As the Annual Meetings of the African Development Bank (AfDB) took place this week in the Ivory Coast, civil society campaigners have been calling for the bank to stop funding fossil gas, but a senior official told Climate Home that the bank will continue to fund the fossil fuel in order to support intermittent sources of renewable electricity.
On the sidelines of the meetings in Abidjan, these campaigners criticised the bank’s decision not to exempt investments in gas from its energy sector policy and called on the bank to exclude gas projects in Mission 300 — a joint initiative of the AfDB and World Bank launched last year to connect 300 million Africans to electricity by 2030.
“We should be doing all that we can to help Africa leapfrog [to renewables] and not dive deeper into the gas era,” said Greenwatch policy advisor Anja Gebel at a side event organised by Power Shift Africa.
Echoing this call, after the election of Mauritania’s Ould Sidi Tah as the bank’s next president, civil society groups in a statement said that the new president should institute “a comprehensive ban on fossil fuel financing by the AfDB, including gas”.
Cobalt and nickel-free electric car batteries boom in “good news” for rainforests
But Wale Shonibare, AfDB’s director for energy financial solutions, policy, and regulations, does not see the bank’s funding of gas ending soon. He said that the bank will continue funding gas because it will serve as a transition fuel.
He said that, in some parts of the continent, gas can cheaply provide the necessary baseload – meaning a consistent supply of electricity – to support solar and wind power, whose electricity generation varies. “When the sun is not shining what happens? so you need baseload that will be there all the time ,” he told Climate Home.
Shonibare said that the grid is a controlling factor, and countries must assess how much renewable energy their infrastructure can handle. He gave the example of Chad, saying their grid capacity is only about 150 megawatts.
“I cannot put more than 30 megawatts of renewables on the grid, otherwise it’s going to destabilise the grid”, he said, so base load from gas or hydropower is necessary.
The AfDB has made it clear that it will no longer finance coal, Shonibare said, but “we have never said that we will never do any fossil but when we do fossil we are going to justify that that’s the best and least-cost solution for the countries at the time”. For now, it is impractical for Africa to go from fossil fuels to renewables, he added.
Peruvian farmer loses climate case against RWE – but paves way for future action
Europe’s gas station
Rajneesh Bhuee, Stop Funding Gas Campaign manager at Recourse, said the bank promotes fossil gas as the least-cost solution due to its readily available reserves on the continent, but in reality, these countries are not tapping into those reserves for local consumption.
“There is no country on the continent that you can point out and say that has invested in gas that is using that gas for local consumption. There is this narrative that Africa is becoming Europe’s gas station because we are continuously exporting gas,” she told Climate Home.
She warned that fossil gas threatens countries’ climate goals, locks countries into long-term dependence on fossil fuels and deepens debt crisis of these countries “because they are investing into a resource that in the next 10 to 15 years will no longer have a market”.
Bhuee’s Recourse, which developed a fact sheet alongside other civil society, found that while the AfDB reached a significant milestone in 2024 with no fossil fuel project funding approved, the bank’s classification of high carbon fossil gas as a ‘transition fuel’, leaves the door open for backsliding to more fossil investments in the future.
Scientists predict global warming of more than 1.5C for 2025-2029 period
The fact sheet recommended that the AfDB should exclude gas from Mission 300 and maintain the phase out of fossil fuels investments by changing the bank’s energy sector policy to exclude all fossil fuels including fossil gas, from future investments.
Ould Tah backs fossil fuels
Civil society groups want the new president to take this forward and pave a new path for the continent’s energy future by shifting toward 100% renewables.
Fiza Naz Qureshi, gas campaigner at Big Shift Global Campaign, said Ould Tah must show “bold leadership that breaks from fossil fuel dependency,” adding that continued support for gas — including through Mission 300 and clean cooking initiatives — “risks locking communities, especially women, into harmful energy systems”.
But the Mauritanian appears to support a different approach to Africa’s energy future. In an interview with Africanews, he said the continent can thrive by using “all available energy resources to support economic growth”.
Women aren’t 14 times more likely to die in disasters – inequality is the real killer
In a separate interview with The Africa Report, Ould Tah said the bank has the capacity to do more, as currently it approves much less funding annually than other multilateral banks, which he finds concerning considering Africa’s vast infrastructure gaps and the urgency of meeting the sustainable development goals.
