- Canadian women's coach, two aides out after drone scandal
- Sinner turns aside Fritz to close in on ATP Finals last four
- Global stocks slip as markets take post-US election breather
- UN condemns 'acts reminiscent of the gravest international crimes' in Gaza
- US bans flights to Haiti as gang violence rages
- Aga Khan emerald fetches record $9 mn in Geneva auction
- Venezuela crackdown helped avert 'civil war': attorney general
- Trump shapes team ahead of White House return
- Climate cash should also go to nuclear, says UN atomic chief
- Free Facebook in EU with less targeted ads
- Dupont set to be fit for New Zealand despite illness
- New balls, please, plead top men's tennis players
- Ban rules Radradra out of Fiji's final November internationals
- US contractor ordered to pay $42 mn to Iraqis tortured at Abu Ghraib
- Lame-duck US climate team vows to be 'effective' at COP29
- Painter Frank Auerbach, contemporary of Freud and Bacon, dies at 93
- UN carbon market inches closer after COP29 agreement
- US finalizes waste methane fine on drillers, but future uncertain
- Fifteen inmates killed in new Ecuador jail massacre
- Trump tariff worries trip up stocks rally, dollar climbs
- Israel opens Gaza humanitarian crossing but aid groups say not enough
- 35 killed, dozens wounded in south China car ramming
- 'Carbon-neutral' countries demand credit at COP29
- FA investigates Premier League referee Coote over video rant
- Boeing expects post-strike output recovery to take several weeks
- Trump shapes cabinet ahead of White House return
- Blinken in emergency Brussels trip on Ukraine after Trump win
- All Blacks scrum-halves 'inspired' to play 'master' Dupont
- Medvedev sees off De Minaur to boost ATP Finals bid
- Lindt disputes US lawsuit claims, stands by 'excellence' labelling
- Trump tariff worries trip up stocks rally
- UK to beef up its emissions cuts as it bids to be 'climate leader'
- Nations to submit boosted climate plans: what's at stake?
- French footballer Ben Yedder gets suspended jail term for sexual assault
- Nuclear watchdog chief says room to manoeuvre on Iran 'shrinking'
- Russia jails doctor over alleged Ukraine comments during consultation
- EU vessels to cease fishing in Senegal after accord expires
- Bayer shares hit 20-yr low as problems pile up
- Russian MPs pass law banning 'propaganda' of childless lifestyles
- NATO 'must do more than just keep Ukraine in fight', says Rutte
- EU unity in a 'world on fire': Kallas makes top diplomat pitch
- UK vows to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 81% on 1990 levels by 2035
- Crisis-hit Germany headed for February 23 snap election
- C.Africa urges lifting of embargo on diamond exports
- Poland hoping Swiatek can inspire BJK Cup 'revenge' against Spain
- Court challenge begins against UK oil and gas field approvals
- Stock markets retreat on Trump tariff worries
- Spain PM accused of 'blackmail' by tying budget to flood aid
- Lineker to leave Match of the Day after 26 years
- New EU chief diplomat backs Ukraine as bloc's top team faces grilling
RBGPF | 0.05% | 60.22 | $ | |
RYCEF | -2.37% | 7.16 | $ | |
SCS | 0.15% | 13.67 | $ | |
NGG | -1.97% | 62.9 | $ | |
RELX | -2.6% | 46.59 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.73% | 24.54 | $ | |
AZN | 0.61% | 65.19 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.85% | 24.75 | $ | |
RIO | -2.29% | 61.2 | $ | |
GSK | -2.34% | 35.52 | $ | |
BTI | 0.26% | 35.24 | $ | |
BCC | -1.42% | 141.13 | $ | |
VOD | -10.04% | 8.47 | $ | |
BCE | -0.58% | 27.69 | $ | |
JRI | -2.27% | 13.22 | $ | |
BP | -2.7% | 28.16 | $ |
Western thirst for African gas raises alarm at COP27
Wealthy Western nations facing an energy crunch are eyeing natural gas in Africa at the expense of supporting green transition in poorer countries, climate activists at COP27 charge.
European countries have been scrambling for alternative sources of gas after the continent's former top supplier, Russia, slashed exports in apparent retaliation for Western sanctions over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine in February.
Gas-rich Norway has since overtaken Russia as a leading supplier, but Europe sees great potential in African fossil fuel reserves, including promising oil and gas discoveries in Senegal and Democratic Republic of Congo.
Europe wants "to turn Africa into its gas station," Mohamed Adow, director of the Power Shift Africa think tank, said at the UN climate summit in Egypt.
"We don't have to follow the footsteps of the rich world that actually caused climate change in the first place."
Exporting natural gas may bring short-term profits but exacerbate the climate crisis and leave African nations worse off in the long run, activists, researchers and advocacy groups said.
Research group Climate Action Tracker called the global dash for gas a "serious threat" to the Paris Agreement goals -- of keeping global warming well below two degrees Celsius, and preferably at 1.5 degrees compared to pre-industrial levels.
- 'Stranded assets' -
Some African leaders argued the potential benefits for people on the world's poorest continent outweighed the harm from the production and export of fossil fuels.
"We are in favour of a just and fair green transition, instead of decisions that harm our development process," Senegalese President Macky Sall told some 100 world leaders last week at COP27.
Germany -- the European country most dependent on Russian supplies before the war -- has been keen to tap Senegal's gas deposits.
Omar Farouk Ibrahim, secretary general of the African Petroleum Producers' Organization, argued the slight increase in the continent's marginal contribution to greenhouse gas emissions "would make a fundamental difference in whether people live or die".
"We have 600 million people in Africa who don't have access to electricity at all. We have over 900 million people in Africa who do not have access to modern form of energy for cooking or domestic heating," he said.
"No progress can be made in any society without energy."
But advocacy groups were not convinced Africa's poor would reap any benefits.
"History shows us that... extraction in African countries has not resulted in development," said Thuli Makama, African programme director at Oil Change International.
Makama, a lawyer from Eswatini, said the Ukraine war would only trigger "short-term" demand from Western nations, leaving African countries with "stranded assets" -- infrastructure that becomes obsolete as the world turns to renewables.
Governments and companies would have invested in infrastructure only to be "left with stranded assets, clean-up expenses and all the devastation that comes with the industry for local people", Makama warned.
- 'Incredible' potential -
A report released Monday by the Carbon Tracker Initiative think tank said Western investment in fossil fuels will eventually evaporate, encouraging African countries instead to seize on the potential offered by solar power.
"The way to help us actually address our energy poverty challenge is for us to tap the incredible renewable energy potential that exists on the continent of Africa," Adow said.
African nations could refuse any further extraction of fossil fuels and make the continent a "green leader", he added.
But investment in renewable energy across the continent last year fell to its lowest level in 11 years, the research group BloombergNEF said on Wednesday.
Out of the $434 billion invested worldwide in renewables in 2021, a meagre 0.6 percent went to projects in Africa, the report said.
The Carbon Tracker Initiative report said the solar industry across Africa provided 14 gigawatts of power in 2021.
It noted however that with production costs falling, solar power in Africa "has the potential to grow... to over 400 gigawatts by 2050" -- half of the continent's energy needs.
Y.Nakamura--AMWN