Uganda’s government has defended plans to ramp up its nascent oil industry by citing a contested scenario for rising fossil fuel use that is favoured by the Trump administration over more climate-friendly models.
Energy analysts have warned that the East African nation’s drive to fund development by producing and exporting oil is a risky strategy due to projections of cost overruns and over-supplied markets as the world transitions away from fossil fuels.
Asked to comment on such warnings, a spokesperson for the Petroleum Authority of Uganda (PAU) referred to the Current Policies Scenario outlined in the International Energy Agency’s World Energy Outlook 2025 (WEO) report.
One of several different scenarios in the report, that scenario is the most negative on climate action – assuming current policies and no further emissions cuts – and projects that oil demand will continue to rise until at least 2050.
“This position is aligned to Uganda’s development aspirations that will leverage our oil and gas resources,” the PAU spokesperson told Climate Home News.
The issue highlights the stakes for Uganda as it invests heavily in oil infrastructure and also shows how U.S. pushback against climate action under President Donald Trump is being used to justify new fossil fuel projects.
IEA’s “cautious” scenario
The IEA’s annual World Energy Outlook report includes long-term projections for global trends on energy demand and supply, investments, government policies as well as the climate and transition targets that might affect energy markets in the years to come.
They include several different scenarios including the Stated Policies Scenario, which reflects policies already implemented or announced and the Net Zero Emissions by 2050 Scenario, which maps out a pathway to achieve specific energy and climate-related goals. Under the Stated Policies Scenario, oil demand is set to peak around 2030.
The Current Policies Scenario (CPS) was removed from the WEO scenarios in 2020 but was reintroduced in last year’s report following pressure from the Trump administration, which has criticised the agency’s climate focus and urged it to include outlooks that better reflect continued fossil fuel use.
Tanzania pushed African nations to oppose fossil fuel transition at COP30
The Paris-based energy body describes the CPS as “cautious” and based on enacted laws and measures.
Asked to comment on Uganda’s citing of the CPS to justify its oil industry plans, an IEA spokesperson said none of the scenarios were forecasts and “the IEA does not assign likelihoods of one scenario prevailing over another”.
“There is no single storyline about the future of energy,” the spokesperson said, adding that it was up to governments and other stakeholders to explore the consequences of policy choices related to issues such as energy security, affordability and sustainability.
Protecting the economy?
Uganda’s oil ambitions involve developing two oilfields on the shores of Lake Albert – Tilenga and Kingfisher – and building the 900-mile (1,443-km) East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP), with the aim of transporting 230,000 barrels of crude per day to Tanzania’s Tanga port for export.
Officials from the government of President Yoweri Museveni say domestic crude production and a planned refinery will cut reliance on imported petroleum products and protect the economy.


But climate and energy experts say the plan is risky. A report published this month by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis found that Uganda stands to benefit far less from oil production than previously projected.
The country’s use of the IEA’s Current Policies Scenario raises further questions, said Dave Jones, chief analyst at Ember, an independent, non-profit energy think-tank focused on accelerating the global energy transition.
“[Using] the CPS, from a perspective of oil demand, is extraordinarily unrealistic,” he told Climate Home News. He said the CPS was not the IEA’s lead scenario “so countries should not give much weight to it”.
He noted, for instance, that the CPS assumes the same number of electric vehicles are sold in 2050 as 2024 in the world outside of China and the EU.
“This is completely at odds with all the evidence of 2025, which shows EVs’ sales share is soaring across many countries, especially emerging countries,” he said.
African banks back oil export pipeline despite climate commitments
Terry Githinji, Africa programme manager at Oil Change International, a research and advocacy group, said it was “alarming” that Uganda was relying on the most fossil-heavy IEA scenario to justify expanding oil production – warning of the dire climate and social impacts that such a path would entail.
“Betting Uganda’s future on a high-risk fossil pathway that enriches foreign oil companies while leaving Ugandans to bear the economic and climate risks is a dangerous gamble, especially when the IEA’s own analysis shows renewables are cheaper, create more jobs, and deliver energy access faster,” Githinji added.
The post Uganda cites contentious IEA fossil fuel scenario backed by Trump administration appeared first on Climate Home News.
Uganda cites contentious IEA fossil fuel scenario backed by Trump administration
Climate Change
Africa’s mineral wealth can make it an architect of a more just energy transition
Mohamed Okash is the Founding Director of the Institute of Climate and Environment at SIMAD University in Somalia.
A recent report by the African Finance Corp. suggests that Africa holds an approximate $29.5 trillion in mineral wealth. It is little wonder then that the continent is once again being courted for what lies beneath its soil.
For Africa, this moment feels both familiar — and fraught. Indeed, the stakes are not only about minerals; they are about whether a continent with the world’s youngest population will be shaped by decisions made elsewhere, or finally assert control over how its future is built.
