Africa: Afreximbank Pushes for Accelerated Climate Financing At COP29

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Afreximbank has pledged to enhance its role in promoting a balanced energy transition in Africa, aiming to address the continent’s development priorities and unlock economic growth.

This commitment aligns with the African Union’s 2023 Nairobi Declaration and builds on outcomes from COP28, focusing on climate finance, loss and damage compensation, and the strategic use of gas as a transitional energy source.

The bank’s participation at COP29 in Baku highlights its support for integrating climate change policies with development objectives, leveraging the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to drive sustainable economic growth. These efforts are rooted in the principles of the AU’s Agenda 2063: The Africa We Want.

Afreximbank’s agenda at the summit includes advocating for the rapid implementation of the Loss and Damage Fund to provide timely financial support to African nations grappling with climate-related impacts.

The bank stresses the need for transparent and accessible funding mechanisms that directly aid communities most affected by climate change.

“Africa bears the brunt of global climate change despite contributing less than four percent to global emissions,” Afreximbank President Benedict Oramah said at the African Union’s pavilion on African Day at COP29.

He noted that climate change threatens economic growth, fuels migration, and heightens regional instability–a situation projected to worsen over the next decade.

“Immediate and decisive action is both a matter of environmental responsibility and sound economic policy, as the cost of inaction far exceeds that of proactive measures,” Mr Oramah added.