a pathway for low-carbon and resilient development.
The biggest energy companies see this future too and are working to diversify their global portfolios. As of September 2019, the world’s major oil companies had made about 70 clean-energy deals, putting them on track to surpass the total for 2018. Shell, for instance, has invested in SolarNow, which sells high-quality
solar solutions in Uganda and Kenya. Since its inception in 2011,
SolarNow has supplanted 210,000 tons of greenhouse gas emissions. More African countries should insist upon being recipients of this 21st-century investment.
While the private sector is driving the shift into renewables,
state-owned enterprises (SOE) in the energy sector—in Africa and globally—are lagging behind. African governments need to support reform in the SOE sector by, for example, introducing competitive procurement for electricity supply.
This strategy could open African institutions and markets to emerging
opportunities in the renewable sector, and even drive down the price of
renewables. Efforts such as South Africa’s Renewable Energy Independent Power
Producer Procurement (REIPPP) program and the World Bank and
International Finance Corporation’s Scaling Solar program have resulted
in solar prices as low as $0.05/kilowatt-hour.
With an abundance of solar, wind, and geothermal resources, African
countries already have a comparative advantage in renewables. The
falling costs of green technologies provide a propitious moment to be on
the delivery end of the new energy revolution. And while it may seem
counterintuitive, Africa’s most oil- and gas-rich countries should be
leading the energy revolution.
Beyond the energy sector, food and land use systems—including the agriculture and forestry sectors—are integral to sub-Saharan Africa’s economy, accounting for 70 percent of livelihoods and almost one-quarter of regional GDP. In fact, new business opportunities in sustainable food and land use systems could deliver $320 billion each year by 2030 across sub-Saharan Africa.
These opportunities include $120 billion in forest ecosystem services
and restoration of degraded land, $100 billion in increased agricultural
yields, and $100 billion in supply chain efficiency improvements and
enhanced value-adding capacity. Concerted landscape restoration efforts
in Ethiopia’s Tigray region, for example, are enhancing farmers’
resilience, water availability, and livelihoods.
Such sustainable food and land use approaches can deliver multiple
co-benefits, from reducing rural poverty to boosting food security and
improving population health, to protecting and regenerating natural
capital.
Africa’s transition to a new climate economy is underway in many
places. The question is: Will developed countries create a tail-wind or a
head-wind? How they answer this question will determine whether Africa
is positioned to fully capitalize on this opportunity.
While it may not
be polite to say so, African countries need money—both to build a
cleaner more prosperous future for themselves and to avoid the worst impacts of climate change created largely by others.
The pending replenishment of the Green Climate Fund (GCF) acts as both a mechanism and a barometer for this challenge. The good news is
that in October 2019, 27 countries confirmed their pledge to the GCF’s replenishment, bringing the total raised so far to $9.7 billion.
The GCF is critical for maintaining momentum behind the Paris Agreement by supporting developing countries to enhance their climate action.
But, so far, some major contributors have been silent. We need to hear
from them.
African leaders cannot do this alone. And nor should they. Whether
driven by opportunism or a sense of moral justice, the world’s developed
and emerging economies must take action at home and help Africa deliver
the investments that will bring the goals of the Paris Agreement within
reach.
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