Country accounts for less than 0.1% of global emissions but suffers disproportionately from related disasters, say new report
Power-generating wind turbines in Loiyangalani in northern
Kenya. Photograph: Thomas Mukoya/Reuters |
The report illustrates the scale of the challenge as the country aims to cut greenhouse gases by 32% within the next decade. It will rely on international sources to fund close to 90% of the expenditure. Securing such a colossal amount of often contentious climate financing from rich countries yet to honour their commitments to the $100bn target pledged during the 2015 Paris agreement will be a tall order.
Kenya accounts for less than 0.1% of global greenhouse gas emissions and has a per capita emission of less than half the global average. But low-emitting countries such as Kenya are suffering the most from the effects of climate change, and are poorly equipped to effectively respond or build resilience to key hazards such as drought and flooding.
For example, a 2011 drought in Kenya caused damage estimated at $11bn, while another in 2014-18 left 3.4 million people in food insecurity and half a million lacking access to water. In 2018, floods displaced 230,000 people in Kenya, including 150,000 children, drowned 20,000 livestock and led to the closure of 700 schools.
Villagers transport supplementary food provided by the UN World
Food Programme during the drought in 2011.
Photograph: David Bathgate/Corbis/Getty Images |
Such losses, the document says, continue to knock about 3-5% off the country’s GDP. Food security, warns the report, will worsen because Kenyan farmers are almost entirely weather-dependent. In addition, major rivers are seeing reduced flow as glaciers on the country’s biggest water tower, Mount Kenya, shrink. They are already down to 17% of their original size and will disappear in 30 years, the report says.
Erratic rainfall has hampered hydroelectric generation and forced Kenya to look at exploiting 400m tonnes of coal reserves with proposals to build two power plants: one using local coal and the other imported coal. Providing cheap fuel will come with negative environmental and social impacts.
The report says: “The use of coal is accompanied by strong environmental impacts, such as high emissions of sulphur dioxide, heavy metals and harmful greenhouse gases. The country is therefore faced with choosing between the exploitation of her fossil fuel resources to realise her development objectives and forgoing their exploitation for environmental reasons. To forgo all the benefits of exploiting the fossil fuel resources, Kenya will need significant international support.”
Greenpeace and environmental activists demonstrate in Nairobi
against the construction of a coal power plant in Lamu on Kenya’s
coast in 2019. Photograph: Simon Maina/AFP/Getty Images
|
Research by Imperial College Business School and Soas University of London for the UN in 2018 showed how developing countries lack the resources required to stem the tide of climate crisis, with the lack of resilience and mitigation measures driving them into unsustainable debt.
“For every 10 dollars paid in interest by developing countries, an additional dollar will be spent due to climate vulnerability. This financial burden exacerbates the present-day economic challenges of poorer countries. The magnitude of this burden will at least double over the next decade,” the research findings state.
Kenya, a member of the Climate Vulnerable Forum, has in recent years seen debt at critical levels with a November economic update from the World Bank showing debt to GDP rising from 62.4% of GDP in June 2019 to 65.6% in June 2020.
Without affordable climate financing, the convention on climate change says any investments in these counties will have to factor risks from climate vulnerability with corresponding increased debt repayments.
Links
- 'A critical situation': Bangladesh in crisis as monsoon floods follow super-cyclone
- 'The water will come back': why Kenya's struggle against flooding is far from over
- Kenya's pastoralists face hunger and conflict as locust plague continues
- Fish ponds and water harvesting: climate-smart farming comes to Kenya
- Scientists turn to tech to prevent second wave of locusts in east Africa
- A humanitarian crisis looms in Africa unless we act fast to stop the desert locust
- Cuts to UK aid: package to drought-hit Kenya to end in 2024
- COP22 host Morocco launches action plan to fight devastating climate change
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