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新数据显示,继过去几年的低迷之后,2023年中国对非洲可再生能源项目的投资出现反弹。

中国和非洲之间的气候合作是中非合作论坛的一个重点议题。论坛每三年举行一次。本次峰会于9月6日闭幕,有数十位领导人齐聚北京。

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上届中非合作论坛于2021年举行,论坛发表了一项具有里程碑意义的宣言,将气候合作“定位为”未来合作的“重要支柱”。同年,中国政府宣布停止为煤电项目提供资金。

随之而来的是对能源项目的政策性银行贷款出现暂停,这引发了人们对中国在非洲能源贷款前景的担忧。然而,波士顿大学全球发展政策中心(Boston University Global Development Policy Center)的最新数据显示,随着银行调整战略,以遵循投资低碳能源和“小而美”项目的要求,这种暂停只是一种重置。

本文分析了这一转变,并探讨了中国为非洲未来可再生能源建设提供融资所面临的挑战。

“既有”利益

中国一直是非洲的能源项目,尤其是化石燃料项目的重要融资方。非洲约75%的电力来自化石燃料,尽管其能源相关的碳排放量占全球总排放量的不到3%,电气化率也是所有有人居住的大洲中最低的。

过去,中国的大部分融资都是由中国两家政策性银行——中国进出口银行和国家开发银行——支持推动的,而且主要针对燃煤电厂。

这两家银行在非洲各地发放了1820亿美元的贷款,主要投向了能源行业。波士顿大学全球发展政策中心的数据显示,从2000年到2023年,政策性银行贷款总额的15%流向了化石燃料行业,12%流向了水电站。

相比之下,发放给太阳能、风能或地热项目的贷款按价值计算不到1%。

这在很大程度上是由于中国官方出资者与国企之间既有联系。根据中南项目(China Global South Project)的数据,从历史上看,大多数中国国企都专注于煤炭和水电等传统电力领域。

英国开放大学(Open University)国际发展教育讲师弗兰顿·奇耶穆拉(Frangton Chiyemura)博士告诉Carbon Brief,中国在2000和2010年代的国际发展活动反映了当时中国自身的“内部发展轨迹”,因为中国也发展了以煤炭为主导的电力系统,而水电是最大的低碳能源。

他表示,在这个“走出去”的时期,非洲的大多数能源项目开发商——主要是中国国企——都专长于水电和煤炭,这导致更多此类项目获得融资并得以建设。

他补充说,这些国企“在保险、融资和与非洲各国政府接触方面都有国家支持……(而且)没有做太多试图建立市场的基础工作”。

“小而美”

2023年,中国进出口银行和国家开发银行承诺向三个能源项目注资5.02亿美元,包括布基纳法索的一个太阳能发电厂和马达加斯加的一个水电站,结束了2021年和2022年能源贷款的“中断”,如下图所示。

未标题

中国政策性银行在非洲的能源贷款暂停了两年,部分原因可能是新冠大流行期间的经济压力。

不过,波士顿大学全球发展政策中心认为,在中国国家主席于2021年承诺停止资助煤电,转而建设“小而美”的项目后,这些银行似乎也暂停了活动,以对其投资战略作出“必要的调整”。

2021年中非合作论坛气候变化宣言也确认,中国将进一步增加对非洲可再生能源和其他低碳项目的投资,“不会在国外建立新的燃煤发电项目”。

奇耶穆拉告诉Carbon Brief,这两年间的贷款减少并非中国政策性银行的“独有”现象。他补充称,在疫情期间,西方国家向非洲提供的贷款也有所下降。

他还同意,中国贷款机构将重点从“数量”转向“质量”,更多地考虑与新项目相关的投资风险和社会影响,这加速了投资的转变。

在此期间,中国的其他利益相关者——从中国电建集团和三峡集团等国企到晶澳科技等私企——都同意为可再生能源项目提供资金或参与项目建设。

根据睿纳新国际咨询公司(Development Reimagined)整理的独立数据(如下图所示),自2021年中非论坛以来,已有138个新的气候相关项目达成协议,而且在过去18个月里,这一数字还在加速增长。

