Carlos Lopes,
Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa
addressed the Africa Regional Consultative Meeting on the Sustainable
Development Goalshas and proposed opportunities in three sectors where
Africa can lead.
1)
Energy
Lopes said evidence is mounting that
Africa’s need to expand its capacity to generate power can be met through
renewable energy technologies that deliver clean and sustainable energy
supplies. “Overcoming the barriers that prevent the development of renewable
energy in a context of climate change will depend largely on improving the
policy and institutional environment in Africa,” he said. He added that
inclusive green growth is a frontier that could focus on affordable renewable
energy services, the promotion of green jobs and the reduction of poverty.
2)
Agriculture
He stressed that it
holds the key to unlocking Africa’s growth potential, to attain the 7%
threshold.
“Leveraging the continent’s agricultural
sector is critical given our growing population and an ever-increasing demand
for food,” he said, adding that this would entail making efficient investments
in
technologies, innovation, enhanced water
management capacity and sustainable land tenure systems.
“Africa needs
agro-business, higher productivity and backward and forward linkages to work,”
Lopes stressed.
3)
Manufacturing
The third sector
highlighted by Lopes is manufacturing. He proposed that Africa can
prove that climate change is better tackled by moving industrial production
next to where the resources are. “Not only would we reduce CO2 emissions and
deal effectively with green technology leapfrogging, but we could also add
value to commodities,” he said, adding that Africa has the option to choose
technologies that may be too costly for others.
He challenged the ministers to define
solutions that do justice to the inter-generational social contract that
defines Africa’s sustainable development goals, stating: “Our actions are being
watched by the younger generation already – they are not waiting to be actors
in this debate; they already are.”
In less than three
generations, over 40% of the world’s youth will be African. By 2050, Africa’s
youth will constitute over a quarter of the world’s labour force. “Young people
are calling for transformation and a strong anti-poverty push. But they also
feel that focus is not enough for creating jobs, having electricity or
communicating through mobile phones, they want the future to be no different
from region to region and natural resources to be used wisely by all, not just
by some,” said Lopes.
He concluded by
saying the Hausa of Nigeria say that escaping with your reputation is better
than escaping with your property. In making the case for a different narrative,
Africans are saying they want their reputation to match reality. They want a
future that sees the continent for more than its natural resources riches. They
want an outcome that reflects their reputation.
Source: How We Made
It in Africa
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