However, his ambitions to increase funding may face stiff challenges. The global breakdown in multilateral cooperation and a proposed funding reduction from the United States threaten to constrain the bank’s ability to expand. Just last month, Washington proposed a $555 million cut to the AfDB’s African Development Fund that supports the continent’s poorest countries.
In light of this, the bank is turning to innovative mechanisms like carbon markets to raise financing for climate action and energy security. At the Annual Meetings, the AfDB launched an Africa carbon support facility which officials say will support countries in developing policies and regulations to govern carbon trading. The aim is to make carbon credits a tradable commodity on Africa’s stock exchanges, according to Reuters.
Affirming this commitment, Kevin Kariuki, AfDB’s vice president for power, energy, climate change and green growth said that “carbon market development is an imperative for the continent”.
The post Civil society groups push back on fossil gas funding as AfDB welcomes new president appeared first on Climate Home News.
Civil society groups push back on fossil gas funding as AfDB welcomes new president
Climate Change
Corpus Christi Cuts Timeline to Disaster as Abbott Issues Emergency Orders
The governor’s office said the city’s two main reservoirs could dry up by May, much sooner than previous timelines. But authorities still offer no plan for curtailment of water use.
City officials in Corpus Christi on Tuesday released modeling that showed emergency cuts to water demand could be required as soon as May as reservoir levels continue to decline.
Corpus Christi Cuts Timeline to Disaster as Abbott Issues Emergency Orders
Climate Change
Middle East war is another wake-up call for fossil fuel-reliant food systems
Lena Luig is the head of the International Agricultural Policy Division at the Heinrich Böll Foundation, a member of the Global Alliance for the Future of Food. Anna Lappé is the Executive Director of the Global Alliance for the Future of Food.
As toxic clouds loom over Tehran and Beirut from the US and Israel’s bombardment of oil depots and civilian infrastructure in the region’s ongoing war, the world is once again witnessing the not-so-subtle connections between conflict, hunger, food insecurity and the vulnerability of global food systems dependent on fossil fuels, dominated by a few powerful countries and corporations.
The conflict in Iran is having a huge impact on the world’s fertilizer supply. The Strait of Hormuz is a critical trade route in the region for nearly half of the global supply of urea, the main synthetic fertilizer derived from natural gas through the conversion of ammonia.
With the Strait impacted by Iran’s blockades, prices of urea have shot up by 35% since the war started, just as planting season starts in many parts of the world, putting millions of farmers and consumers at risk of increasing production costs and food price spikes, resulting in food insecurity, particularly for low-income households. The World Food Programme has projected that an extra 45 million people would be pushed into acute hunger because of rises in food, oil and shipping costs, if the war continues until June.
Pesticides and synthetic fertilizer leave system fragile
On the face of it, this looks like a supply chain issue, but at the core of this crisis lies a truth about many of our food systems around the world: the instability and injustice in the very design of systems so reliant on these fossil fuel inputs for our food.
At the Global Alliance, a strategic alliance of philanthropic foundations working to transform food systems, we have been documenting the fossil fuel-food nexus, raising alarm about the fragility of a system propped up by fossil fuels, with 15% of annual fossil fuel use going into food systems, in part because of high-cost, fossil fuel-based inputs like pesticides and synthetic fertilizer. The Heinrich Böll Foundation has also been flagging this threat consistently, most recently in the Pesticide Atlas and Soil Atlas compendia.
We’ve seen this before: Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 sparked global disruptions in fertilizer supply and food price volatility. As the conflict worsened, fertilizer prices spiked – as much from input companies capitalizing on the crisis for speculation as from real cost increases from production and transport – triggering a food price crisis around the world.
Since then, fertilizer industry profit margins have continued to soar. In 2022, the largest nine fertilizer producers increased their profit margins by more than 35% compared to the year before—when fertilizer prices were already high. As Lena Bassermann and Dr. Gideon Tups underscore in the Heinrich Böll Foundation’s Soil Atlas, the global dependencies of nitrogen fertilizer impacted economies around the world, especially state budgets in already indebted and import-dependent economies, as well as farmers across Africa.
