The Conference of Covenant of Mayors in Sub Saharan Africa was opened by Ghana’s Minister for Local Government and Rural Development (MLGRD), Hajia Alima Mahama, under the theme “Towards the Institutionalization of Local Climate Action and Access to Finance”.
The CoM SSA initiative uses a bottom up approach pioneered by funders the European Union that mobilizes local actors for sustainable energy access, to elaborate and implement climate action plans.
The conference
also had the objectives to inspire and enable policy makers, donors, local
governments and key actors involved in the implementation of CoM SSA to
accelerate the pace and scale of transformational change and the mobilization
of cities.
It is for
this reason that working with national associations and CSOs are critical for
the acceleration of action on the ground.
Jean-Pierre Elong-Mbassi, Secretary General of the United Cities and Local Governments of Africa, highlighted four key messages from the Conference:
Jean-Pierre Elong-Mbassi, Secretary General of the United Cities and Local Governments of Africa, highlighted four key messages from the Conference:
The first
is to correct the imbalance in financing Climate Adaptation to enable Africa to
achieve it ambitious climate action plans, with Africa demanding more
adaptation finance.
Secondly,
Ghana is to position itself as Africa’s Climate Hub and champion the
localization of Nationally Determined Contributions. The Mayor of Accra who is
also The Global Covenant’s Executive Board member and UCLG Africa’s Climate
Task Force co-chair, is well positioned to take these messages to the international
stage.
Thirdly, the
Climate Chance Summit Africa to become the preparation conference for COPs
representing cities, local governments and non-state actors in Africa to
formulate and deliver their messages, declarations and recommendations at an
international level where these ambitious climate plans are now called “The
Accra Climate Dialogue”.
And
lastly, the most critical of messages from the conference is to ensure climate
finance is accessible at the local level.
Ghana’s President Nana Akufo-Addo singled out the work of CoM SSA over the last four years as testimony to the benefits the initiative has had on cities and municipalities
Ghana’s President Nana Akufo-Addo singled out the work of CoM SSA over the last four years as testimony to the benefits the initiative has had on cities and municipalities
He noted
that “we, in Africa, suffer the most
because our weak economies are most susceptible to the effects of climate
change, and our capacity to withstand its damage is low”. He further
stated that “Africa
is the region of the world with the lowest access to energy and the least
equipped to face extreme climate events brought about by climate change”.
The
challenge of access to finance was further reiterated by the Minister for Local
Government, Hajia Alima Mahama.
She called
for the establishment of a dedicated financing window for local authorities to
implement their climate change priority action plans.
“The imbalance between mitigation actions
represents an effort of over 600 billion dollars put by the international
community compared to 200 billion for adaptation that must be addressed,” she
said.
The
Declaration read by NALAG President, Bismark Baisie Nkum, also highlighted
access to finance as a key recommendation.
The CoM SSA initiative will continue to support cities and local governments through vertical integration and political advocacy; technical assistance and capacity building for cities and supporting organisations such as National Associations of local governments, Civil Society Organisations (CSOs); and the promotion, communication, dissemination, awareness raising and visibility of the initiative.
The CoM SSA initiative will continue to support cities and local governments through vertical integration and political advocacy; technical assistance and capacity building for cities and supporting organisations such as National Associations of local governments, Civil Society Organisations (CSOs); and the promotion, communication, dissemination, awareness raising and visibility of the initiative.
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