Africa Needs to Work Closer Together on Climate Action
Africa Needs to Work Closer Together on Climate
Action and Sustainable Development
Key
Conclusions of Africa Carbon Forum
2017
Growing Importance of Cities and
Business in Implementation of Paris
Agreement
Press release available
on-line in English: http://newsroom.unfccc.int/unfccc-newsroom/africa-needs-to-work-closer-together-on-climate-action-and-sustainable-development/
Press
release available on line in French: http://newsroom.unfccc.int/fr/actualit%C3%A9s/les-pays-africains-doivent-travailler-en-plus-etroite-collaboration-sur-l-action-climatique-et-le-developpement-durable/
(Cotonou,
30 June 2017) – African countries must work closer
together when implementing national climate action plans
under the Paris Climate Change Agreement and mobilizing
climate finance, whilst better integrating climate action
into sustainable development planning. This was the key
conclusion of ministers and key delegates who convened for
the Africa Carbon Forum which ended today in Cotonou,
Benin.
Over 600 practitioners, experts and policy makers,
including ministers from governments across Africa and other
high level participants, met in Cotonou to take stock and
align strategies on how financial resources should be
mobilized to ensure sustainable development and emissions
reduction on a continent-wide scale.
"Africa is the
continent most affected by climate change. Two thirds of
Africans make their living off the land, consequently, it is
critical that the continent secures a climate-resilient
economic and development path. Hosting this Africa Carbon
Forum on the topic of collaborative climate actions for
sustainable development demonstrates Benin’s own
commitment to the national climate action plans and the
broader concern of Africa to promote collective actions for
the climate,” said Abdoulaye Bio Tchane, Senior Minister
in charge of Planning and Development of Benin.
With
ambitious commitments already made by countries under the
Paris Agreement, and with more commitments expected, African
ministers and other leaders stressed the importance of
building momentum that will enable the transformational
shift towards low carbon and greater resilience to climate
change. They also highlighted the need for new partnerships
to develop and further spur sustainable development.
Speaking to delegates in Cotonou, the Executive
Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC), Patricia Espinosa, said:
“Africa will see
explosive growth through to the middle of the century. Not
only that - Africa is one of the most important engines for
growth worldwide in the coming years. African people are at
the core of this growth. But the growth needs to be shaped
on the basis of related climate and sustainable development
criteria. Africa’s nationally determined contributions to
the agreement are blueprints for attracting private sector
investment and pushing forward. Implementation of the Paris
Agreement is the foundation for stability, for security and
prosperity as the population grows to 9 billion people or
more by 2050. It is food and water and energy for everyone.
It is good jobs. It is the foundation for building
sustainable, resilient communities powered by clean,
renewable energy.”
Moving forward, the Africa Carbon
Forum is developing into the regional climate action event
supporting, in conjunction with Global Climate Action
events, non-government (“non-Party”) stakeholder action
in the run-up to the annual UNFCCC Conference of the
Parties.
Growing Importance of Cities, Business
and Civil Society for Climate Action in
Africa
Delegates at this
year’s Africa Carbon Forum confirmed that non-Party
stakeholders, including private sector and cities, stand
ready to enhance ambition on climate action and welcomed the
event as a unique regional event, which facilitates
knowledge and new partnerships which are key to allowing
Africa to realize its potential and meet the ambitions goals
set in the Paris agreement and the Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs).
Delegates discussed crucial themes ranging
from climate policy options to the future of the existing
and widely use mechanisms that are suitable to the different
domestic context and can be scaled up at regional level in
Africa. Many discussions centered on how to strengthen
cooperation between Parties and non-Party stakeholders in
key sectors for Africa – notably energy, agriculture and
human settlements – including the role of future carbon
markets in boosting climate action for sustainable
development.
“The private sector is vital in bringing
climate finance to Africa,” says Dirk Forrister, IETA’s
CEO and President. “Markets are the most efficient way of
driving that investment, which in turn aids African nations
to grow in a cleaner, more sustainable way.”
"This
meeting shows that many countries in the region are
advancing on the domestic policy front and a number are
finding new innovative ways of engaging their local private
sector in project development and finance”, said Miriam
Hinostroza from UNEP DTU.
About the Africa Carbon
Forum and the Nairobi Framework
Partnership
The Forum was
organized under the umbrella of the Nairobi Framework
Partnership and partners and cooperating organizations
involved in this year’s Africa Carbon Forum include the
UNFCCC, World Bank, United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP),
International Emissions Trading Association (IETA), UNEP DTU
Partnership, United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD), Africa Development Bank Group, Low
Emission Development Strategies Global Partnership (LEDS
Partnership) and Climate Markets and Investment Association
(CMIA). The event is supported by the West African
Development Bank (BOAD).
The Nairobi Framework
Partnership was launched in 2006 by then UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan to assist developing countries,
especially in sub-Saharan Africa, to improve their level of
participation in the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development
Mechanism.
Read more about the Africa Carbon Forum 2017
on the website, http://africacarbonforum.com/