We Must Participate in Climate-Driven Public Policy
Dr. Richard Munang
Multiple Award-Winning Environmental Thought Leader | Strategic and Innovative Leadership| Climate Change & Sustainable Development Expert | Author of "Mindset Change"|. All opinions expressed are my own.
"It is the tortoise's shell, ugly and hard, that protects its lifelong journey on Earth," this African proverb highlights the divide between public policy and its implementation in Africa. Public policy is the biggest driver of change, and the people who implement policy are ordinary Africans.
Policies, institutions, regulations, and procedures will remain unrealized regardless of how cutting edge they are, as long as ordinary citizens continue to relegate implementation to governments alone.
Ordinary citizens are the proverbial tortoise's shell to Africa's economies. They are the missing link in making specific existing policies work as intended to improve the lives of ordinary Africans.
One area in which the public policy divide plays out spectacularly is in the?climate change ?space. Africa has invested significantly in enabling legal and policy frameworks compared to Europe and North America. For example, 52 out of 54 countries have ratified their Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC), making Africa the most compliant region globally.
NDCs balance both mitigation and adaptation commitments. As countries move to submit their second-round commitments, already 43 African countries have submitted theirs, with 2 submitting stronger targets. Through internal policy prioritization, Africa has invested in climate resilience at about 2% of GDP yearly. This also enables sectoral policies, such as climate-smart agriculture policies.
Africa needs to bridge the implementation divide, not development dollars alone, but a citizenry that is bold, visionary, and selfless enough to devise enterprise solutions to challenges that affect every corner of Africa. The catchment for this citizenry is the informal sector, which already accounts for over 80% of all employment in?sub-Saharan Africa . Another catchment is the African youth, which constitutes up to 60% of Africa's population, making them the most significant non-state actor constituency in size that urgently needs to be tapped to drive climate action policy forward.
Innovative volunteerism offers climate action solutions throughout Africa. Through innovative volunteerism, lessons accrued from youth in one corner of the continent are cross hybridized with willing actors in another corner of the continent without physical engagement. This is accomplished through leveraging the passion and willingness of the volunteers themselves, as well as digital technology. This tool shows how this dynamic can play out practically but at a micro-level.
For example, Africa's NDCs commitments include elements of both emissions reduction as well as resilience building. While Africa has contributed the least to global emissions, it stands out as the most disproportionally vulnerable region globally. Through innovative volunteerism, young people are being structurally guided to step up to the plate, and implement elements of Africa's NDC policy provisions, informed by socioeconomic realities. For example, most emissions from sub-Saharan Africa are land-based, accounting for up to 56%, driven by land degradation. Agriculture is a leading source of this degradation.
A significant portion of the land in Africa is cleared for agriculture. However, a substantial amount of the harvest ends as postharvest losses,?estimated to be close to $48 billion . This means the goods and services expended in producing this food are lost, fueling further land degradation. In addition, many income and enterprise opportunities that would have arisen from value addition to increase the socioeconomic resilience of communities are also lost.
However, these young people are being structurally guided to leverage their skills and passion for working with local farmers, clustering them into local cooperatives to leverage economies of scale, and decentralizing simple climate action solutions of?solar dryers ?to enable value addition. These solar dryers are enhancing food safety by lowering incidents of dangerous aflatoxin by 53%, allowing the farmers to increase the shelf-life of perishables, thus cutting postharvest losses to ensure efficient utilization of the ecosystem services used to produce the foods Africans consume.
From these practical steps, data has been generated on the financial, market, environmental, and social benefits of youth actions and the gaps that need to be addressed to sustain and upscale these successes. This data is then used to recalibrate policy and make it more implementable. For example, data showing solar dryers' benefits, applicability, and popularity in preventing aflatoxins among informal food producers were used to recalibrate national food safety and food production standards to achieve specific food safety and production standards. This integration means that any actor willing to be certified in these standards must apply the solar dryers as a tool for compliance. And by this, we see climate-smart agriculture policies that address food security issues throughout Africa.
"Being in the forest and failing to see trees is a curse," this African proverb reminds us that we cannot afford to fail to tap opportunities that are within reach. Citizen participation in public policy implementation is one such area that the continent must urgently leverage to bridge the policy implementation divide.
Clinical Pharmacy Director | Financial Professional l Founder | l Author ?? l MSL/Medical Affairs Trainee | Chatgpt Prompts
2 年We need to find a way to power our homes and businesses without relying on the grid. Solar panels are the answer, but they can be expensive. I have a total of 400,000 KW solar panels for my home here in the US and this technology is still in its infancy, but there is going to be great demand for this. I built my own battery and solar panel system and I will love to partner with anyone that is ready to engage in this project. Speaking of some that use this system on a daily bases. I have to insist that there is still more to learn about.