The Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), World Bank and African Union Commission, have joined forces to look for ways of strengthening regional capacities to improve the continent’s readiness for climate risks and enhance the resilience of its development to impacts of climate change as a whole.
The three started off with a three-day workshop in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Wednesday, May 23, 2012 with two components, namely; Climate Vulnerability of
Africa’s Infrastructure: A Strategic Regional Approach; and Africa Climate Risk
Management and Green Growth.
Organised by the World Bank in collaboration with the
African Union Commission and ECA’s African
Climate Policy Centre, the workshop has brought together some 60 participants
representing Regional Economic Communities, River Basin organisations, Power
Pools and a broad range of stakeholders.
Addressing the opening session yesterday morning, Mr.
Josué Dioné, Director of the Food Security and Sustainable Development Division
at ECA, called on participants to ensure that the two
components of the workshop are strengthened with specific details and that an
effective partnership is established for following up on the outcomes of the
encounter.
Also speaking at the opening session, Mr. Cheikh
Dakate, energy expert at the African Union Commission welcomed the workshop as
a right step in the direction charted by the Commission to help Member States
better prepare against the impacts of climate change.
At the opening session, one of two experts from the
World Bank leading the technical discussions of the workshop, Mr. Nagaraja Rao
Harshadeep, Senior Environmental Specialist, Africa Region, presented the
workshop overview, including the objectives, structure and agenda.
The other, Raffaello Cervigni, Lead Environmental Economist
Regional
Coordinator, Climate Change Sustainable Development Sector, Department
of Environment and Natural Resources for Africa Region and Peter Droogers,
consultant at FutureWater, made an introduction to a study on Infrastructure
and Climate Change, entitled: ‘Addressing the Climate Vulnerability of Africa’s
Infrastructure: A Strategic Regional Approach.’
According to an ECA Press Release Numbered 76/2012, announcing the workshop, the analysis
builds on the data platform already established under the Africa Infrastructure
Country Diagnostic (AICD), but with significant enhancements to assess climate
risks and infrastructure investment viability with respect to future
uncertainty in climate outcomes in Africa.
It states further, that the study on infrastructure
and climate change builds on the Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic
(AICD, 2010), which was developed by a partnership including AUC, NEPAD, RECs,
AfDB, DFID, PPIAF, AFD, EC, KFW and the World Bank.
The press release issued by the ECA Information and Communication Service, said the study resulted in a
comprehensive analysis of the continent’s infrastructure development agenda,
including estimates of the financing required to achieve relevant Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) and other standards of service.
To the ECA, the
proposed study on climate change would add an explicit climate dimension to
AICD, so that it could become possible to quantify the impacts of climate
change on the level and composition of spending needs for network infrastructure
in the water, power pool, and transport sectors in Africa, and also help to
identify approaches to evaluating specific infrastructure investments in the
face of climate uncertainty.
The Economic Commission announced that in addition to
the study, a proposed Climate Change Risk Management and Green Growth Project
(CCRM/GG) is expected to improve the readiness of regional and national
entities in Africa to effectively manage climate risks.
Partners, it says, are hopeful that the project would
provide an integrative vehicle for capacity-building and investment readiness
to enable African nations and regional entities to effectively utilise evolving
climate financing for climate resilience and low-carbon growth, to provide both
climate and development benefits.
Meanwhile, a good number of regional agencies working
on climate-related fields, regional training institutions, the Government of
Japan, the Global Fund for Disaster Reduction and Recovery (GFDRR), and other
Development Partners are supporting the workshop.
By
Edmund Smith-Asante
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