Africa is responsible for only a fraction of global greenhouse gas emissions but is suffering disproportionately from climate change. This is harming food security, ecosystems and economies, fueling displacement and migration and worsening the threat of conflict over dwindling resources, according to a new report from the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).
The State of the Climate in Africa 2022 report
shows that the rate of temperature increase in Africa has accelerated in recent
decades, with weather- and climate-related hazards becoming more severe. And
yet financing for climate adaptation is only a drop in the ocean of what is
needed.
More than 110 million people on the
continent were directly affected by weather, climate and water-related hazards
in 2022, causing more than US$ 8.5 billion in economic damages. There
were a reported 5 000 fatalities, of which 48% were associated with
drought and 43% were associated with flooding, according to the Emergency Event
Database. But the true toll is likely to be much higher because of
under-reporting.
“Africa is responsible for less than 10 percent
of global greenhouse gas emissions. But it is the continent which is the least
able to cope with the negative impacts of climate change. Heatwaves, heavy
rains, floods, tropical cyclones, and prolonged droughts are having devastating
impacts on communities and economies, with increasing numbers of people at risk,”
said WMO Secretary-General Prof. Petteri Taalas.
“There are big gaps in weather observations in
Africa and early warning services are woefully adequate. We are determined to
close those gaps and ensure that life-saving early warnings reach everyone,” he
said.
The report, produced jointly with the African
Union Commission and Africa Climate Policy Centre of United Nations Economic
Commission for Africa (UNECA), was released during the Africa Climate Summit,
which also saw the launch of the Early Warnings For All in Africa Action Plan.
Kenya, which is hosting the summit, also released its State of the Climate in
Kenya in 2022 report.
“Africa, like other regions, has come to terms
with the reality that climate change is already happening. Left untamed, the
coming decades and years would easily be characterized by severe
climate-induced pressure on the continent’s economies, livelihoods and nature,”
says H.E. Ambassador Josefa Leonel Correia Sacko, Commissioner for Agriculture,
Rural Development, Blue Economy and Sustainable Environment at the African
Union Commission.
“Given Africa’s high exposure, fragility and low
adaptive capacity, the effects of climate change are expected to be felt more
severely. People’s health, peace, prosperity, infrastructure, and other
economic activities across many sectors in Africa are exposed to significant
risks associated with climate change,” she writes in the report.
Agriculture is the mainstay of Africa’s
livelihoods and national economies – supporting more
than 55% of the labor force. But its
agricultural productivity growth has declined by 34% since 1961 due to climate
change. This decline is the highest compared to what other regions of the world
have experienced.
Projected annual food imports by African
countries are expected to increase by about a factor of three, from
US$ 35 billion to US$ 110 billion by 2025.
The
level of loss and damage, and therefore the costs incurred, will depend on many
factors, including the level of ambition of global mitigation actions and the
level of investment in adaptation at the local level. In a 4 °C warming
world, with strong regional adaptation, “residual damages” costs equivalent to
3% of Africa’s projected gross domestic product could be incurred annually by
2080.
The
loss and damage costs in Africa due to climate change are projected to range
between US$ 290 billion and US$ 440 billion, depending on
the degree of warming, according to the UNECA’s African
Climate Policy Centre.
Climate change and the diminishing natural
resource base could fuel conflicts for scarce productive land, water, and
pastures, where farmer-herder violence has increased over the past 10 years due
to growing land pressure, with geographic concentrations in many sub-Saharan
countries, according to the report.
The report, with an
accompanying story map, is the result of a multi-agency effort. It includes
input from the African Union Commission, the UN Economic Commission for Africa,
and contributions from African National Meteorological and Hydrological Services,
WMO Regional Climate Centres, specialized United Nations agencies, the African
Development Bank, the Consultative Group on International Agricultural
Research, and numerous experts and scientists.
Key
messages
Temperature: The average rate of
warming in Africa was +0.3 °C/decade during the 1991–2022 period, compared
to +0.2 °C/decade between 1961 and 1990. This is slightly above the global
average. The warming has been most rapid in North Africa, which was gripped by
extreme heat, fuelling wildfires in Algeria and Tunisia in 2022.
Rainfall: The Horn of Africa faced
its worst drought in 40 years, with Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia particularly
hard hit. The “triple-dip” La Niña was a substantial contributor. Five
consecutive failed rainfall seasons reduced agricultural productivity and food
security. In Somalia, almost 1.2 million people
became internally displaced by the catastrophic impacts of drought on pastoral
and farming livelihoods and hunger during the year. A further 512 000
internal displacements associated with drought were recorded in Ethiopia.
Many parts of the Sahel
experienced significant flooding during the monsoon season, with Nigeria,
Niger, Chad and the southern half of Sudan particularly affected.
Tropical
Cyclones:
The South Indian Ocean experienced an active tropical cyclone season despite an
unusually late start. The Southern Africa region was hit by a series of
tropical cyclones and tropical storms in the first months of 2022, leading to
flooding and population displacement. There was little time for recovery
between shocks in nations like Madagascar.
Sea-level
rise:
The rate of coastal sea-level rise in Africa is similar to the global mean
value of 3.4 mm/year. It is, however, slightly higher than the global mean
along the Red Sea (3.7 mm/year) and along the western Indian Ocean
(3.6 mm/year).
Climate
Adaptation:
Per capita emissions of carbon dioxide in Africa in 2021 were 1.04 metric
tons per person, compared with the global average of 4.69 metric tons per
person.
More
than 50 African countries have now submitted their Nationally Determined
Contributions (NDCs). Agriculture and food security, water, disaster risk
reduction, and health are the top priorities for adaptation.
Implementing
Africa’s NDCs will require up to US$ 2.8 trillion between 2020 and
2030. The African Development Bank (AfDB) has doubled its climate finance to
US$ 25 billion by 2025 and devoted 67% of its climate finance to
adaptation, in addition to its effort to raise up to US$ 13 billion for
its Africa Development Fund.
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