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    Students turn on Senegalese government over Dakar university violence

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    Zimbabwe’s President Mnangagwa sworn in after a contested election

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    Nigeria’s state-owned NNPC records $4.2 billion after-tax profit in 2025

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    Africa’s informal economy taxation: the potential and drawbacks of technology

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    Key events in Ethiopia’s journey towards debt restructuring

    BRICS Plus and the Shifting Global Power Balance: Implications of South Africa’s Role

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    African Union suspends Niger over coup, prepares sanctions; France denies report it asked Algeria to use airspace for a Niger operation

    Leaders in Africa’s human rights institutions are being elected. Why it matters

    Sahel Alliance leaders meet in Bamako to deepen break with ECOWAS

    The AES and the Reconfiguration of Regional Security Architecture: A Look at the 2025 Bamako Summit

    Somaliland rejects visas issued by Somalia and tightens control over its airpsace

    Why is Somaliland strategically important?

    US airstrikes in northern Nigeria: potential windfalls and dangers

    US airstrikes in northern Nigeria: potential windfalls and dangers

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    Why France’s Focus is Shifting to Anglophone Africa

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    Benin government says armed forces foil coup attempt

    Coup contagion? A rash of African power grabs suggests copycats are taking note of others’ success

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    Your teachers’ level of knowledge affects how well you perform in class: perspectives from 14 French-speaking African nations

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    Haile Selassie (1892-1975): Former Emperor of Ethiopia

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    Samori Touré (1830-1900): Military leader and founder of Wassoulou Empire

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    Mohammed Abdulle Hassan (1856-1920): Somali religious and nationalist leader

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    Imam Abdullah Haron (1924-1969): South African Muslim cleric and anti-apartheid activist

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    Joyce Banda, educator and former president of Malawi

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    Jomo Kenyatta (1894-1978): First prime minister and first president of Kenya

    What does a diary entry reveal about the West African origins of Apongo, a rebel leader in Jamaica?

    What does a diary entry reveal about the West African origins of Apongo, a rebel leader in Jamaica?

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    Royal Palace, Porto-Novo, Republic of Benin

    Royal Palace, Porto-Novo, Republic of Benin

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    Royal Court of Tiébélé, Burkina Faso

    Royal Court of Tiébélé, Burkina Faso

    Lake Tanganyika, the world’s longest freshwater lake

    Lake Tanganyika, the world’s longest freshwater lake

    The Bafut Chiefdom, Cameroon

    The Bafut Chiefdom, Cameroon

    The battles of Isandlwana and Rorke’s Drift

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    Kimberley’s Big Hole, Northern Cape, South Africa

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Home Analysis & Report Climate Change

Getting climate financing to conflict areas: a case for collaborating with local communities and armed groups

December 6, 2023
Large investments expected at first Africa climate summit
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By Ashley Jackson*

 

Conflict-ridden and fragile countries are among the most vulnerable to climate change and least prepared to deal with it. They are largely excluded from climate adaptation programmes and funding.

This is partly because funding is channelled through national governments, which might not be able to work in areas affected by conflict or beyond their control.

Civilians and armed groups alike are increasingly concerned about climate change. The international community, however, is doing little to address its impact in these vulnerable areas.

The Notre Dame Global Adaptation Initiative has identified 25 countries as most vulnerable to climate change and least prepared to adapt to its impact. Of these, 15 have been hit hard by conflict. This list includes Somalia, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo and Afghanistan.

By their nature, conflict-ridden areas have weak or no government structures. The current approach to climate adaptation does not include non-state actors and local communities, who might work more effectively in these areas.

With the COP28 climate meeting in Dubai, the issue of climate change adaptation in conflict areas has been in the news. A draft declaration by the COP presidency calls for immediate action and urgent funding for these vulnerable communities. The text is not legally binding, but it goes further than any previous COP statements on climate impacts in conflict areas.

I have spent over a decade researching conflict and insurgency. Working with colleagues from the Overseas Development Institute and the Geneva Graduate Instiute, I’ve investigated the failure of multilateral institutions to include conflict areas in their climate adaptation programmes.

We reviewed existing literature on this. We identified gaps in climate adaptation efforts and funding mechanisms that would work in conflict areas. We argue for working with local communities and civil society as well as engaging non-state armed groups.

The conflict-climate gap

Conflict-affected countries receive significantly less climate adaptation funding. They get about one-third of the per capita climate financing compared to conflict-free countries. Adaptation programming and financing mechanisms are not designed for areas experiencing conflict or those beyond state control.

In some areas, non-state armed groups have stepped into the gap. In Myanmar, the Karen National Union operates its own departments focusing on land, forestry and wildlife conservation. The Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) has incorporated environmental protection clauses into its internal codes of conduct. And in Somalia, Al Shabaab has imposed fines for cutting down trees and even banned plastic bags.

Elsewhere, such as in the Sahel, armed groups exploit the environmental drivers of conflict in propaganda and recruitment.

Armed groups take up the mantle of environmental protection for a complicated mixture of reasons. (They may also contribute to ecological destruction.) For most, it enhances their legitimacy with local populations, who are desperate for relief from the impact of climate change.

Where this is the case, it may present an opening for climate adaptation interventions. Armed groups control significant territories — often rich in natural resources. Their participation can be critical in taking wide-scale climate actions. We also know that armed groups seeking statehood or other forms of legitimacy are often willing to comply with international norms to gain positive recognition.

In short, there is untapped potential to save lives and mitigate the impact of climate change in areas under armed group control.

Our research suggests that this engagement can help build peace and reduce violence. Climate change is often portrayed as driving conflict or as a “threat multiplier” with impacts ranging from resource scarcity to displacement of people. But engagement with armed actors on the environment and climate change can also serve as a building block for peace.

This is especially true in countries like Colombia, where environmental factors contributed to the conflict. Environmental and resource issues are an often neglected aspect of preparing for peace talks.

Read also

West Africa Coastal Erosion: The Case of Ghana and Togo’s Disappearing Shorelines 

The Impact of Climate Change on Rwandan Agriculture and Food Security

Beyond Shopping Bags: Kenya Tackles Organic Waste Plastic Pollution

Climate work in areas beyond state control is fraught with ethical, legal and practical dilemmas. For instance, certain laws that prohibit material support to designated terrorist groups can obstruct or complicate aid efforts.

There is always a risk that armed groups may just pay lip service to these norms, or that engaging with them could inadvertently further empower or legitimise them. Additionally, unlike government counterparts, armed groups and communities in these areas may lack the technical capacity to understand the ecological complexities involved in climate adaptation.

Addressing climate impacts beyond state control

These risks must be navigated carefully. But the urgent need for adaptation outweighs the potential drawbacks.

Climate adaptation actors do not need to engage directly with armed actors. Customary authorities, humanitarians and local peace builders can be intermediaries, ensuring interventions are appropriate and accepted by all.

Climate adaptation in conflict areas requires a different approach. At a minimum, it requires going beyond national governments, and directly engaging with conflict-affected communities. It also, to some extent, means devolving decision-making to communities themselves.

An urgent priority should be increasing climate financing for conflict regions. COP28’s belated interest in conflict affected areas is welcome, but it doesn’t go nearly far enough. This recognition must be followed by concrete policy and funding shifts tailored to the challenges of working in conflict areas and areas beyond state control.

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* Research Associate, Overseas Development Institute, King’s College London

Source: The Conversation
Tags: Armed GroupsClimate changeclimate financingclimate fundsNotre Dame Global Adaptation Initiative

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