Learning lessons from the war in Ukraine, many countries invested heavily in renewable energy and/or increased domestic oil production as a way to decrease dependency on foreign fossil fuels. But few took the same approach to reimagining domestic food systems and their food sovereignty.
Agroecology as an alternative
There is another way. Governments can adopt policy frameworks to encourage reductions in synthetic fertilizer and pesticide use, especially in regions that currently massively overuse nitrogen fertilizer. At the African Union fertilizer and Soil Health Summit in 2024, African leaders at least agreed that organic fertilizers should be subsidized as well, not only mineral fertilizers, but we can go farther in actively promoting agricultural pathways that reduce fossil fuel dependency.
In 2024, the Global Alliance organized dozens of philanthropies to call for a tenfold increase in investments to help farmers transition from fossil fuel dependency towards agroecological approaches that prioritize livelihoods, health, climate, and biodiversity.
In our research, we detail the huge opportunity to repurpose harmful subsidies currently supporting inputs like synthetic fertilizer and pesticides towards locally-sourced bio-inputs and biofertilizer production. We know this works: There are powerful stories of hope and change from those who have made this transition, despite only receiving a fraction of the financing that industrial agriculture receives, with evidence of benefits from stable incomes and livelihoods to better health and climate outcomes.
New summit in Colombia seeks to revive stalled UN talks on fossil fuel transition
Inspiring examples abound: G-BIACK in Kenya is training farmers how to produce their own high-quality compost; start-ups like the Evola Company in Cambodia are producing both nutrient-rich organic fertilizer and protein-rich animal feed with black soldier fly farming; Sabon Sake in Ghana is enriching sugarcane bagasse – usually organic waste – with microbial agents and earthworms to turn it into a rich vermicompost.
These efforts, grounded in ecosystems and tapping nature for soil fertility and to manage pest pressures, are just some of the countless examples around the world, tapping the skill and knowledge of millions of farmers. On a national and global policy level, the Agroecology Coalition, with 480+ members, including governments, civil society organizations, academic institutions, and philanthropic foundations, is supporting a transition toward agroecology, working with natural systems to produce abundant food, boost biodiversity, and foster community well-being.
Fertilizer industry spins “clean” products
We must also inoculate ourselves from the fertilizer industry’s public relations spin, which includes promoting the promise that their products can be produced without heavy reliance on fossil fuels. Despite experts debunking the viability of what the industry has dubbed “green hydrogen” or “green or clean ammonia”, the sector still promotes this narrative, arguing that these are produced with resource-intensive renewable energy or Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS), a costly and unreliable technology for reducing emissions.
As we mourn this conflict’s senseless destruction and death, including hundreds of children, we also recognize that peace cannot mean a return to business-as-usual. We need to upend the systems that allow the richest and most powerful to have dominion over so much.
This includes fighting for a food system that is based on genuine sovereignty and justice, free from dependency on fossil fuels, one that honors natural systems and puts power into the hands of communities and food producers themselves.
The post Middle East war is another wake-up call for fossil fuel-reliant food systems appeared first on Climate Home News.
Middle East war is another wake-up call for fossil fuel-reliant food systems
Climate Change
Are There Climate Fingerprints in Tornado Activity?
Parts of the Southern and Northeastern U.S. faced tornado threats this week. Scientists are trying to parse out the climate links in changing tornado activity.
It’s been a weird few weeks for weather across the United States.
-
Greenhouse Gases7 months ago
Guest post: Why China is still building new coal – and when it might stop
-
Climate Change7 months ago
Guest post: Why China is still building new coal – and when it might stop
-
Greenhouse Gases2 years ago嘉宾来稿:满足中国增长的用电需求 光伏加储能“比新建煤电更实惠”
-
Climate Change2 years ago
Bill Discounting Climate Change in Florida’s Energy Policy Awaits DeSantis’ Approval
-
Climate Change2 years ago嘉宾来稿:满足中国增长的用电需求 光伏加储能“比新建煤电更实惠”
-
Climate Change Videos2 years ago
The toxic gas flares fuelling Nigeria’s climate change – BBC News
-
Carbon Footprint2 years agoUS SEC’s Climate Disclosure Rules Spur Renewed Interest in Carbon Credits
-
Renewable Energy2 years ago
GAF Energy Completes Construction of Second Manufacturing Facility