未标题

数据库中记录的项目包括超过20吉瓦(GW)的太阳能项目、9吉瓦的水电项目以及1吉瓦的风电项目,如下图所示。

这些项目的资金来源广泛,包括中国和非中国企业、非洲和其他非中国金融机构,以及多边开发银行。

该咨询公司的项目经理兼中国气候融资政策负责人付亦可(Fu Yike;音译)对Carbon Brief说,在中国国家主席习近平2021年作出承诺后,中国国企已表示有兴趣“探索在非洲开展项目的新方式”,包括参与太阳能项目。

在数据库中列出的55个太阳能和风能项目中,国有企业分别参与了46个和5个。

根据睿纳新的分析,到2030年,中国在非洲的清洁能源项目装机可达224吉瓦,这意味着中国参与非洲的能源转型对于非洲实现2030年300吉瓦的目标至关重要。

付亦可补充说,特别是太阳能发电装机预计将成为中国未来在非洲能源部署的一大特色。

陡峭的“学习曲线”

总部设在伦敦的智库海外发展研究所(ODI)认为,中国“一带一路”倡议所建立的机制可以协助在非洲部署平价低碳技术,如同其促进了铁路和港口等中国国内基建产能向非洲“溢出”一样。

然而,奇耶穆拉告诉Carbon Brief,许多习惯于开发煤炭和水电的国企在转向可再生能源方面面临着巨大挑战。

此前,这些国企通过由政策性银行贷款资助的EPC总承包合同(即设计、采购和建造合同)来开发能源基础设施,这种合同只要求它们建设基础设施,而不负责运营和维护。

现在,非洲的决策者越来越多地推动采用股权融资模式,鼓励中国企业投资可再生能源项目并持有股份。

然而,奇耶穆拉表示,这种模式涉及到国企不太习惯的业务流程。

例如,埃塞俄比亚正在通过股权融资开发一座风力发电厂,从而减轻该国的债务压力。奇耶穆拉说,这意味着中国企业将不得不参与公开招标系统,而不是他们所习惯的闭门谈判。

“我记得一位(公司代表)说:‘为什么我要为一个(价值)可能只有8000万至9000万美元的项目浪费金钱和时间呢?’……企业认为,把时间花在(编写)招标文件上没有任何价值……但这表明它们在理解监管要求方面缺乏经验,而非洲的市场监管正在迅速变化。”

此外,付亦可认为,一些公司还对非洲的投资风险表示担忧。

大多数非洲国家在世界银行的“营商便利度”排名中靠后,这意味着监管环境不利于在当地创办和运营公司。

付亦可补充说,中国民营企业更愿意与国企合作,这可以将它们的参与与中国政府的利益更紧密地联系起来,从而限制它们的风险敞口。

奇耶穆拉与他人共同撰写的一篇论文也提到了这一点:“最近的趋势是在这些私营企业和国有企业之间建立一个联合体……很明显,在现有的政策群体中,新的联盟或利益集团正在形成,它们更加致力于促进风能和太阳能活动。”

奇耶穆拉称,部分原因是非洲在能源法规方面“快速变化”的环境。

非洲经济研究联合会(African Economic Research Consortium)合作研究经理戴安娜·恩吉·穆查伊(Dianah Ngui Muchai)认为,促进非洲投资的关键是针对可再生能源项目的“灵活和创新的(金融)工具”,以及“明确和现实”的政策目标。

奇耶穆拉告诉Carbon Brief,南非和埃塞俄比亚一直在尝试通过开发股权融资风电项目来实现这一目标。

“这是一条学习曲线,但我们相信也许在未来五到十年内……我们很可能会看到一些中国公司通过股权融资来开发这些项目。”他说。

中非论坛强调转向投资

这些主题在今年中非论坛的成果中得到了呼应。在主旨演讲中,习主席承诺向非洲提供价值3600亿元人民币(510亿美元)的资金支持。其中,2100亿元人民币(300亿美元)将通过信贷资金额度支付,700亿元人民币(100亿美元)将通过投资支付。

