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Published 17th November 2022

Vol 63 No 23


Delegates haggle in Egypt as the planet burns

Copyright © Africa Confidential 2022
Copyright © Africa Confidential 2022

African leaders argued for the continent's fossil fuels at the UN COP27 summit amid fierce debates over energy access and compensation for climate change

That the UN's climate summit in Sharm el Sheikh has been popularised as the 'African COP' owes as much to the strong African focus of the negotiations as to the location. Whether on 'loss and damage' – the main new agenda item – fossil fuel extraction or renewable energy projects, African states were front and centre. Other developing regions, particularly Latin America, barely got a mention. Ministers and officials were still haggling over the final communiqué with two days before the summit was due to end on 18 November.

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Showcase fails to quell rights concerns

Copyright © Africa Confidential 2022
Copyright © Africa Confidential 2022

Behind Egypt's green boosterism lies a fragile economy and a government anxious to keep the lid on dissent

Hosting the UN COP27 summit in the south Sinai resort of Sharm el Sheikh has given President Abdel Fattah el Sisi an opportunity to highlight Egypt's green energy...


Al Shabaab lashes out after heavy losses

Aftermath of the 29 October 2022 bombing in Mogadishu. Pic: Hassan Bashi/Xinhua/Alamy
Aftermath of the 29 October 2022 bombing in Mogadishu. Pic: Hassan Bashi/Xinhua/Alamy

The recent bomb attack in the capital reveals weakness in Al Shabaab, which is at its lowest military ebb for years

The horrific Al Shabaab bombing in Mogadishu on 29 October which killed 100 and wounded more than 400 showed the jihadists' defiance in the face of President Hassan...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

After the 'African COP' in Egypt, the Group of Twenty (G20) summit in Bali on 15-16 November – with its focus on debt restructuring and energy policy – addressed several issues key to African leaders. Several G20 members are calling for the African Union to be admitted as a permanent member of the organisation.

'If we want to express solidarity with the South, we must accept the African Union, like the European Union, comes to the table,' said France's President Emmanue...

After the 'African COP' in Egypt, the Group of Twenty (G20) summit in Bali on 15-16 November – with its focus on debt restructuring and energy policy – addressed several issues key to African leaders. Several G20 members are calling for the African Union to be admitted as a permanent member of the organisation.

'If we want to express solidarity with the South, we must accept the African Union, like the European Union, comes to the table,' said France's President Emmanuel Macron. China and the EU back the call; India, which will chair the G20 next year, is yet to take a formal position.

Senegal's President Macky Sall attended the G20 both as an invited national leader and as AU chairman. He is central to the G20 debates over fossil fuels and energy transitions: Senegal is one of the fastest-growing gas producers in West Africa but is also launching its own Just Energy Transition Partnership. As South Africa secured international backing for its pioneering JETP strategy, G20 hosts Indonesia announced their own version of the plan.

Macron plans to hold an international conference in June on a new financial pact with the Global South, insisting that 'we must not ask these countries to support multilateralism if it is not able to respond to their vital emergencies', a nod to the climate crisis and difficulties imposed by the pandemic and the fallout from Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

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Spend, spend, spend

Government borrowing has been soaring, and loans from the central bank are many times over the statutory limit

Lower tax revenues due to plummeting recorded crude oil output, coupled with several expansionary budgets, mean that Nigerian government borrowing has been rocketing as the country heads for...


Ruto and Odinga loyalists battle over election body

The fight to control the electoral commission focuses on personalities instead of pushing for its wider reform

Wafula Chebukati, the chairman of Kenya's Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) is due to retire on 17 January but the opposition's critiques of the organisation – and...


Cyril in Empireland

King Charles III and Prime Minister Sunak see President Ramaphosa's forthcoming visit as marking a new era

It is symbolically and politically important to Britain that South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa is the first leader to be hosted by King Charles III for a state...


Big Tech's ethical mining rules thrown into chaos

A row over a scheme to outlaw minerals produced by companies using child labour or financing wars in Central Africa will hit global supply chains

The world's biggest tech companies – including Alphabet, Apple, Samsung and Tesla – buying tin, tungsten and coltan from Central Africa face a supply chain crisis after evidence...



Pointers

Loans before haircuts

Finalising a US$1.3 billion loan with the International Monetary Fund in September was the easy part of Zambia's bid to avoid insolvency, according to analysts and officials from...