• About
  • Become a Climate Reporter
  • Send Us Your Report
  • Submit A News
  • Support Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
Wednesday, June 4, 2025
NEWSLETTER
Africa Climate Reports
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • CLIMATE CHANGE
  • SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
  • FOOD
  • FOREST
  • ENERGY
  • WASH
  • LAND
  • OTHERS
    • FINANCE
    • HEALTH
    • OCEANS
    • TOP STORIES
    • MOST POPULAR
    • COLUMNISTS
    • INTERVIEWS
    • OPINIONS
    • PHOTOS
    • VIDEOS
Africa Climate Reports
  • HOME
  • CLIMATE CHANGE
  • SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
  • FOOD
  • FOREST
  • ENERGY
  • WASH
  • LAND
  • OTHERS
    • FINANCE
    • HEALTH
    • OCEANS
    • TOP STORIES
    • MOST POPULAR
    • COLUMNISTS
    • INTERVIEWS
    • OPINIONS
    • PHOTOS
    • VIDEOS
No Result
View All Result
Africa Climate Reports
No Result
View All Result

African Peoples to Europe: Don’t hijack our renewable energy

by editor
September 17, 2017
in BREAKING NEWS, ENERGY
0
Home BREAKING NEWS
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Protest for renewable energy in South Africa
Protest for renewable energy in South Africa

Today almost 200 African civil society organisations issued a strong condemnation of European manipulation and compromising of the Africa Renewable Energy Initiative (AREI).

Tensions have erupted over the actions of France and the European Commission, who are accused of risking the initiative’s African sovereignty, and of bypassing processes including social and environmental criteria to push approval of projects, to the cost of African citizens.

The AREI was launched in 2015 in Paris during COP21 as an African-led initiative with the goal of providing at least 10 GW of new renewable energy to Africa’s peoples by 2020, and put the continent on course to add at least another 300 GW and achieve universal access to energy for all Africans by 2030.

It was supported by $10 billion in pledges for 2015-2020 by developed countries in Paris, and has been hailed as a groundbreaking effort to bring clean, affordable, and reliable energy to millions of people in a democratic, human-rights focused approach.

RelatedPosts

Mining Communities Urge Community-Led Path in South Africa’s Energy Transition

Radio’s commanding power in Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation

However African civil society groups understand that at a recent AREI Board Meeting, France and the European Commission abused their position as donors to override the views of several Africans on the AREI Board, by announcing and pushing through approval of 19 projects that were not subject to AREI evaluation criteria or social, environmental, and gender safeguards.

They did so apparently without being formal Board Members, in the face of objections by several African Board Members, and apparently without participation of the countries hosting the projects. They furthermore pushed for the undue imposition of EU technical experts to supposedly influence AREI’s future development.

France and the EU have pledged to provide funds to support “new and additional” renewable energy capacity, but these promises are being broken in their attempt to rebrand some already existing projects as AREI projects.

The compromising of AREI principles threatens its very core and has prompted a diverse swathe of African civil society to rally behind a set of demands, in an attempt to regain control of the initiative for African countries.

A letter signed by almost 200 African civil society organisations demanded that African countries immediately take action to put AREI back on track and ensure full independence from donors and other third parties and that EU and France abandon aspirations to have seats as Board members.

The letter further demands that AREI Board ‘endorsement’ of the 19 existing EU projects be suspended until they are subject to a thorough review against AREI criteria, environmental and social safeguards, and have the prior informed consent of States and citizens concerned.

The African civil society groups also demands that all further funding and proposed projects be genuinely “new and additional,” with no more accounting tricks and that AREI becomes fully accountable, transparent and participatory for African states and for civil society in all aspects as well as ensuring active participation by all civil society constituencies at all levels of AREI.

“This clear undermining of African governance belongs to an era we supposedly left in the past. The AREI is meant to be an African-led initiative, but here we have the EU undermining years of work by going over the heads of African governments and pushing through projects without public participation or adequate safeguards. The sad irony is that this power grab flies in the face of what the EU and France themselves agreed,” said Kumi Naidoo of Africans Rising for Justice, Peace, and Dignity.

A solar project in Nigeria (PHOTO: Greentech)
A solar project in Nigeria (PHOTO: Greentech)

Mithika Mwenda of the Pan-African Climate Justice Alliance believes that “AREI has been a great example of African leadership in rising above political stalemates to tackle the climate crisis. Now the EU is claiming credit for the hard work of African peoples and governments, while at the same time making it harder for AREI to hit its targets of delivering 300 GW of new renewable power by 2030.”

