African leaders seek $120 billion to tackle climate change

African leaders seek $120 billion to tackle climate change

The funding is used by governments to boost access to energy and healthcare.
Climate change has had huge impacts on the continent. Photo: World Bank/X

African leaders have urged rich countries to commit record contributions to a low-interest World Bank facility for developing nations to fund development and combat climate change.

Donors will make their cash pledges to the International Development Association (IDA), a World Bank institution that offers loans with low interest rates and long tenures, at a conference to be held in Japan in December.

"We call on our partners to meet us at this historic moment of solidarity and respond effectively by increasing their IDA contributions... to at least $120 billion," Kenya's President William Ruto told a meeting of African leaders and the World Bank to discuss IDA funding on Monday.

African economies were facing a "deepening development and debt crisis that threatens our economic stability, and urgent climate emergencies that demand immediate and collective action for our planet's survival," Ruto said.

Climate impact

He cited Kenya's own devastating floods and a severe drought affecting southern African nations such as Malawi.

If the donors pledge the minimum amount suggested by African leaders, it will be a new high after the last round of fundraising in 2021, which raised $93 billion.

IDA lending operates on a three-year cycle, which is usually preceded by donors making their contributions at a global meeting.

IDA offers low-interest-rate loans to 75 developing nations around the world, the World Bank said, with more than half of them in Africa.

Climate investment

The funding is used by governments to boost access to energy and healthcare, invest in farming, and also build critical infrastructure such as roads.

Ajay Banga, the president of the World Bank, promised to cut down on "burdensome" rules that govern lending to nations under the IDA to make it more efficient and to deliver funds to borrower nations faster.

"We believe a simpler and reimagined IDA can be deployed with more focus to make meaningful impact," he said.

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Reuters