Skip links
Shopping Cart
Shopping Cart

Africa has called on the world leaders to turn their pledges into action regarding the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.

The Africa Group of Negotiators (AGN), chaired by Dr Richard Muyungi, and the COP30 Special Envoy for Africa, Prof. Carlos Lopes, made the call on Saturday, November 15, 2025, at the 30th United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties in Belém, Brazil.

Speaking at a joint media briefing, they  outlined the continent’s priorities for COP30.

Dr. Richard Muyungi
Chair the African Group of Negotiators (AGN), Dr. Richard Muyungi

They called for scaled-up climate finance, a strong global goal on adaptation, and fair global trade rules that uphold multilateralism and deliver development for all.

They explained that Africa’s determination to secure concrete outcomes that match the ambition and scale needed to tackle the climate crisis already devastating the continent.

According to them, Climate finance Article 9.1- the legal obligation of developed countries to provide climate finance to developing countries is critical to African countries implementing their NDCs.

“On Article 9.1, the issue is simple, developing countries cannot rely on vague assurances. We need clear, concrete commitments from developed countries, yet few have put forward new finance pledges.

“For Africa, Article 9.1 must be fully implemented, just like every other part of the Paris Agreement. It is an obligation, not an option.

“Without it, adaptation finance will be replaced by loans, leaving vulnerable countries to pay for impacts they did not cause,” they said.

According to them, resource mobilisation under Article 9.3 is valuable for mitigation, but it cannot be a substitute for guaranteed provision of finance required under Article 9.1 as adaptation depends on it.

They issued a stark warning about global finance models that increasingly burden developing countries with commercial debt.

“Blended and hybrid finance often camouflage the fact that commercial conditions are expanding. These instruments are not multiplying finance, they are simply bringing in more commercial money.

“We must pay attention when practice does not match the promise,” he said.

Muyungi further criticised Just Energy Transition Partnerships (JET-Ps) for shifting away from grant-based support toward loan-heavy arrangements.

The AGN chair emphasised that indicators must track global support, not to impose new obligations on developing countries.

Indicators under the Global Goal on Adaptation are essential, we need a clear way to measure progress, just as we do for mitigation and the 1.5°C goal.

“But the issue is which indicators are being chosen. Some of them expect developing countries to do more with less, adding responsibilities without the means to deliver.

“Our concern is not with indicators themselves, but with ensuring they reflect real adaptation needs and come with the support required to achieve them,” he said.

According to him, recognising Africa’s special needs is rooted not in politics, but in science, geography and history as Africa’s case makes this even more urgent.

“Scientifically, countries along the equator, many of them in Africa, are warming faster and face harsher impacts.

“Under Article 4.8, Africa also falls within several categories of highly vulnerable countries. And our historical and developmental context compounds these challenges.

“All of this makes Africa’s special needs and circumstances undeniable. They must be fully recognised if the global goal on adaptation is to be meaningful,”  he said.

He noted that negotiators had reduced the list of proposed indicators from over 10,000 to around 100 to align with the means of implementation including finance, technology, and capacity-building commitments.

He said regarding Baku–Belém Roadmap, unlocking the 1.3 trillion dollar underscored Africa’s concern about slow progress on climate finance following the COP29 decision on the New Collective Quantified Goal(NCQG) to mobilise 300 billion dollars annually by 2035.

“And also, to design a roadmap towards $1.3 trillion in the post-2035 period.

“From Baku to Belém, the core issue is simple, we now have a commitment to mobilise at least 300 billion dollars a year up to 2035, and to build a pathway towards $1.3 trillion.

“But instead of negotiations, we were given consultations, and the roadmap was published without the final round of discussions we expected,” he said.

According to him, the roadmap is not closed, but only to keep pushing to strengthen it. Now, how do we unlock the $300 billion that must now replace the old 100 billion benchmark?

He added that delivering the $300 billion annually would be a challenge for Africa as the world entered the new phase.

