African climate think tanks and experts have called for the support of inclusive decision making spaces by the G20 and accelerated reform of international cooperation institutions to create a more equitable global economic architecture that leaves no one behind.
Reaffirming Africa’s commitment to multilateralism and international law as essential foundations for shared global prosperity, they noted that Africa’s position is clear that “the climate agenda is the development agenda”.
Speaking in Johannesburg during a G20 expert-level informal consultation forum organised by the African Union Development Ageny (AUDA-NEPAD) and the office of the special envoy for climate change in the executive office of the president, Republic of Kenya, which is also chair of the Conference of African Heads of State and Government (CAHOSCC), the experts noted that the G20 must recognise Africa’s fundamental right to development while supporting global decarbonisation efforts toward the 1,5°C goal.
“We call for policy space and differentiated pathways that enable just, affordable, and inclusive energy transitions reflecting our national contexts. Climate ambition must advance hand-in-hand with poverty eradication, job creation, and economic growth,” says Nardos Bekele-Thomas, CEO of AUDA-NEPAD.
Amb Ali Mohamed, the special envoy for climate change in the executive office of the president, Republic of Kenya, says: “Africa demands fair participation in global transitions, particularly across the critical minerals to clean technologies continuum.
We urge the G20 to commit to local manufacturing, technology transfer, and capacity development that strengthen Africa’s domestic capabilities. We draw attention to Africa’s Green Industrialisation Strategy and the Green Minerals Strategy and advocate for a Compact on African Critical Minerals ensuring fair, sustainable trade practices. We reject unilateral trade measures adopted under the guise of climate action that undermine African exports and industrial competitiveness.”
On energy transformation, the experts agree the G20 must prioritise investments in renewable energy generation, transmission, and storage infrastructure aligned with Africa’s regional power pools, and called for support in strengthening cross-border energy trade, grid interconnectivity, and expansion of Just Energy Transition Partnerships (JET-Ps) and the implementation the Agriculture Industrialisation Strategy that are inclusive, fair, and aligned with African priorities.
The G20, they says, must unequivocally reaffirm legal obligations under the Paris Agreement, particularly regarding climate finance provision by wealthy, historically high emitting countries to developing nations on a needs-based approach.
They call on the G20 to support the Fourth Financing for Development outcomes, including commitment to an intergovernmental process at the United Nations to close gaps in debt architecture and explore options for debt sustainability.
Delegates caution that any structures for climate finance mobilisation must serve the needs of countries with special circumstances, including Africa, noting that the G20 should commit to financing transitions to low-carbon and climate-resilient development through concessional, grant-based, predictable flows that address capital costs, currency risks, and debt burdens while involving local private sectors.
The experts note that Africa requires innovative approaches that enhance access to climate finance, enabling translation of national adaptation plans into transformative adaptation actions.
“We acknowledge the critical links between climate adaptation, mitigation ambition, and climate finance, emphasising the significance of ambitious mitigation targets in G20 Nationally Determined Contributions,” says Amb Mohamed, adding that partnerships between African countries and G20 members are essential for implementing adaptation actions effectively.
Bekele-Thomas urges that Africa’s engagement with the G20 must be grounded in principles of equity, justice, and shared responsibility, adding: “We seek not charity but partnership; not exclusion but fair participation in shaping our collective future. The path to global climate action must honor Africa’s right to sustainable development while contributing meaningfully to planetary goals.”