Friday, April 26, 2024

What US Pulling Out Of Paris Pact Means For Kenya, Africa

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By Leonard Onyango

To maintain mantle of leadership in the global arena, they say, the world’s most powerful country needs to reassess its positions on global initiatives like the Paris Climate Accord.

This is due to the fact that China is currently the world’s largest producer of wind and solar energy and the largest investor in green energy projects. It’s home for the world’s six largest solar manufacturing companies.

But the bitter truth is that developing countries stand to lose the most.

The Paris Agreement aims at strengthening the global response to the threat of climate change by keeping a global temperature below 2 degrees in this century.

In Kenya, for example, a slight rise in temperature above 2 degrees could cause increase in seawater capable of submerging Mombasa County and 17 per cent of coastal areas, according to the Kenya National Climate Change Action Plan (NCCAP) 2018-2022.

Article 9 of the Paris Agreement that entered into force on November 4, 2016, stipulates that developed country Parties such as US, China, Russia, India and Japan, among others, shall provide financial resources to assist developing country parties like Kenya to put in place appropriate financial flows, new technology and capacity building frameworks in line with their own national objectives.

FUNDING

It says that $100 billion (Sh10 trillion) in public and private resources will need to be raised each year from 2020 to finance projects that enable developing countries, which are hit hard by the impacts of climate change such as drought, floods, diseases among other stressors to build resilience.

Kenya is one of the countries that are supposed to benefit from part of the Sh10 trillion funding to build infrastructures that will, for instance, cushion people against the ravaging floods that have claimed about 20 lives in the last two months, and help the country become food secure among other capacities.

United States’ withdrawal from the Climate Accord is a hard slap on the face of Kenya and other developing countries because it is the world’s second-biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, behind China, and is by far the largest cumulative greenhouse gas emitter in history.

With US pulling out of the accord, it means that the likelihood of mobilizing the required amount is next to impossible.

According to World Bank statistics, every American is responsible for 16.5 tonnes of carbon dioxide.

RESPONSIBILITY

On the other hand, each Kenyan is responsible for 0.3 tonnes of carbon dioxide. The difference is so huge given that Kenya’s population is only 14 per cent of the United State’s.

According to United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the entire of Africa continent accounts for only between two to three per cent of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions mostly from energy and industrial sources…Read more>>

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