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Deliver on “long-overdue” Climate Finance: Africa’s Religious Leaders to Global Community

Religious Leaders reading their statement on the sidelines of the Africa Climate Summit 2023. Credit: Jesuits Africa Madagascar/Facebook

Religious leaders in Africa are calling on members of the international community to live up to their “financial obligation” towards dealing with effects of climate change. 

In their statement read out on the sidelines of the September 4-6 Africa Climate Summit (ACS) and the September 4-8 Africa Climate Week 2023 (ACS) in Kenya’s capital city, Nairobi, the religious leaders also urge leaders on the world second-largest and second-most populous continent to come up with strategies on how to strengthen resilience against climate crises. 

“We call on the International Community to meet its financial obligation to Africa. There hasn't been adequate financial support despite the commitment that developed countries have to the African continent,” Bishop Mathew Hassan Kukah of Nigeria’s Catholic Diocese of Sokoto said Tuesday, September 5. 

Bishop Kukah challenged leaders from the global north “to move past announcements to delivery on commitments made.”

“The Africa Climate Week provides an opportunity for developed countries who have contributed the most to the climate crisis to move beyond rhetoric and deliver long-due finance,” he said.

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The Nigerian Catholic Bishop called upon African leaders to establish “clear roadmaps” to ensure the climate finance given by nations of the global north reaches the most vulnerable communities that are at the highest risk of climate crisis.

“We believe that African leaders must become more transparent in the judicial use of their resources towards improving the quality of lives of their citizens. African leaders must prevent the hemorrhaging of resources from the continent to the Western world,” the 71-year-old Nigerian Catholic Bishop known for good governance and vocal about injustices said. 

At the Nairobi press conference, the Director of the Jesuits Justice and Ecology Network Africa (JENA) emphasized the need for the actualization of the  Loss and Damage Fund for vulnerable nations affected by climate disasters.

Fr. Charles Chilufya spoke the global kitty established to support developing countries facing the devastating impacts of climate change, as agreed upon during the United Nations 27th Conference of Parties Climate Conference (COP 27) in Egypt. 

“We call for operationalization, including capitalization, by rich countries of the loss and damage fund for relief to global south countries through the provision of grant financing for addressing loss and damage,” Fr. Chilufya said.

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The Nairobi-based Zambian Jesuit Priest added, “We call for equity and fairness of finance provided by global financial institutions to poor countries suffering losses and damages.”

In their statement, the religious leaders also urged delegates at the ACS to stop mining fossil fuels. 

“We urge the African leaders to divest from fossil fuel energy sources, oil, gas, and coal, and set clear targets and necessary actions needed to actualize the divestment to operationalize fair and just systems to clean sources that are affordable, efficient and accessible for our communities,” Bishop Chediel Elinaza Sendoro of Mwanga Diocese of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania said.

The Evangelical Lutheran church leader added that Africa’s leaders need to come up with a “clear plan on the threat of adaptation actions, strengthening of adaptation actions and resilience against the consequences of the climate crisis as one of its core outcomes.”

African leaders need to “adopt a concrete science and evidence-based approach and implement adaptation actions that respond to the adaptation needs of the communities,” he said.

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Bishop Sendoro underscored the need for Africa’s leaders to “catalyze the increase of finance for adaptation in Africa through exploring different finance avenues that deliver fair and low-cost finance to African countries and communities.”

The Tanzanian Lutheran Bishop also called up on African leaders to divest from fossil fuels and “set clear targets and necessary actions needed to actualize the divestment to operationalize fair and just systems to clean sources that are affordable, efficient, and accessible for our communities.”

Magdalene Kahiu is a Kenyan journalist with passion in Church communication. She holds a Degree in Social Communications from the Catholic University of Eastern Africa (CUEA). Currently, she works as a journalist for ACI Africa.