Oct 23, 2021

African Environmentalism: The Forgotten Continent in the Climate Conversation

Written by: Alexandra MorkMarley Belanger

As efforts to reduce global emissions become more urgent, the mobilization of African climate initiatives is a beacon of hope. Through a combination of multinational and hyperlocal programs, African nations and their citizens showcase a unique action plan to combat climate change.

The Population With the Most At Stake

Nothing illustrates the current international community’s attitude towards African voices on climate change more than the case of Ugandan Climate Change Activist Vanessa Nakate. In January 2020, Nakate was invited to the World Economic Conference in Davos, Switzerland, and appeared in a picture along with other youth activists such as Greta Thunberg. When news coverage broke of this event, Nakate had been cropped out, leaving the four white activists in the frame. While this shows a clear act of racism and discrimination, Nakate’s experience is not unique. Historically, African voices have been cropped out of the climate conversation, in this case quite literally, and it is time for a change. 

Africans will be among the world’s most affected by the impacts of climate change, therefore they should be at the center of the conversation. While it pollutes the least, Africa holds some of the world’s fastest rates of urbanization and has the largest percentage of youth with a quickly expanding population. Changing weather patterns mean an increase of uninhabitable heat, changes in rainfall patterns leading to increased rates of food insecurity, and even border conflicts. In West Africa, the desertification of once lush regions as the Sahara Desert expands south has pushed nomadic peoples into sometimes violent conflict with landowners in countries like Mali and Burkina Faso. Based on current emission standards, the children born in sub-Saharan Africa since 2016 will face nearly 6 times the amount of extreme weather events, and 50 times as many heat waves as previous generations. For Africans, climate change is more than just an abstract discussion, it is tangibly impacting their way of life every day. 

According to the United Nations, Africa’s share of the global population is projected to grow from 17 percent in 2017, to around 26 percent in 2050. Climate change and global emission caps do not respect borders. If we focus only on targeting the biggest polluters in the present day, an opportunity may be missed to ensure developing African nations do not surpass these nations in the future. Currently, Africa’s 54 countries contribute only 2-3 percent of global carbon emissions, but at the same time, they are economically dependent on fossil fuels. While this is negligible now, as the population of Africa expands and develops more urban cities, its carbon footprint will grow. Through a mixture of large-scale international initiatives and grassroots youth engagement, Africa is evolving to be at the forefront of many innovative climate initiatives.  

Uniquely Multinational Initiatives 

International climate initiatives in Africa are both a necessity and an innovation. Due to the drastically different conditions in each nation, and varying degrees of government support for climate initiatives, the most effective projects rely on a unique web of private actors, state organizations, and independent individuals. One such project is known as the Great Green Wall Initiative which was launched by the African Union in 2007. The Wall aims to establish an 8000km barrier of vegetation along the border of the Sahara Desert to combat desertification. The Sahara Desert is “expanding southward at a rate of 48 kilometers a year.” The Great Green Wall plans to stretch across the Sahel-Sahara region —Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Sudan, Chad, Niger, Nigeria, Mali, Burkina Faso, Mauritania, and Senegal— and seeks to replant and grow a living barrier of trees and vegetation to stop the expansion of the desert. This initiative seeks to restore 100 million hectares of degraded land and create 10 million green jobs by 2030. The initiative has entered a new phase with partners pledging more than USD 14 billion in international finance over the next five years. 

The Great Green Wall serves two agendas, environmental preservation, and community building. The BBC has reported that improvements in land quality and economic opportunity in Mali may help curb terrorism in the country. In Northern Cameroon where there has been fighting and bloodshed for years due to Boko Haram and other separatist groups, a group of nearly 70,000 refugees in the Minawao Refugee camp have planted over 360,000 seedlings on more than 100 hectares of land with the support of the Great Green Wall initiative. Not only have these refugees been able to reverse any burden they may have put on the environment by settling in the region, but they have also planted enough vegetation to completely transform the soil. This allows them to be able to grow their own food and sustain themselves. This project’s ability to allow people fleeing from conflict to provide for themselves on their own terms, while simultaneously repairing the environment sets an example for future projects. 

African Youth Driving the Conversation

Just as Vanessa Nakate was inspired to engage in climate activism after experiencing unusually frequent heatwaves within her own country of Uganda, other African youths are actively becoming engaged in the discussion. In September, there was a multi-country environmental justice movement calling for a more unified response to climate change. In the region containing the east and west African drylands, youth activists such as Charity Lanoi in Kenya are running grass seed banks to restore perennial grasses so pasture animals can graze. In the unusually hot temperatures, the naturally regrowing grasses have struggled to root, thus making Lanoi’s work critical. In Ghana, Portia Adu-Mensah rallied her community against a proposed coal plant in Ghana’s central region. Portia is a founding member of the activism group “350 Ghana – Reducing Our Carbon.” To oppose the coal plant, she wrote letters, reached out to community members, and worked with journalists to combat the development of the plant. Eventually, the government agreed to look at more renewable energy and stopped the construction of the plant. After considering the cases of these individuals, what becomes abundantly clear is that there is a growing wave of youth involvement in African nations. These activists represent more than just isolated cases of excellence, but a new wave of hope in the climate change conversation. 