其中部分资金将用于资助一系列“清洁能源”项目,而“绿色发展”在会后的官方宣传中占据了重要位置。习主席在主旨演讲中指出,中方愿在非洲实施30个具体的清洁能源项目。

会后发表的宣言指出:“中方支持非洲国家更好利用光伏、水电、风能等可再生能源,进一步扩大在节能技术、高新技术产业、绿色低碳产业等低排放项目的对非投资规模。”

此外,与宣言同时发布的还有一份涵盖2025至2027年中非合作的行动计划,其中列出了指导未来三年中非合作的十大“伙伴行动”,包括“贸易繁荣”、“产业链合作”和“绿色发展”。

2.2.9 The partnership initiative for green development. China will support Africa in enhancing climate adaptation capacity, provide new energy technologies and products, implement 30 clean energy and green development projects, and set up a Special Fund for China-Africa Green Industrial Chain. China will strengthen capacity-building and joint research in such areas as disaster prevention, mitigation and relief, bio-diversity protection, environmental improvement, and desertification treatment, and work with Africa to construct a meteorological early-warning service platform. China will set up the China-Africa Forum on Peaceful Use of Nuclear Technology, build joint laboratories together with African countries and the Africa Center of China-Africa Cooperation Center on Satellite Remote Sensing Application, carry out marine space planning, and support African countries’ participation in the international lunar research station project and China’s lunar and Martian exploration.
An excerpt from the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation Beijing Action Plan (2025-2027). Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs

双方还将进行更广泛的能源合作,中方“将鼓励对非洲包括太阳能、风能、绿氢、水力发电、地热等可再生能源项目投资”。

习主席还告诉中非论坛代表,中国将“鼓励中非企业‘双向奔赴’投资创业……把产业附加值留在非洲,为非洲创造不少于100万个就业岗位。”

南非总统西里尔·拉马福萨(Cyril Ramaphosa)在新闻发布会上说,他“对习主席今天宣布的资金数额持非常积极的态度”,并补充说“这将是非洲大陆的一大福音”。

中南项目的分析则不那么乐观,认为报道标题上的数字“极具误导性”。

分析称,300亿美元的信贷额度“很可能………将更多地惠及中国企业,而非非洲利益相关者”,而100亿美元的投资数字“不应被视为政府财政承诺的一部分……因为(这笔资金)将由中国民营企业,尤其是采矿业企业提供”。

中南项目联合创始人埃里克·奥兰德(Eric Olander)告诉彭博社,这笔信贷可能会被用于“资助从中国购买大量太阳能电池板、电池和电动汽车”,以供非洲使用。

但非中政策咨询中心(Africa-China Centre for Policy and Advisory)高级研究员艾萨克·安克拉(Isaac Ankrah)博士告诉Carbon Brief,习主席对在整个非洲发展“绿色增长引擎”的关注凸显了中国“转向更具结构化的气候适应项目融资模式,重点关注技术转让、产能建设和可持续基础设施”。

他补充说,“这些承诺可能导致资金流的重新调整,使其更加符合非洲能源转型的具体需求”。

中非论坛对投资的关注是否会导致其切实远离贷款驱动型项目还有待观察,但一些非洲决策者将推动这种转变发生视为首要任务。

正如安哥拉财长维拉·戴维斯·德索萨(Vera Daves De Sousa)在接受路透社采访时所说:“我们需要打破常规思维: “我们需要跳出思维定式,因为‘你给我钱,我给你抵押品’的简单解决方案已经过时了。”

The post 深度报道:中国对非洲可再生能源的投资在沉寂两年之后反弹 appeared first on Carbon Brief.

深度报道:中国对非洲可再生能源的投资在沉寂两年之后反弹

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Analysis: Energy-efficient air conditioning could save Indian homes 69bn rupees a year

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More energy-efficient air-conditioning units could, together, save Indian households ₹69bn ($724m) a year, according to new analysis by Carbon Brief.

