Malawi’s Bwaila Hospital labor wards closed for lack of deliveries supplies

Bwaila Hospital labor wards closed for lack of deliveries supplies

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-Malawi is bleeding. The country’s Bwaila Hospital in the capital Lilongwe has temporarily closed its Labour Ward and theatre due to lack of needed supplies for use.

The Maravi Post understand that facility is currently referring expectant women who are due for delivery and patients due for operation to Kamuzu Central Hospital.

Health authorities are yet to comment on the matter.

This comes as Malawi is grappling with forex shortage, lack of essential drugs and medicine in public hospital, high cost of living, fuel crisis, power outages and among others.

Despite challenges rocking the country, President Lazarus Chakwera without shame and remorse keeps on making petty trips and tours both local and international that milk hard-earned taxes.

Chakwera’s Tonse Alliance administration is failing to fix ailing economy for the last two years in power.

UN refugee chief calls for greater focus on climate and conflict factors

NEW YORK, USA, 03rd November 2022 -/African Media Agency (AMA)/- Responses to climate change must also consider its link to both conflict and the displacement it causes, UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, said in a briefing to the Security Council on Wednesday. 

Mr. Grandi expressed hope that these dimensions “will be in clearer focus” at the COP27 UN climate change conference, opening this weekend in Egypt, and at its successor conference in a year’s time.  

The climate emergency is ravaging resources and creating tensions, including between communities, particularly in already fragile contexts where authorities do not have the means to support adaptation and resilience. 

Fear of more fighting 

“I fear that without more attention and much greater financing for prevention, adaptation, and development and governance support – tensions, frustrations, competition will grow and spark wider conflict, with deadly consequences – including displacement,”  he said.

The UN refugee chief was in Somalia last week where he met emaciated women, men and children affected by conflict and the historic drought in the Horn of Africa. 

Refugees from the country have been pushed into drought-affected areas of neighbouring Kenya. 

More international support 

“The confluence of climate change and conflict has created very protracted displacement: therefore, inclusion and where possible integration, both in refugee contexts and situations of internal displacement, are important peacebuilding measures requiring greater international recognition and support,” Mr. Grandi told the Council. 

This “spiral” is evident in several other hotspots, including Africa’s Sahel region, he added.  Three million people there have been uprooted by climate change, poverty, weak governance and armed group activities, as well as “the often brutal reaction of governments”. 

Mr. Grandi said he used the climate emergency, and its connection to conflict and displacement, to convey the “enormous complexity” of refugee crises today

Globally, roughly 103 million people have been forcibly displaced by persecution, conflict, violence, human rights violations and other factors. 

Harsh winter for Ukrainians 

UNHCR staff have responded to 37 emergencies around the world in the past 12 months alone, in countries such as Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Myanmar and Syria. 

Meanwhile, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has forced some 14 million people to flee their homes, sparking the fastest and largest displacement crisis in decades. 

“Ukrainians are about to face one of the world’s harshest winters in extremely difficult circumstances. Humanitarian organizations have dramatically scaled up their response, but much more must be done, starting with an end to this senseless war,” he said. 

“Unfortunately, we see the opposite, and the destruction caused by strikes at civilian infrastructure, which happens as we speak, is quickly making the humanitarian response look like a drop in the ocean of needs.” 

Safeguard humanitarian action 

Mr. Grandi concluded his remarks by stressing the need for action in four areas, starting with resources.  Despite a record level of income, UNHCR is facing a major funding gap in some crucial areas, such as food aid for refugees.  

He also called for “seriously strengthening peacebuilding” in fragile countries, for example by reinforcing police, judicial and local government capacity, and overall rule of law.  This is critical to both resolve displacement, by allowing refugees to return home, and to prevent conflict from recurring

For his third point, Mr. Grandi stressed that humanitarian action must be better safeguarded, as threats are increasing, with deadly consequences. Warring parties must protect humanitarian work and enable access to people in need.  

“Furthermore, everyone must uphold international humanitarian law and contribute to preserving the civilian character of refugee settings – an increasing challenge in many parts of the world. Armed elements must be separated from refugees, and those displaced and those needing protection must not be conflated with combatants,” he said. 