It is time for African policymakers, political leaders, and regional institutions to treat minerals not merely as export commodities, but as strategic bargaining tools.
From cobalt and lithium to the rare earth minerals powering electric vehicles, renewable energy systems, and modern defence technologies, global powers are racing to secure the resources they believe will define the next century.
In this context, Africa has a strategic advantage. The continent holds an estimated 30% of the world’s critical mineral reserves, including over 55% of global cobalt, around 44% of global manganese, significant shares of platinum-group metals, and fast-growing lithium discoveries in countries such as the Democratic Republic of Congo, Zimbabwe, Ghana and others. Despite this endowment, Africa only captures less than 1% of global mineral value addition.
A regional approach to value addition
To turn this tide, African policymakers, political leaders, and regional institutions must be intentional about the terms under which these resources leave the continent.
One practical step would be adopting common beneficiation thresholds, requiring that certain minerals not be exported in raw form, but only after reaching a defined level of domestic processing, such as concentration, refining, or precursor production. Instead of shipping unprocessed lithium ore or cobalt concentrate abroad, for example, governments could require some level of upgrading at home.
A handful of African nations have already taken such measures.
In 2023, Namibia banned exports of unprocessed lithium and other critical minerals to encourage local beneficiation. That same year, Ghana announced a lithium agreement that also included provisions for local value addition and state participation, signalling that raw mineral exports will not define its long-term strategy. And just last week, Zimbabwe suspended exports of lithium concentrates and all raw minerals. The government framed the move as a way to compel domestic processing and downstream investment rather than continued raw export dependency.
In addition, the African Union has been pushing toward a more coordinated regional approach to minerals through its African Mining Vision. Fully implementing such an approach would not only strengthen the continent’s bargaining power but prevent companies from simply shifting operations to the country offering the weakest standards.
Mineral revenues can help fund climate plans
Of course, export restrictions alone are not a silver bullet. They work best when backed by clear regulation, reliable energy supply, infrastructure investment, and regional coordination.
Aligning mineral policy with energy, climate, and industrial strategies is equally important. That means linking mining licenses to renewable energy investment consistent with the Paris Agreement, directing mineral revenues into long-term industrial or green transformation funds rather than short-term budget fixes, and using frameworks such as the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to build cross-border value chains. Strong transparency standards under the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) can further strengthen public trust and fiscal stability.
Critical minerals give Africa a real chance to move beyond aid-dependent development and invest in growth driven from within. Managed well, they can help finance locally led transformation, creating jobs, building industries, and strengthening economic resilience.
A different model with young people at the table
This debate cannot be confined to boardrooms and foreign capitals, however. Africa has one of the youngest populations on Earth, yet for many young people, the future is not guaranteed, shaped by persistent poverty, inequality, conflict, and accelerating climate shocks that erode livelihoods and public trust.
Young people must have a seat at the table. And they are already making their voices heard; speaking boldly about the future they want, sparking public conversation through entrepreneurship, organising, research, art, and policy advocacy. Indeed, the mineral agreements signed today will determine whether this generation inherits jobs and dignity, or deeper vulnerability and unfinished promises.
Africa’s future should not be secured by the goodwill of external partners, nor by repeating extractive bargains dressed up as development. It should be shaped by African leaders who choose value creation over raw export, and long-term sovereignty over short-term gain.
In a world marked by climate change and growing geopolitical rivalry, Africa has something few others possess: the resources, the market, and the moral claim to insist on a different model.
If that mineral wealth is governed with the right policies, transparency, and foresight, it can anchor green industrialisation, expand opportunity for a rising generation, and reposition Africa not as a prize in a new scramble, but as a decisive architect of a more just and sustainable global order.
The post Africa’s mineral wealth can make it an architect of a more just energy transition appeared first on Climate Home News.
Africa’s mineral wealth can make it an architect of a more just energy transition
Climate Change
Lobbyist Disclosure Failures Disadvantages Maryland Climate Advocates, According to Audit
The opaque system allows industry operatives to shape legislative decisions with little public oversight, a nonprofit research group has found.
As Maryland lawmakers weigh proposals aimed at reining in utility companies, lowering electricity prices and expanding the state’s low-carbon energy system, a new audit report has found that the lobbyists who want to influence those decisions have largely operated in the dark—and done so legally.
Lobbyist Disclosure Failures Disadvantages Maryland Climate Advocates, According to Audit
Climate Change
Facing Its Third Data Center, an Iowa County Rolls Out Extensive Zoning Rules
Linn County has adopted some of the nation’s strictest data center zoning rules. Residents say the protections aren’t enough.
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Facing Its Third Data Center, an Iowa County Rolls Out Extensive Zoning Rules
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