Skip to Content

COP28 Preview

Can Egypt Lead Africa’s Climate Justice Movement?
February 11, 2025 by
COP28 Preview
Bigad Haysam
| No comments yet

At COP28 in Dubai, Egypt is leading Africa’s charge for climate justice, demanding wealthy nations pay $300 billion annually to compensate for climate damages. With Africa contributing 4% of global emissions but suffering 80% of climate costs, this summit could redefine global equity—or repeat decades of broken promises.

Africa’s Climate Paradox

  • Egypt’s Vulnerabilities:
    • Nile Delta: Rising seas threaten 40 million livelihoods.
    • Agriculture: Staple crop yields could drop 20% by 2050 (IPCC AR6, 2023).
  • Case Study: Mozambique: Cyclone Freddy displaced 1.5 million people in 2023, but only < 10million of a 200 million aid request was delivered (UN OCHA, 2023).

Egypt’s COP28 Demands

  • Binding Payments: Require wealthy nations to contribute 0.5% of GDP annually to a loss-and-damage fund.
  • Debt Relief: Cancel loans for countries spending > 20% of budgets on climate adaptation.

Challenges at COP28

  • Resistance from Wealthy Nations: The EU and US oppose binding payments, citing “economic impracticality.”
  • Lack of Transparency: No mechanism tracks fund distribution to grassroots projects.

Grassroots Movements

  • #PayUpForClimate: A pan-African campaign with 1 million signatures demanding reparations.

Expert Quote:

“Africa isn’t begging for charity—we’re demanding reparations for decades of exploitation. COP28 is our courtroom.”

  — Dr. Fatima Ahmed, African Climate Justice Initiative

Sign in to leave a comment