Africa is set to receive a massive financial windfall courtesy of the worldâs largest developmental banking organization.
In addition to the $200 billion that it has already pledged towards fighting climate change, the World Bank Group is stepping up its support for Africa by committing $22.5 billion between 2021 to 2025.
The funding, which more than doubles their commitment to climate-related projects over the last five years, is part of the groupâs 2025 Targets to Step Up Climate Action which they launched in December 2018.
In the wake of the most recent climate report from the IPCC, the World Bank, along with the rest of the international summit leaders, view 2019 as a pivotal year to plan accelerated climate action â and this yearâs summit narrowed its focus on ways to accelerate and step-up climate action in Africa.
The additional funding from the bank builds upon its ongoing African Climate Business Plan (ACBP), which has financed over 176 conservational projects across the continent and become a critical support mechanism for countries to institutionalize climate action that meet their contributions submitted under the historic Paris Climate Agreement.
The bank is now collaborating directly with eight countries â Rwanda, Mali, Cote dâIvoire, Namibia, Uganda, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, and Kenya â on climate adaptation and mitigation.
Since the creation of the ACBP, the partnership has delivered stunning results across the continent. In 2018, for example, the World Bank Group approved an investment package of $794.5 million for hydropower projects in Cameroon. It is estimated that once this project is completed, it will increase the nationâs electricity-generating capacity by 30% and provide clean energy; economic opportunities; and agricultural stability to disadvantaged communities.
âThis investment in clean energy is key to lowering the cost of electricity and ensuring that Cameroonâs economy is competitive,â said Elisabeth Huybens, World Bank Country Director for Cameroon. â[This project] is one of the very few public-private partnership hydropower projects in Sub-Saharan Africa that will accelerate Cameroonâs realization of its development goals, including poverty reduction.â
Additionally, the campaign has helped to create agricultural plans to improve food security for rural poor people; natural disaster management systems for catastrophes in Kenya; and one of the most successful electrification programs in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Source : GNN