“This continent has seen too many bad development projects already, which is why AREI was created with robust safeguards in mind to ensure that all stakeholders could be consulted and that human rights would be respected. With the EU pushing through approval for these 19 projects without review according to AREI’s criteria, they are effectively trampling over badly needed protections for women, indigenous people, and other constituencies,” said Titilope Akosa of Centre for 21st Century Issues.

According to Godwin Ojo of the Environmental Rights Action – Nigeria, “AREI is one of the major legacies from COP21 in Paris and gives us all hope, yet France and the European Commission’s heavy-handed efforts in AREI place this legacy at risk, and undermine trust in the UN climate change process to deliver real solutions for our peoples, and in Europe as a genuine partner for sustainable development in Africa.”

“European donors know how to talk the talk but do they know how to walk the walk? If the latest developments are anything to go by, they don’t. A just transition to clean, affordable, democratic energy requires billions — billions which were promised but which we are now told will appear by magic as a result of a much smaller investment of a few hundred million. People in Africa need concrete investments in renewable energy, not a lottery ticket” said Rhoda Boateng of the International Trade Union Confederation – Africa.

Tags: AfricaAREIRenewable Energy
ShareTweetSendShare
editor

editor

Related Posts

Mining Communities Urge Community-Led Path in South Africa’s Energy Transition
CLIMATE CHANGE

Mining Communities Urge Community-Led Path in South Africa’s Energy Transition

May 22, 2025

By Ken Koutchakpo As South Africa moves toward a low-carbon future, communities most affected by the extractive economy demand to...

Radio’s commanding power in Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation
BREAKING NEWS

Radio’s commanding power in Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation

February 14, 2025

Radio photo culled from https://www.myjoyonline.com/ By Kofi Adu Domfeh A severe storm strikes, bringing with it torrential rains, deafening thunder,...

Next Post
African Regional Post-COP22 consultations begin in Kampala, Uganda

African Regional Post-COP22 consultations begin in Kampala, Uganda

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Recommended

Renforcement des capacités des producteurs de riz : un pas décisif vers la sécurité alimentaire

Côte d’Ivoire targets Food Security through Capacity Development for Rice Farmers

2 weeks ago
Renforcement des capacités des producteurs de riz : un pas décisif vers la sécurité alimentaire

Renforcement des capacités des producteurs de riz : un pas décisif vers la sécurité alimentaire

2 weeks ago
L’Afrique Renforce la Filière Rizicole avec la Deuxième Session du Programme de Formation des Professionnels du Riz

Africa Strengthens Rice Value Chain with Second Session of Rice Master Training Programme

3 weeks ago
L’Afrique Renforce la Filière Rizicole avec la Deuxième Session du Programme de Formation des Professionnels du Riz

L’Afrique Renforce la Filière Rizicole avec la Deuxième Session du Programme de Formation des Professionnels du Riz

3 weeks ago
Mining Communities Urge Community-Led Path in South Africa’s Energy Transition

Mining Communities Urge Community-Led Path in South Africa’s Energy Transition

3 weeks ago
Beninese Rice Farmers hail Climate Resilience and Regenerative Agriculture  at Mega Field Day

Beninese Rice Farmers hail Climate Resilience and Regenerative Agriculture at Mega Field Day

1 month ago

Popular News

    Social Media

    ABOUT US

    Africa Climate Reports is Africa’s first and largest bilingual journal dedicated to opening new vistas in the coverage and reportage of climate change and the region’s environment. With a multi-lingual team of talented reporters from across the continent, we tell the African climate story in a refreshingly lucid, communally engaging and technically robust manner.

    SITE LINK

    • About
    • Advertise
    • Careers

    OTHER LINKS

    • About
    • Become a Climate Reporter
    • Send Us Your Report
    • Submit A News
    • Support Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us

    NEWSLETTER

    Be the first to get notified when we have something new to share. Get Africa Climate Reports newsletter directly into your email.
    we promise not to spam you!
    • About
    • Advertise
    • Careers

    © 2024 All Rights Reserved- Africa Climate Report - Designed by Prexy

    No Result
    View All Result
    • HOME
    • CLIMATE CHANGE
    • SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
    • FOOD
    • FOREST
    • ENERGY
    • WASH
    • LAND
    • OTHERS
      • FINANCE
      • HEALTH
      • OCEANS
      • TOP STORIES
      • MOST POPULAR
      • COLUMNISTS
      • INTERVIEWS
      • OPINIONS
      • PHOTOS
      • VIDEOS

    © 2024 All Rights Reserved- Africa Climate Report - Designed by Prexy