In the news
Game changer: Green Climate Fund Establishes Regional Offices in Kenya, Côte d’Ivoire
The decision by the Green Climate Fund to establish regional offices in Africa fortifies the continent’s position in global climate governance and as a strategic hub for climate finance access and coordination. Read why this decision is also a big win for Africa’s civil society.
Tanzania’s Clean Cooking Milestones and Lessons for Africa
Nearly 2.3 billion people around the world still lack access to clean cooking. One billion of them are in Africa. But Africans are rewriting this narrative. Across the continent, governments are ramping up investments to improve access to clean cooking among their citizens. Read how this is happening.
Middle East turmoil is Africa’s wake-up call on oil
The ongoing conflict in the Middle East, pitting Israel and the US on one hand and Iran on the other, is a stark warning to Africa about the vulnerability of economies tied to fossil fuels.
Global security vs climate security: Polluters cutting climate finance for defense budgets
The very countries historically responsible for the bulk of greenhouse gas emissions are increasingly cutting development and climate budgets and redirecting resources toward defence and security priorities.
The AfDB is sinking billions into a violent Mozambique fossil gas project; it surely can do better than this
The African Development Bank presents itself as the champion of Africa’s sustainable future, but its growing financial support for LNG projects in Mozambique tells a different story
Is Global Security A Mirage?
Are we willing to redefine security in a way that leaves no one invisible to the global system?
Millions of vulnerable communities across Africa, are waiting for that answer.
ANALYSIS: WHAT MAKES AFRICA WATER-POOR?
Water bankruptcy is a critical condition where human water usage exceeds renewable supplies and natural replenishment rates to such an extent that the damage to water-related natural capital—including aquifers and lakes—is irreversible or too costly to repair.
ON THE TRAIL OF THE LIMPOPO: MOZAMBIQUE FLOODS EXPOSE THE CASE FOR LOSS AND DAMAGE FUND
In early February of 2026 a team of Power Shift Africa filmmakers spent a week in flood-devasted regions of Mozambique, cataloguing the damage, interviewing destitute families, and talking to helpless government officials. This report, alongside a full-length documentary, forms part of our exclusive coverage of these floods… and, most importantly, links the carnage to the moral obligation of loss and damage
That sinking feeling: Why Mozambique is one of the world’s most climate-vulnerable nations
For millions of Mozambicans, survival depends heavily on the unpredictable rhythms of nature. In a country where agriculture, fisheries and informal livelihoods dominate the economy, rainfall patterns and river levels are not abstract meteorological indicators, but forces that determine whether families will harvest crops, rebuild homes or flee rising waters.
Women in the Climate Crisis: My Childbirth Experience at a Displacement Camp
The January 2026 flood disaster that killed 150 people and displaced nearly 1 million others in Mozambique was yet another brutal reminder of climate-induced extreme weather events. Beyond the headlines of washed-up farmlands, submerged homes and a wrecked economy, however, is the untold story of Estefania. A young woman who gave birth at a displacement camp in the midst of this madness. This is her story.
Kenya Floods: 5 Things You Need to Know
So far, more than 40 people have died from the floods that have rocked Kenya since Friday last week.
What’s the Role of the Private Sector in Africa’s Just Transition?
Acknowledging the primacy of public finance does not deny the role of the private sector. It means correctly situating it.
DIALOGUE ON NAVIGATING NEW GLOBAL DISORDER
On the margins of the 39th Ordinary Session of the African Union Assembly in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, a select group of policymakers, economists, diplomats and civil society leaders gathered for a closed-door dinner conversation that many described as both urgent and overdue.
Davos 2026: 7 Defining Speeches at the World Economic Forum Summit
When they met in Davos, Switzerland, for the World Economic Forum last week, world leaders had plenty to ponder.
Davos 2026: World Leaders Debate Scarcity as Wealth Concentrates
The world’s wealth has not disappeared; it is concentrated in a few hands in ways that limit its impact on those who need it most.
Is it time to reform the United Nations?
For those who imagined a new, peaceful, and prosperous post-war world 80 years ago, the world would be unrecognisable in its current state. Many leaders, however, still believe in international cooperation. But they also want the UN reimagined.
AfDB Bolsters Concessional Finance for Adaptation, Development in ADF’s 17th Replenishment
As climate impacts intensify and traditional development aid becomes more uncertain, the African Development Fund’s 17th replenishment signals a shift toward African-owned, adaptation-focused climate finance at scale.
What the US’s Exit from these Critical Organisations Means
In a memorandum sent to heads of departments and agencies, President Donald Trump announced the US’s exit from and end of funding for at least 66 intergovernmental organisations, citing non-alignment with the interests of the United States.
The decision follows Trump’s order last February to officials in his administration to conduct a review of all international organisations, conventions, and treaties supported or funded by the United States.
Is this the Conference That Will End Fossil Fuel Dependence?
The International Conference on the Just Transition Away from Fossil Fuels, to be held in Santa Marta, Colombia, this April, is one of a kind. It is the first intergovernmental forum that complements the Paris Agreement and the UN climate process.