African Development Bank commits $2billion to clean cooking
The African Development Bank Group pledged $2 billion over 10 years towards clean cooking solutions in Africa—a major step along the road to saving the lives of 600,000 mainly women and children each year.
Speaking at a
landmark summit on Clean Cooking in Africa held in Paris recently, the Bank
Group’s President Dr Akinwumi Adesina, said the institution would now commit 20
per cent of all its financing of energy projects towards promoting safe
alternatives to cooking with charcoal, wood and biomass.
Receiving heads of
state and government, and leaders of international organizations at the Elysee
Palace to discuss the outcomes of the summit, French President Emmanuel Macron,
praised the African Development Bank’s leading role and commitment to
delivering clean cooking in Africa. The summit resulted in $2.2 billion pledges
from the public and private sectors.
“As part of the
Paris Pact for People and the Planet, and with the commitment of Tanzania,
Norway, the International Energy Agency, the African Development Bank, and many
other partners, we are taking a step forward against this silent scourge today.
We
are mobilizing $2.2 billion to provide clean alternatives to populations in
Africa,” Macron said (https://apo-opa.co/
Addressing the
summit plenary yesterday, the African Development Bank President noted that in
Africa a staggering 1.2 billion people lack access to clean cooking
facilities.
The Summit was
cochaired by United Republic of Tanzania President Dr. Samia Suluhu Hassan,
Norway Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre, African Development Bank Group
President Dr. Akinwumi A. Adesina, and the Executive Director of the
International Energy Agency Dr. Fatih Birol.
In his passionate
address, Adesina declared that it was time to end the sight of African women
and girls, backs bent bearing heavy loads, walking kilometres each day, often
with a lack of security just to cook daily family meals. He noted that the
tools for enabling clean cooking access are readily available and affordable
but had not been sufficiently prioritised.
“As a result over
10 years, six million people, mainly women, will die prematurely. That is not
acceptable,” he told the summit attended by some 20 African heads of state and
government, representatives of all leading international organisations and
global businesses.
“Access to clean
cooking is about more than cooking, it is about dignity… It is more than about
lighting a stove, it is about life itself. It is about fairness, justice and equity
for women,” Adesina said, recalling how as a youth he had damaged his own
eyesight blowing into smoking wooden fires and how a friend had died in a
kerosene-related explosion.
Worldwide, the lack
of access to clean cooking affects over two billion people—more than half of
whom are in Africa, typically cooking over open fires and basic stoves. Using
charcoal, wood, agricultural waste, and animal dung as fuel, they inhale
harmful toxic fumes and smoke with dire consequences for health.
It is the second
leading cause of premature death in Africa. Opportunities for education,
employment and independence are also severely impacted because women instead
spend hours each day foraging for rudimentary fuels.
“This momentous
summit on clean cooking in Africa is the largest ever gathering of leaders and
policy makers dedicated to confronting the issue of access to clean cooking in
Africa. We can fix it,” Adesina added. “There is nothing improved in continued
suffering. No woman in Africa should have to cook again with firewood, charcoal
or biomass. It is time to restore dignity to women who cook in Africa.”
The Bank’s pledge
of $200 million per year represents an important contribution to the
$4 billion per year needed to allow African families to have access to
clean cooking by 2030.
In addition to its
dramatic toll on human lives, the lack of clean cooking facilities is one of
the main causes of deforestation in Africa.
International
Energy Agency figures show that globally 200 million hectares of forest, 110 million
of them in Africa, were at risk because of the climatic effects of cooking with
charcoal, biomass, and wood. “Providing access to clean cooking is not only
right, fair and just—it is also the globally responsible thing to do,” Adesina
said in his address to the Summit plenary session.
Adesina hailed the
event in which close to 60 countries took part, with over 1,000 delegates in
attendance, as a major turning point on an issue which had gone too long
unaddressed.
He added that
commitments announced at the summit go beyond the money alone—they set out
concrete steps on how governments, institutions and the private sector can work
together to solve the clean cooking challenge this decade.
President Samia
Suluhu Hassan of Tanzania told the gathering that successfully advancing the
clean cooking agenda in Africa would contribute towards protecting the
environment, climate, health, and ensuring gender equality.
“This summit
underscores our commitment to advancing this agenda and providing a framework
towards universal adoption of clean cooking fuels and technologies across the
continent,” she said.
President Suluhu
launched during COP28 a national program to solve this challenge in Tanzania,
and in other parts of Africa, with the African Women Clean Cooking Support
Program.
She made a strong
call to the global community to ensure a bold replenishment of the next
three-year cycle of the African Development Bank Group’s concessional window,
the African Development Fund. “To guarantee resources for clean cooking, this
summit has to call for a generous next replenishment of the African Development
Fund that includes $12 billion for clean cooking,” President Suluhu urged.
Prime Minister
Jonas Gahr Støre of Norway said: “Improving access to clean cooking is about
improving health outcomes, reducing emissions, and creating opportunities for
economic growth. With today’s summit, we have mobilized much needed support,
and built a diverse partnership that together can make a real difference.
Norway is a steadfast supporter of clean cooking, and I was pleased to announce
today that we are committed to investing approximately $50 million in this
important cause.”
“This summit has
delivered an emphatic commitment to an issue that has been ignored by too many
people, for too long. We still have a long way to go, but the outcome of this
summit, $2.2 billion committed, can help support fundamental rights such as
health, gender equality and education while also reducing emissions and
restoring forests,” IEA Executive Director Birol declared.
Birol said the IEA
would build on the summit’s achievements by continuing to play a convening role
to engage more willing partners and generate new funds to help meet the
$4 billion a year in capital investments required between now and 2030.
Reaching this level of funding would enable the world to deploy the stoves and
fuel delivery infrastructure needed to reach universal access to clean cooking
in sub-Saharan Africa.
Within this
context, Denmark’s Minister for Development Cooperation and Global Climate Policy
Dan Jannik Jørgensen praised the African Development Bank’s initiative to
establish a dedicated clean cooking sub-program under the Sustainable Energy
Fund for Africa (SEFA).
Established in
2011, SEFA is a multi-donor Special Fund managed which provides catalytic
finance to unlock private sector investments in renewable energy and energy
efficiency. It offers technical assistance and concessional finance instruments
to remove market barriers, build a more robust pipeline of projects and improve
the risk-return profile of individual investments.
The African
Development Bank has been a key advocate for clean cooking access in Africa. In
July 2023, it published with the International Energy Agency a comprehensive
report on clean cooking solutions (https://apo-opa.co/
At COP28, the
African Development Bank hosted a round table on clean cooking during which it
committed to allocating 20% of its annual energy lending towards clean cooking,
generating $2 billion over the next decade. The Bank also supported Tanzania's
clean cooking initiative, which focuses on improving women's access to clean
cooking solutions, launched by President Samia Suluhu Hassan at COP28.
Asia—led by China
and India in the lead—and Latin America have for the most part, succeeded in
resolving the issue over the last 20 years. However, today in Benin, Ethiopia,
Liberia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Tanzania… more than 80 per cent of
the population still depends on biomass to cook their meals. In Nigeria, Kenya
or Ghana, the figure is 70 per cent.
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