He reiterated that despite consultations in Bonn and additional ministerial discussions, African countries had expected a more inclusive process before the roadmap was published.

He said the AGN welcomed the operationalisation of the loss and damage fund through the Barbados Implementation modalities.

He, however, stated the initial $250 million allocation fell short of the scale of needs.

“Under the Barbados implementation modalities, loss and damage support is made up of pure grants, not loans, and countries can access them through four clear channels.

“These are directly through their national focal points, through existing direct-access entities, through international entities like UNDP or the World Bank, or through regional institutions.

“This is the first time we have a fund that delivers only grants, and that’s a major step forward.”

According to him, the amounts are still small, 800 million dollars in the fund with 250 million allocated for 2025–2026, but it builds momentum as we expect more pledges at COP30.

He said Africa negotiators were also pushing to secure new resources through the adaptation fund as it transitioned from Kyoto to Article 6 of the Paris Agreement.

“The principle is simple: those who caused the problem must support those living with the impacts. But for 30 years, this principle has been contested. We’re trying to uphold multilateralism while ensuring these core obligations are honoured.

“These are the difficult choices before us. With Africa requiring over $3 trillion for adaptation alone, we significantly call for increased pledges at COP30,” he said.

On trade, he stated that those calling for the discussions to be moved to the World Trade Organisation were the same actors not respecting it as the normative space for the concerned issues.

“We see this in examples such as CBAM, new forest-related clauses from Europe, recent tariff increases, and a growing list of protectionist measures that invoke climate concerns while penalising countries that contribute least to climate crisis.

“It is a clear paradox, what we need instead are incentives for countries that are not contributing to the problem. Some may emit in specific industries or exports, but the overall picture is what matters.

“Africa emits the least globally. You cannot penalise isolated sectors without considering the continent’s full development spectrum.”

Muyungi demanded if Africa truly cherished multilateralism or unilateralism.

“At times we all call for multilateralism, yet in practice, we defend our own territories and businesses.

“As negotiators, this contradiction puzzles us. We believed all countries would work together without putting up new borders, especially when facing a shared global challenge.

“Yet a number of countries have introduced trade-restrictive measures and justify them as WTO-related, whether on patent rights or other issues,” he said.

According to him, if unilateral measures continue, many countries will be disadvantaged and restricted from trading goods or services deemed to have an “unacceptable” carbon footprint.

“But how does a product acquire that carbon footprint? Often through technologies and services that originate from the very countries imposing these restrictions.

“This is not the right way forward if we want to protect multilateralism. Without clear guardrails, these actions will undermine the development and trade opportunities we are trying to build.”

By Gabriel Agbeja

Research

Featured News

Explaining Katsina’s Massive Leap to 2nd Position in the 2025 Climate Governance Ranking

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

In 2024, during the first edition of the Subnational Climate Governance Performance Rating and Ranking,

COP30: Firm to connect institutions with international climate finance opportunities

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

SISTME, a climate change and biodiversity conservation consulting firm based in Argentina, has offered to

From resistance to planetary governance, Indigenous women redefine global climate action

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

While world leaders negotiate behind closed doors in the Blue Zone of COP30, Indigenous Women

Sahara Group Foundation launches 16th Sahara Go Recycling Hub to boost environmental sustainability, economic empowerment

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

Sahara Group Foundation, the corporate social impact arm of Sahara Group, has commissioned its 16th

Climate finance is the lifeblood of climate action – Simon Stiell at COP30

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

Remarks delivered by UN Climate Change Executive Secretary, Simon Stiell, at the third High-Level Ministerial

UNDP, REA, GEF commission Plateau solar mini-grid to power agricultural value chains, empower rural communities

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), in partnership with the Rural Electrification Agency (REA) and

COP30: Africa urges world leaders to turn pledges into action

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

Africa has called on the world leaders to turn their pledges into action regarding the

Thousands join global marches calling on govts at COP30 to deliver climate justice

Shedrack November 16, 2025
0

An estimated 30,000 people marched through the Brazilian city of Belém on Saturday, November 15,