African Ministers Unite for Climate Agreement
African Ministers Unite in Calling for Strong
Universal
Climate Agreement and Sufficient Finance to
Unlock Africa’s potential
* Private and public
sectors join in quest for market and
finance
opportunities at 7th Africa Carbon
Forum
(Marrakech, Morocco, 16 April 2015) – Ministers
from governments across
Africa have renewed their call
for a strong and universal climate change
agreement with
increased flows of funds, including through market
and
finance opportunities, sufficient to fulfill
Africa’s development
aspirations.
With countries set
to approve a new climate change agreement under the UN
in
Paris in December, African ministers stressed the region’s
readiness and
requirement for accelerated private and
public financing of low-carbon
development. Africa, with
its vulnerable populations and vast potential,
has
perhaps the most to lose from climate change and the most to
gain from
an effective climate change agreement.
“I
agree with Ministers that the last 10 years in the
implementation of the
Clean Development Mechanism is a
very valuable asset and that market
mechanisms can play a
significant role in raising the level of ambition,
and
supporting climate action,” said Ms. Hakima El Haite,
Delegate Minister
in charge of Environment of
Morocco.
“In these last eight months before Paris, the
focus must shift from
restating negotiating positions to
finding common ground solutions,” said
UNFCCC Deputy
Executive Secretary Richard Kinley at a day-long
ministerial
segment at the Africa Carbon Forum 2015
hosted by the Kingdom of Morocco.
“All countries have
something to gain from the Paris agreement and it is
in
everyone’s interests to reach a strong conclusion as
soon as possible this
year. If Heads of State come to
Paris, it must be to adopt an agreement
that is robust
and ready for them.”
Clean Energy to Unlock African Sustainable Development Potential
The African Carbon Forum
2015 focused on programmes to unleash private
sector
finance, such as through the Clean Development Mechanism,
and scale
up other forms of climate finance to strengthen
the sustainable development
of African
countries.
According to the International Energy Agency
Africa Energy Outlook 2014,
625 million people in
Sub-Saharan Africa, about two-thirds of the
population,
are without secure access to electricity. Some 730
million
people in the region still rely on cooking mostly
with wood, harming health
and destroying vital forest
cover.
“The coming months provide African countries with
a significant opportunity
to align their contributions to
the Paris climate agreement with their own
long-term
sustainable development priorities,” said Mr.
Kinley.
Countries are busy detailing their Intended
Nationally Determined
Contributions (INDCs), which they
will submit as their contribution to
climate action under
the Paris agreement. INDCs for 35 countries have
been
submitted to date. On April 1, Gabon became the
first African country to
submit an INDC.
Climate Finance and a Strong CDM Are Key to Success
Two clear
messages emerged from participants at the African Carbon
Forum.
First, linking climate finance to results is
essential to stimulate greater
funding for both
mitigation and adaptation to climate change.
Second,
developing countries, including Africa, need
tools like the Clean
Development Mechanism if they are to
successfully shift to a low-carbon
emitting development
path. Paris provides the continent with a
unique
opportunity to anchor carbon markets in the
long-term climate agenda in
line with scaling up climate
action and sustainable development based on
their
national priorities.
A consistent theme during the Forum
was the need to preserve and improve
the CDM beyond 2020
as a tool for providing continued climate finance
and
technology to developing countries, especially in
Africa. This would
capitalize on the capacity and
infrastructure already built up by countries
and
stakeholders. It is widely expected that this will be one of
the issues
to be resolved in Paris.
Participants
particularly highlighted the usefulness of the
CDM’s
established rules in measuring, reporting and
verifying results and its
possible role to help define
and clarify the content of INDCs. The
workshop also
concluded that African countries could look at how best
to
link and leverage finance through the Green Climate
Fund at the same time
as increasing use of the CDM.
The
Forum noted that the INDCs provide Africa with an ideal
vehicle through
which public policy developments can be
transparently displayed by
countries to shift toward a
low-carbon and sustainable development path.
What the
Forum organizers said about climate change and development
in
Africa
“Throughout this African Carbon Forum, I
have sensed the extraordinary will
of the continent to
act, and to use the tools that are functioning and
at
their disposal now, such as the Clean Development
Mechanism. I share the
sentiment expressed by many
participants here, that it is time to support
Africa's
dynamism in particular by exploring how the GCF can
channel
climate finance for the implementation of CDM
projects in Africa, and
finally unleash the continent's
mitigation potential. With the Paris
agreement in mind, I
trust that African countries will reflect this reality
in
their INDCs.”
John Kilani, Director, Sustainable
Development Mechanisms programme, UNFCCC
“The African
Carbon Forum 2015 has clearly demonstrated the engagement
and
commitment by countries in the region to contribute
to a balanced and fair
outcome at the COP in Paris.
Countries are preparing their INDCs, and
presentations at
the Forum indicate that these will have both ambition
and
at the same time send clear signals of the need to
balance adaptation and
mitigation aspects within a
broader green economy development framework.”
John
Christensen, Director, United Nations Environment Programme
DTU
Partnership
“Here’s what participants at the
Forum are saying: a clear and fair global
climate
architecture, which can protect the more vulnerable regions,
such
as Africa, needs to be a part of the Paris
narrative. Participants are
demonstrating a very high
level of commitment to helping the Paris process
hear
Africa’s voice in getting climate policies
right.”
Neeraj Prasad, Manager, Climate Change Group,
World Bank Group
“As we move towards the goal of a
global climate change agreement in Paris
in December, the
7th Africa Carbon Forum reinforced the need to
have
adequate, predictable, sustainable climate finance
resources to address
Africa’s challenges in
transitioning to low carbon development,
smart
agriculture, and sustainable urban development ¬
key topics at this year’s
ACF. These areas should be at
the core of Africa’s development priorities
and how
they are integrated into the countries’ INDCs will help
determine
the successful implementation of INDCs beyond
Paris. We all know current
climate financial flows are
currently insufficient to meet all of Africa’s
climate
change challenges, but it will be critical for African
countries to
demonstrate the ability to effectively
deploy those resources that are
available to help
contribute to the global climate change goals.”
Kurt
Lonsway, Manager, Environment and Climate Change Division,
African
Development Bank
“As we've heard over the
past couple of days, there is a great opportunity
for the
private sector to invest in a low carbon future for Africa,
using
market forces to bring innovative technologies so
that the continent can
develop in a sustainable way. The
Paris agreement can help facilitate this
by setting the
right parameters for business to invest, including
agreeing
rules and guidelines for carbon
markets.”
Dirk Forrister, President and CEO of
International Emissions Trading
Association
This
year’s Africa Carbon Forum attracted over 600 participants
of 53
countries, including 23 ministers or senior
officials, policymakers,
project developers and
investors, and built on the success of last
year’s
forum in Windhoek, Namibia. Discussions centered
on international and
national policies and operational
issues related to carbon markets,
mechanisms and
finance.
The Forum is organized under the umbrella of the
Nairobi Framework by the
UNFCCC, United Nations
Environment Programme along with the
UNEP-DTU
Partnership, World Bank, African Development
Bank and the International
Emissions Trading
Association.
The Nairobi Framework 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.
ENDS