Climate change-induced extreme heat is driving up the use of air conditioning across the country, as people try to cope with record-breaking temperatures.

This demand, however, is straining the country’s power grid and raising emissions.

On 21 May 2026, India’s power demand reached a record 270 gigawatts (GW), fuelled by a heatwave sweeping across the country and a surge in air-conditioning demand.

Carbon Brief’s analysis shows that, if the roughly 15m households expected to buy a new air conditioning (AC) unit this year bought a “five-star” rated one instead of a “two-star”, it would cut carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by nearly 5m tonne (Mt).

The installation of AC units in India is currently uneven and ongoing challenges remain, predominantly around the cost of the technology.

Below, Carbon Brief looks at what more energy-efficient models would mean for India’s emissions and household electricity savings, as well as opportunities and barriers to cooling access.

Record heat

Historically, India has had one of the lowest levels of access to cooling in the world. As the nation continues to see an increasing number of heatwave days, this is shifting.

For example, India saw record-breaking heat in 2024 and nearly 14m air conditioners sold – up from 10m in 2023.

Between 2021 and 2023, AC sales volumes increased by more than 25% year-on-year in India.

While solar power is playing an increasing role in meeting the daytime electricity demand from these units, coal power plays a significant role in powering air conditioners on warm nights.

By 2037, India’s space-cooling demand was expected to grow nearly 11-fold in a business-as-usual scenario compared to 2017, according to the government’s 2019 India Cooling Action Plan (ICAP).

According to a World Bank study, this would mean a new air-conditioning unit is bought every 15 seconds in India. There would also be a 435% increase in annual greenhouse gas emissions related to air conditioning in the country over the next two decades.

The chart below shows the ICAP’s estimated rise in air conditioner units in India from 2021 to 2037. The blue line represents a high-growth scenario, while the green line corresponds to a low-growth scenario.

Residential air-conditioner ownership projections under low (green line) and high (blue line) growth scenarios, according to the India Cooling Action Plan’s projections. Source: ICAP (2019).
Residential air-conditioner ownership projections under low (green line) and high (blue line) growth scenarios, according to the India Cooling Action Plan’s projections. Source: ICAP (2019).

Growing demand

Despite the upswing in installations over recent years, it remains rare for households to have access to air conditioning in India.

According to India’s national sample survey in 2020-21, only 4.9% of Indian households owned air conditioning, with ownership concentrated among the urban rich. As of 2024, this had increased to around 8%.

(Ownership of evaporative air coolers is significantly higher than it is for air conditioning, particularly in the arid north and central Indian states, where humidity is low.)

Dr Nikit Abhyankar, an associate adjunct professor at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California Berkeley, tells Carbon Brief that India is set to add between 100-150m new air conditioners in the next 10 years, which could go up to 200m “if you factor in the crazy heatwaves”.

According to his research, the two factors that drive “dramatic” sales of ACs are income and extreme temperatures.

He tells Carbon Brief:

“The moment you cross a specific income threshold, the first appliance you buy is an air conditioner, no matter whether it’s hot or not. And the moment there are extreme temperatures, the next summer, you see a huge wave of new ACs being purchased.”

With that in mind, he says India offers a “classic lock-in opportunity”, since 90% of the air conditioners that will exist in 2040 have yet to be purchased, particularly given the tendency among Indian users to repair and reuse units. Abhyankar continues:

“That’s why making sure that first AC purchase is the most efficient one is very important in India, because that AC is not going out of the market in seven years.”

Energy-efficient units

With the number of air-conditioning units in India on the rise, ensuring they are as energy-efficient as possible could save households money, while cutting emissions and electricity demand.

India’s Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) mandates star ratings for air conditioners to indicate their efficiency. It uses a metric called the Indian seasonal energy efficiency ratio (ISEER), which is based on an India-specific temperature distribution.

Ratings range from one to five stars, with the latter being the most energy-efficient.

