Olufemi Adeyemi
The African Development Bank (AFDB) has said it will provide $25 billion to Africa’s Climate Fund for the next 27 years.Akinwunmi Adesina, the President of the Bank, made this
known Tuesday, September 5 at the ongoing African Climate Summit in Kenya.
He said the Bank is committed to contributing $25 billion to
the continent in funding climate finance, to accelerate the transition to
cleaner energy sources.
“At the national level, we must accelerate actions on
climate adaptation and that is why the African Development Bank has committed
to providing $25 billion to provide climate finance by 2025.
“We have also launched the African Adaption Act Commission
programme together with the Global Centre on Adaptation, the largest climate
adaption programme in the world. Africa must develop with what it has not what
it does not have.
“We cannot power Africa with potential. We must truly unlock
Africa’s renewable energy potential. That is why the Africa Development Bank is
implementing $20 billion to harness the power of solar and deliver electricity
to 250 million people.”
According to him, “we must power every home, school, and
hospital and provide stable, affordable and reliable power. But we must be
pragmatic, Africa must use its natural gas and combine it with renewable
energy.”
The Summit looks to achieve three climate finance goals:
More financing, targeted financing, and cheaper higher risk appetite financing.
“Climate change poses significant risks to the global
community, with physical effects causing substantial economic losses. Over the
past decade, storms, wildfires, and floods have resulted in substantial GDP
losses,” the organisers said.
“Africa, in particular, faces severe climate-related
challenges, including drought, desertification, and increasing cyclones, leading
to displacement, migration, and food crises.”