Normalizing Civic Engagement

Initiatives like the Great Green Wall and grassroots youth movements represent far more than a few success stories, they represent the normalization of civic engagement and discourse. In the same country of Cameroon that refugees are carving out a path to sustain themselves, all civil protests are essentially outlawed. In September 2020, Cameroonian forces used military force to break up peaceful political protests and arrested over 500 people. Climate action initiatives are important to support in Africa because, in countries with varying degrees of political freedom, climate movements are rarely viewed as a direct challenge to government authority. This type of civic engagement serves as a model that can encourage other social and political movements to gain momentum. In a broader sense, the existence of broadly multinational but uniquely localized environmental projects also represents a blueprint for multi-state climate collaboration in the future. Whether the Great Green Wall gets officially completed or not is not what is important. Truly collaborative international climate action initiatives symbolize humanity treating the climate crisis for what it really is, an emergency. If we are to succeed in securing a safe and sustainable climate for future generations, we can not afford to have any voices cropped out of the conversation. 


References

Photo by: Ainhoa Goma/ Oxfam International, Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

AfricaNews. 2021. “Climate Action Now! Activists Hold Widespread Actions in Africa, in Solidarity with Global Climate Strikes.” Africanews. https://www.africanews.com/2021/09/24/climate-action-now-activists-hold-widespread-actions-in-africa-in-solidarity-with-global-climate-strikes/ (October 23, 2021).

Arsenault, Chris. 2015. “Drought, Expanding Deserts and ‘food for Jihad’ Drive Mali’s Conflict.” Reuters. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-climatechange-mali-conflict-idUSKBN0NI16M20150427 (October 23, 2021).

Bourgois, Xavier. “Refugees in Cameroon Help Build ‘Great Green Wall’ to Combat Desertification.” UNHCR. https://www.unhcr.org/news/stories/2021/9/614854b14/refugees-cameroon-help-build-great-green-wall-combat-desertification.html (October 23, 2021).

Evans, Monica. 2021. “Seeds of Change: Supporting Young Local Leaders to Level up Rangeland Restoration Efforts.” CGIAR Research Program on Livestock. https://livestock.cgiar.org/news/seeds-change-supporting-young-local-leaders-level-rangeland-restoration-efforts (October 23, 2021).

“Great Green Wall — The Great Green Wall.” Great Green Wall. https://www.greatgreenwall.org/about-great-green-wall (October 23, 2021).

Habib, Jacky. 2020. “Environmental Activists Making a Difference in Africa.” CARE. https://www.care.org/news-and-stories/news/three-environmental-activists-making-a-difference-in-africa-and-around-the-world/ (October 23, 2021).

Human Rights Watch. 2021. “Cameroon: Repression Marks Crackdown Anniversary.” https://www.hrw.org/news/2021/09/22/cameroon-repression-marks-crackdown-anniversary (October 23, 2021).

Kwasi, Stellah. 2021. “Africa’s Rise in Protests Is about More than Macroeconomics.” ISS Africa. https://issafrica.org/iss-today/africas-rise-in-protests-is-about-more-than-macroeconomics (October 23, 2021).

Okereke, Caleb, Stephanie Busari, and CNN. “She Was Cropped out of a Photo of White Climate Activists. Now, She Says It’s Time to Stop Erasing African Voices.” CNN. https://www.cnn.com/2020/01/30/africa/uganda-activist-vanessa-nakate-cropped-intl/index.html (October 23, 2021).

Pallares, Gloria. 2021. “Africa’s Great Green Wall to See Quicker Growth with New $14 Billion.” Landscape News. https://news.globallandscapesforum.org/49608/newly-seeded-with-14-billion-africas-great-green-wall-to-see-quicker-growth/ (October 23, 2021).

Pilling, David. 2021. “Africa Has Been Cropped out of the Climate Change Debate.” Financial Times. https://www.ft.com/content/648a7b64-16f8-407a-814f-ab4c46dfc775 (October 23, 2021).

Schleeter, Ryan. 2013. “The Great Green Wall.” National Geographic Society. http://www.nationalgeographic.org/article/great-green-wall/ (October 23, 2021).

Thiery, Wim et al. 2021. “Intergenerational Inequities in Exposure to Climate Extremes.” Science 374(6564): 158–60.

United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division (2017). World Population Prospects: The 2017 Revision, Key Findings and Advance Tables. Working Paper No. ESA/P/WP/248. 

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1 Comment

  1. Nicholas Cook

    “Climate change and global emission caps do not respect borders.” – Excellent sentence Marley. I gravitated immediately towards your blog because I have not seen any coverage of the movement to tackle climate change in the second largest continent on Earth. It is embarrassing that Western media continues to occlude African voices from the global conversation especially when they clearly have so much to give.

    The Great Green Wall initiative is a very exciting project and something that I wish we had the vision to carry out here in the United States. As someone from a rural state agricultural policy is near and dear to my heart (nerdy I know). It always makes me disappointed to never hear climate policy analysts in the US ever bring up the role agriculture can play in stemming the tide. We have lost an area the size of New Jersey in highly fertile land in the past 20 years. Re-seeding land is one of the best ways to combat emissions and I’m happy to see that here it seems to be building community among refugees who previously had none.

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