According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), three-star units “dominate” India’s air-conditioning market, “possibly due to [up-front] cost considerations”, while four- and five-star units account for a minority of sales.

The chart below shows AC production volumes in India between 2019 and 2023 by energy-efficiency star rating, according to the IEA.

Annual air conditioner production volumes in India by efficiency rating and fiscal year, 2019-2023. Source: International Energy Agency (2024).
Annual air conditioner production volumes in India by efficiency rating and fiscal year, 2019-2023. Source: International Energy Agency (2024).

Carbon Brief analysis finds that buying a five-star air conditioner could cut the emissions associated with generating electricity to run the unit by around 300 kilograms (kg) of CO2 per year, when compared to a two-star unit.

As such, if all 15m air-conditioning units expected to be sold in 2026 were five-star, it could save 5MtCO2 annually.

This is roughly equivalent to the emissions from an average-sized coal-fired power plant, the analysis shows.

In a year, the lower electricity demand from more efficient units could mean ₹69bn ($724m) in cost savings for consumers, as shown in the chart below. Each affected household could save ₹4,600 ($48) annually on their bills.

Running cost (blue) and potential savings (red) of 15m two-star and five-star rated air-conditioning in a year, ₹bn. Source: Carbon Brief analysis.
Running cost (blue) and potential savings (red) of 15m two-star and five-star rated air-conditioning in a year, ₹bn. Source: Carbon Brief analysis.

There are also significant savings from five-star units compared with three-stars, amounting to around 150kgCO2 and ₹2,300 ($24) per household per year.

Carbon Brief’s illustrative analysis is supported by a new working paper from the India Energy and Climate Center (IECC) at UC Berkeley, which looks at the longer-term impact of AC demand on electricity demand and emissions, as well as grid investment costs and consumer savings.

Released in May 2026, it says that room air conditioners already account for nearly a quarter of India’s peak electricity demand (60-70GW).

The authors estimate that AC-driven peak power demand could reach 120GW by 2030 and 180GW by 2035, pushing India’s power grid beyond its capacity. They warn:

“Even with all under-construction generation and storage projects online, power shortages are expected as early as 2028.”

Sustained energy-efficiency improvements, however, could reduce this cooling-driven peak power demand by 10GW by 2030 and 47GW by 2035.

They estimate that these improvements could help avoid nearly $80bn in power infrastructure investments and deliver $9-25bn in consumer savings between 2028 and 2035, while reducing emissions by 12MtCO2 per year by 2030.

Rolling out five-star units

While there are emissions and cost benefits to five-star air-conditioning units compared to the alternatives, the higher upfront costs can still present a barrier.

These more energy-efficient units can pay for their higher purchase price over a three-year period, but on average cost ₹5,000 to ₹8,000 ($52-84) more upfront than a three-star unit.

Researchers at the Indian climate thinktank Sustainable Futures Collaborative (SFC) called on Indian state and national governments to create a “highly-targeted active cooling” programme last year.

They recommended deploying a subsidy or a large-scale purchase programme that allows families to buy energy-efficient air conditioners. This, they said, must be targeted at portions of Indian cities with the highest heat risk, determined by the vulnerability assessments of their heat action plans.

Climate adaptation researcher at King’s College London and SFC author Aditya Valiathan Pillai tells Carbon Brief: 

“Commit money to air conditioning for the poorest-of-the-poor: subsidise ultra-efficient ACs and electricity, but give them cool air at the cheapest possible, most efficient rate. 

“Because these are the people running the economy, which is not going to function in a heatwave if these people are dying or unable to work.”

Methodology

Carbon Brief’s analysis is based on official energy consumption, power pricing and emissions data from different ministries and government institutions.

It uses BEE’s “search and compare” tool to list all five-star and three-star “variable speed” or “inverter” air conditioners, given their enhanced efficiency and ability to regulate humidity.

This was then filtered to air conditioners with a capacity of 1.5t, which studies say are most preferred by Indian households.

