Africa: Nigeria and South Africa Plan to Boost Fossil Fuel Production, Risking Their Climate Change Pledges
you are currently viewing::Africa: Nigeria and South Africa Plan to Boost Fossil Fuel Production, Risking Their Climate Change PledgesJanuary 11, 2026--Just 20 countries produce 80% of the world's oil, gas and coal. Since 2019, researchers have released regular reports analysing how these governments plan to continue drilling and mining for fossil fuels -and how those plans diverge from the global climate goal set out in the Paris Agreement, which aims to limit temperature rise to less than 1.5° above pre-industrial levels. The 2025 Production Gap Report found that many of these countries still plan to produce far more fossil fuels by 2030 than is safe for the climate. Scientists Emily Ghosh, Derik Broekhoff, Bathandwa Vazi and Olivier Bois von Kursk were among the co-authors of the report, which found that Nigeria and South Africa - already among the world's largest fossil fuel producers- plan to increase fossil fuel production despite their climate commitments. Source: allafrica.com |
June 16, 2026- U.S. dollar-pegged digital tokens reduce payment frictions but raise new policy trade-offs
Nigerian households and small firms are moving money across borders in a new way: via smartphones, digital wallets, and U.S. dollar-pegged crypto assets known as stablecoins.
June 9, 2026- The rand strengthened on Tuesday after South Africa's economy expanded more than expected in the first quarter of 2026, though the impact of the Iran war was likely to be reflected in the next release.
At 1415 GMT, the rand traded at 16.4325 against the U.S. dollar, up about 0.6%.
May 26, 2026-The continent recorded an estimated average GDP growth of 4.4 percent in 2025, with 22 economies posting rates above 5 percent.
In 2026, Africa is projected to grow at 4.2 percent, despite heightened geopolitical tensions and global supply shocks.
May 2, 2026-Zimbabwe's exchange-traded fund (ETF) landscape has undergone a gradual evolution, shaped by liquidity constraints and shifts in the underlying equity instruments. The launch of the Old Mutual Top 10 ETF in December 2020, the first ETF, with listing in January 2021, marked a significant milestone for the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange (ZSE), introducing passive investment exposure.
April 23, 2026- To weather the shock, policymakers should ensure that any near-term measures are time-bound and targeted at the most vulnerable, and maintain the focus on medium-term development objectives.
Sub-Saharan Africa's economies entered 2026 with significant momentum. The region had notched its fastest growth rate in 10 years-4.5 percent in 2025-buoyed by reduced macroeconomic imbalances, rising investment levels, and a generally supportive external environment.
April 16, 2026-After a strong 2025 with regional growth estimated at 4.5 percent, sub-Saharan Africa entered 2026 reaping the benefits of hard-won stabilization gains. But the war in the Middle East has clouded the outlook. The shock has caused a rapid increase in key commodity prices, particularly in fuel and fertilizer.
April 8, 2026--Smarter industrial policy can advance Africa's economic transformation and create jobs
Sub-Saharan Africa's economic recovery from a decade of global shocks is showing signs of stalling, with growth projections for 2026 revised downward by 0.3 percentage points from estimates previously published in October 2025, according to the latest edition of the Africa Economic Update, the World Bank Group's biannual economic report for the region.