Africa to be $2.5 trillion short of climate finance by 2030
Africa will be $2.5 trillion short of
the finance it needs to cope with climate change by 2030, a U.N. official said
on Monday, adding that the continent has contributed the least to greenhouse
gas emissions while seeing some of the worst impacts.
Africa attracts only two per cent of
global investments in clean energy but needs $2.8 trillion of investment in the
sector by 2030, United Nations Economic Commission for Africa chief economist
Hanan Morsy said; warning against the consequences of under-funding.
"We end up in a vicious circle
with investment shortfalls increasing exposure risk and worsening impact,
further eroding fiscal space and raising finance costs," she said.
Despite producing low emissions
compared to other continents, climate change is costing African countries five
per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) annually, Morsy said.
On average, each African produced 1.04
tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions in 2021, less than a quarter of the global
average, a joint U.N.-African Union report found last year.
The report said the average rate of
warming in Africa was 0.3 degrees Celsius per decade in the 1991-2022 period,
compared with 0.2 degrees in the world as a whole.
"The situation is further
compounded by heavy public debt," Morsy said, adding that African
countries pay 1.7 percentage points higher interest on debt than other
countries.
"Countries are spending more
servicing their debt than on climate action."
Many speakers at the UNECA conference
called for global financial architecture reform.
"We must address the issue of
unfair risk perceptions and credit ratings that offer Africa limited borrowing
options," UNECA Executive Secretary Claver Gatete said.
He cited data from the UN Development
Program that estimated that the subjectivity of credit ratings was costing
Africa up to $74.5 billion.

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