Using the same tool, Carbon Brief then listed all “fixed speed” two-star ACs of a similar capacity (1.45t to 1.55t), given that these account for the majority of two-star ACs available on the market and favoured by renters.

Based on expert estimates, the analysis lists the energy consumption of each of these key categories in kilowatt-hours (kWh) and added 15% to account for losses in power transmission and distribution.

The carbon intensity of Indian electricity is specified by the CO2 baseline database published by India’s Central Electricity Authority in November 2025.

The number of hours per year a household’s air conditioning runs is estimated at 1,600 hours by the BEE.

Carbon Brief uses a marginal electricity tariff of ₹10 per kWh to calculate annual electricity consumption costs.

This is because average electricity tariffs vary significantly from state to state, but especially by energy consumption “slabs”, with AC use pushing bills into higher-tariff rates.

For instance, in Maharashtra, electricity tariffs for domestic households range from ₹1.52 per unit for below-poverty-line households to ₹16.64 per unit for homes using more than 500 units of electricity.

Savings from higher energy efficiency, therefore, reduce electricity consumption in the highest electricity tariff block, where rates are the most expensive.

Cooling hours

Air-conditioner usage varies across India’s climatic zones. The ISEER metric that underpins star ratings estimates that, on average, a household air conditioner runs for 1, 600 hours a year.

This estimate is based on 2014 weather data for 54 cities across India, to see how many hours in a year temperatures exceed 24C.

Refrigerant emissions

The analysis only accounts for emissions from electricity generation and does not factor in “fugitive” emissions from refrigerant leaks.

These are significant, given that refrigerants are greenhouse gases that can have hundreds of times more warming potential than CO2.

According to a study published by climate thinktank iForest last year, Indian households with air conditioning are refilling their refrigerants more frequently than the global average.

It estimates that greenhouse gas emissions from refrigerant release from India’s air conditioners were 52Mt of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) in 2024, likely to increase to 84MtCO2e by 2035.

Cooling access and population data

Government estimates vary on how many Indian households do not own a single air conditioner, with little publicly available data differentiating between cooling devices and a delayed national census.

India’s national sample survey, published in 2020-21, is the only one of its kind in recent years to separate air-conditioner ownership from air cooler ownership, estimating that only 4.9% of all Indian households owned an air conditioner.

The post Analysis: Energy-efficient air conditioning could save Indian homes 69bn rupees a year appeared first on Carbon Brief.

Analysis: Energy-efficient air conditioning could save Indian homes 69bn rupees a year

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Climate Change

Coral reefs are not doomed – but policy must catch up with the science 

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Dr. Stacy Jupiter is the Executive Director of the Wildlife Conservation Society’s Global Marine Program. Melissa Wright is Bloomberg Ocean Initiative Lead at Bloomberg Philanthropies.

For years, the dominant story on coral reefs has been one of inevitable loss, with news headlines focusing on mass bleaching, ecosystem collapse, and catastrophic tipping points. As ocean temperatures continue to rise, many people have come to see the decline of the world’s reefs as unavoidable.

The threats are real and urgent, but new evidence points to a more complicated and useful conclusion: some reefs still have a meaningful chance to survive and recover, provided they are protected.

A major new analysis, published today with the support of Bloomberg Philanthropies, identifies more than 165,000 square kilometers of coral reefs, across 71 countries and 100 territories and jurisdictions, with the strongest potential to withstand and recover from climate impacts. 

Drawing on more than 45,000 coral surveys, along with decades of climate and ocean data, the research finds that three times more reefs may be capable of surviving the climate crisis than previously understood. That has major implications for reef-dependent communities, food security, coastal protection, fisheries, tourism, and national economies.

    Essential natural infrastructure for communities

    The findings make clear that reefs will not all respond to climate impacts in the same way. Some are located in rare underwater cool spots that can help shield them from extreme heat. Some show greater resistance to bleaching and other climate-related stress. Others recover more quickly after severe disturbances. These differences matter because they show where protection can have the greatest long-term impact.

