Mohieldin praises remarkable progress of African Carbon Markets initiative

Mohieldin praises remarkable progress of African Carbon Markets initiative
By Marwa Nassar - -

Mahmoud Mohieldin, the United Nations (UN) Climate Change High Level Champion for Egypt, praised remarkable progress by the African Carbon Markets initiative which represents one of the innovative and sustainable solutions to the climate and development finance crisis in Africa.

He also lauded the involvement of a number of sponsors and companies in the implementation of the initiative, setting criteria for its activation and determining the prices of carbon credits that suit Africa’s needs to finance its climate and development action.

This came during his participation in the session titled “African Carbon Markets: A New Era of Growth” at the Africa Business Forum 2023 on Monday, in the presence of Lazarus Chakwera, president of Malawi; José María Neves, president of Cape Verde; Emmerson Mnangagwa, president of Zimbabwe; and a number of heads of African organisations and banks.

Africa’s efforts with regard to innovative financing and the creation of carbon markets must ultimately aim to provide adequate, effective and equitable financing to achieve development and climate goals, explained Mohieldin.

He has stressed that the success of the African Carbon Markets initiative would put the continent on track to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), including the climate ones.

Mohieldin explained that Africa has always been a victim of a reductive approach that separates climate action and development, stressing the importance of what Egypt called for during the 27th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP27) in Sharm el-Sheikh to adopt a holistic approach in dealing with the issue of climate change by paying equal attention to various dimensions of climate action, and integrating climate action as a whole with different SDGs.

Mohieldin reported that UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres stressed the importance of activating and accelerating development action in a way that achieves the sustainable development goals, including the goal of confronting climate change, adding that this requires African countries to work upon this holistic approach that tightly links between climate action and other sustainable development goals such as combating poverty and unemployment, providing water and energy sources for all and conserving biodiversity.

Mohieldin accentuated that financing climate action is insufficient, inefficient and unfair, and that overcoming these problems will be done by combining climate financing with financing development action, explaining that Africa’s efforts with regard to innovative financing and the creation of carbon markets must ultimately aim to provide adequate, effective and equitable financing to achieve development and climate goals.

Mohieldin said that financing solutions include developed countries fulfilling their pledge at the Copenhagen climate conference to finance climate action in developing countries worth $100 billion annually as a form of commitment, explaining that climate action in Africa needs ten times that amount annually.

He asserted the need to reduce dependence on debt to finance climate action, as borrowing instruments represent 60% of climate financing worldwide and more than 80% of the tools of financing climate action in developing countries, pointing out the importance of activating the mechanism of debt swap for co-investment in the environment and nature.

He stated that strengthening the role of the private sector in financing and implementing climate and development action would contribute to overcoming the financing crisis, with the need to deal with the phenomenon of green washing through the expert report issued during the Sharm El-Sheikh climate conference, which set out ten recommendations for the governance of environmental practices of companies.

Mohieldin highlighted the need to link the public budgets of countries to climate and development action, especially in developing countries, with the importance of cooperation at the regional level among African countries to implement initiatives and projects that push climate and development action forward in the continent, such as the African Carbon Markets Initiative.

Mohieldin said that COP28 in the United Arab Emirates will build on the significant results of COP27 regarding the files of climate finance, losses and damages, just transition, adapting to the negative impacts of climate change and mitigating emissions.

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