Jump to navigation

Ethiopia

Chancellor Scholz seeks cooperation with Africa on tech and green energy

Europe's biggest economy is getting more serious about Africa ahead of its hosting of a finance summit with France

During his three-country tour of East Africa on 4 May, Germany's Chancellor Olaf Scholz became the latest European leader to give its support for a permanent African Union's seat at the G20 group of major economies.

'Africa must play a bigger role in international relations, a role that does justice to the continent and its growing population,' said Scholz at a joint news conference, after meeting African Union Commission Chairman Moussa Faki Mahamat in Addis Ababa.

He added that he was 'convinced' that the AU's G20 membership – giving it the same status as the European Union – would be finalised quickly.

While Europe has not improved its trade and economic offer to the African continent beyond the promise of new public-private investment under the EU's new Global Gateway infrastructure investment programme, European leaders have been pushing in recent months for a bigger diplomatic role for Africa in institutions such as the G20 and UN Security Council (AC Vol 64 No 2, Grand ambitions, little money).

This new political support is intended to bolster  Europe's influence on the continent, though the promises of support at G20 and UN level have been matched by Europe's geopolitical rivals Russia and China.

EU leaders are also hoping to use the 'New Global Financial Pact' summit to be hosted in Paris by France's President Emmanuel Macron in June to demonstrate that it is Africa's main ally on a new international debt relief programme and on climate finance. Much will depend on whether any clear commitments are agreed at the summit – in the wake of what were disappointing talks on financial system reform at the the IMF/World Bank spring meetings in Washington DC last month.

The EU says it could also swing behind Nigeria's hopes of joining the G20. That might help both sides: although Nigeria has Africa's biggest reserves of oil and gas, it has struggled to win over western investors  but has recently started discussing several ambitious plans to export gas to Europe.

Nigeria and Egypt have also been mooted as among the next set of members of an expanded BRICS group (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa). They typify a set of countries in the Global South which are trying to stand back from the intense rivalry between China and the United States.



Related Articles

Grand ambitions, little money

After the summits in Brussels and Washington, their big promises will be tested on debt, trade and investment this year

For many of the delegates who travelled to Washington DC for the United States-African leaders' summit on 13-15 December, the first such gathering in eight years, it was...


Odinga’s fiasco

The Prime Minister’s family suffered badly in the nominations race as a backlash against cronyism made itself felt

When attempts to reform the way political parties nominate their candidates failed, the Independent Election and Boundaries Commission refused to intervene. The IEBC seemed afraid to damage its...


Tentative steps towards peace

The reluctance of some to negotiate, tricky problems between allies, and arm-twisting from the west make for a complex negotiating picture

The fledgling peace process between the Ethiopian federal government and the Tigrayan People's Liberation Front has evolved from a mere cessation of hostilities agreed in Pretoria on 2...


Making enemies of the press

The country’s leading media group faces financial struggles and competition from social platforms, while foreign outlets expand in Nairobi

A highly competitive and – by the region’s standards – vibrant media culture is among the legacies of Nation Media Group (NMG) founder and owner, Prince Shah Karim...


Spinner caught in web

In the months leading up to the August 2017 polls in Kenya, rumours flew that data-mining consultancy Cambridge Analytica, then at the height of its notoriety, had been...