    More than 500 million people depend on reefs for food, livelihoods, and coastal protection. For those communities, climate-resilient reefs are not an abstract conservation priority. They are essential natural infrastructure. They help protect coastlines, sustain fisheries, support local economies, and reduce climate risk. Because ocean currents move coral larvae and marine life between reef systems, some of these reefs may also help regenerate wider reef ecosystems after climate shocks.

    This should change how governments, funders, and conservation partners prioritize action.

    Climate change remains the greatest long-term threat to coral reefs. At the same time, many of the pressures pushing reefs closer to collapse are immediate and local. Sewage pollution, deforestation, agricultural runoff, destructive fishing practices, and poorly managed coastal development continue to damage reefs that are already under stress. Recent research shows that water pollution and fishing pressure are now among the leading local threats affecting nearly two-thirds of the world’s coral reefs.

    These pressures can be reduced. Governments and local partners are already working to improve reef management, cut pollution, strengthen enforcement, and protect critical ecosystems. Those efforts need to move faster, alongside much stronger action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

    Prioritising climate-resilient reefs

    The new maps of climate-resilient reefs give governments, communities, and reef managers a clearer basis for action. They show where reefs have the strongest potential to persist over time, and where protection can deliver the greatest benefits for people, coastlines, and economies.

    Right now, only around 28 percent of the identified climate-resilient reefs fall within protected or conserved areas. If these reefs are among the most capable of surviving climate impacts and helping regenerate broader reef systems, they should be prioritized for protection, management, and investment.

    The case for action is practical as well as ecological. Healthy reefs can reduce wave energy by up to 97 percent, helping protect coastlines from storms, flooding, and erosion. They support fisheries that feed millions of people, sustain tourism jobs and local economies, and help reduce climate risk for vulnerable coastal communities.

    For many families, a healthy reef means food, income, and protection when storms hit. For Indigenous Peoples and coastal communities, reefs are also tied to culture, heritage, identity, and traditional knowledge systems.

    Ocean conservation must catch up

    Governments are beginning to recognize the urgency of protecting climate-resilient reefs. At last year’s UN Ocean Conference in Nice, 11 countries signed a declaration committing to stronger protection of these reefs, including action to address destructive fishing, pollution, and unsustainable coastal development.

    As leaders meet in Kenya this week to discuss the challenges facing the world’s ocean, more governments should join the declaration and help build a broader coalition committed to safeguarding these critical ecosystems.

    As coral reefs pass tipping point, ocean protection rises up political agenda

    Some countries are already showing what this leadership can look like. Brazil has included corals in its national climate plans. The Bahamas is embedding reef protection into national policy and local stewardship systems. The declaration offers a way to build on these efforts and scale them globally.

    But commitments will not be enough. Success will depend on implementation. That means stronger protection and management, reduced local pressures, increased investment, and meaningful support for the Indigenous Peoples and local communities stewarding these ecosystems.

    The science is clear. Many reefs still have the capacity to persist and recover. The question is whether policy and investment will move quickly enough to protect them, so they can continue sustaining communities, economies, and coastlines for generations to come.

    The post Coral reefs are not doomed – but policy must catch up with the science  appeared first on Climate Home News.

    Coral reefs are not doomed – but policy must catch up with the science 

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    Climate Change

    Months After a Jet Fuel Leak, No Agency Tested Waters Downstream of Piscataway Creek. So Community Groups Are Doing It Themselves.

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    Authorities that manage the Potomac River tributary did not sample the stretch where residents fish and recreate. One Indigenous leader sees the lack of response as part of a pattern of ongoing neglect.

    In the five months after jet fuel started leaking from Joint Base Andrews into Piscataway Creek, no agency tested the water or sediment some 20 miles downstream, where the creek empties into the Potomac River and the shoreline community and anglers gather to fish and boat along the riverbank.

    Months After a Jet Fuel Leak, No Agency Tested Waters Downstream of Piscataway Creek. So Community Groups Are Doing It Themselves.

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