COP27: France And Germany Invest 600 Million Euros in South Africa
As part of an investment plan
approved at COP27 in Egypt, France and Germany have released 600 million euros
to help the energy transition in South Africa. This money is part of the 98
billion dollars raise to help the African nations.
"South Africa, France, and
Germany have signed loan agreements for the two European nations to provide 300
million euros each in concessional financing to South Africa in support of the
country's efforts to reduce its dependence on coal," the three countries
announced Wednesday in a joint statement.
South Africa gets 80% of its
electricity from coal, a pillar of the economy that employs nearly 100,000
people. Several power plants are to be shut down by the end of 2030. The
state-owned company Eskom, which is in debt, is unable to produce enough
electricity with its aging installations and is imposing continuous power cuts.
A $98 billion investment plan for
the energy transition of Africa's leading industrial power was approved earlier
this week at the UN climate summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, which opened on Sunday,
following an agreement in principle reached last year at COP26 in Glasgow.
France, Germany, the United
Kingdom, the United States, and the European Union had pledged the support of
8.5 billion dollars with the ambition of making South Africa an example of
cooperation in the fight against emissions in developing countries.
The sum released by France and
Germany, in the form of loans from the German public investment bank (KfW) and
the French development agency (AFD), is the first tranche of this aid. The two
countries have pledged one billion euros each to South Africa, which will need
at least $500 billion to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050, according to the
World Bank.
South African President Cyril
Ramaphosa has repeatedly criticized rich countries for providing aid to the
poorest mainly in the form of loans that risk adding to their debt.
Southern countries will need more
than $2 trillion a year by 2030 to finance their climate action, nearly half of
it from outside investors, according to a report commissioned by the COP
presidency.
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