Overcome your differences 

The UN refugee chief also presented another side of the duty of care issue, as millions of displaced and vulnerable people are living in areas under the control of non-State actors, or in countries under sanctions. 

He said no matter how polarised the context, aid workers must be able to operate wherever they are needed, which at times may involve “uncomfortable interactions” with those who control territory they need access to.  

“If I raise this…it is because we are often forced to negotiate humanitarian carve-outs, as they call them, case by case. I therefore welcome the current efforts in this Council to ensure greater predictability in these matters,” he added.  

His final point was a call for the international community, and countries on the Council, to overcome their divisions and disagreements “at least when you discuss humanitarian issues, and hopefully when you address or strive to address the root causes that are displacing people around the world.”  

Distributed by African Media Agency on behalf of Un News.

Source : African Media Agency (AMA)

How will Chakwera clear his name in AIP mess?

Chakwera fired Lowe for AIP mess

By Burnett Munthali

Reverend Lazarus Chakwera is involved in the Affordable Inputs Program (AIP) fraud. The President is hiding behind his national address, and the likely reshuffle to come.

President Lazarus Chakwera knows what is happening in his government but is just pretending not to know anything about the scandal.

If he doesn’t know anything then he must step down immediately or Malawians will not give him another five years contract.

His family is involved in AIP fraud and that a sign of a man who cannot control anyone including his own people.

From the look of things our President is a very weak leader who is taking sides in making his decisions on very important issues. He normally takes long to act on something, which is bad for the country.

Lazarus Chakwera demonstrated his weakness during the appointment of his first cabinet and continues to do so.

Malawians are still skeptical over the firing of Former Agriculture Minister Lobin Lowe as people know they are brothers in law.

If the President was serious enough, he would have fired more people connected with the scandal. Hence, the President should not be taken seriously. He has a hidden agenda.

Chakwera’s habit of finding faults on the Chairperson for committee on Agriculture, Sameer Suleiman for revealing the thirty billion fraud is a similar equation to that of the Director of the Malawi Anti Corruption Bureau, Martha Chizuma.

You will remember that this President played the same blame game. He is not prepared to fight any corruption but benefit from it in totality.

The President should not waste his time and energy intimidating any arm of government as they were established to function independently from each other and professionally.

Chakwera must start working, implementing good policies and fighting corruption head on.

Tonse Alliance is giving Malawians yet another raw deal of expired AIP fertilizer which is arriving in this country. That’s taking Malawians too far and for granted.

This clueless government is not even aware of the burning anger in the hearts of the people of this country. Nobody wants retrogression but progress.

Only few individuals will choose to talk good of Tonse Alliance Government for fictitious reasons.

The President’s national address is just empty talk as usual for nothing but hide and seek. There is nothing serious in all his speeches. Pastors are bad leaders, they are just preachers and not doers, they believe in making speeches, and not action. They steal a lot as well.

Our leader should not allow colleges because it affects the education system of the nation. The President made a lot of talk before ascending to power, he should not, therefore, find it difficult to perform. Let him go back to his manifesto, or run government professionally. Simple !

Chakwera must reshuffle his cabinet and stop creating ministries that are useless such as ministry of civic education and national unity.

What does minister Timothy Mtambo have to teach Malawians after all those rough speeches and violent protests he organized in 2019 – 2020? Such ministries do not make sense and should not exist.

They are just a waste of resources for nothing because Malawi is not a divided nation to have such an establishment.

Probably countries coming from internal fighting and war could have such. Chakwera’s personal advisors look like they were created for job opportunities only. The President keeps goofing all the time and he doesn’t

His Excellency, the President loves traveling all over different places in the middle of his own austerity measures and a failing economy.

This is the time to reduce his international trips and work on the current economic situation head on. Foreign exchange shortages, fuel crisis, government corruption, the rising cost of essential commodities do not just end with prayer but action.

Mr President needs help from government officials, opposition, technocrats, university students, researchers and everyone else because on his own with his team, he has failed and is going nowhere. Tonse Alliance Government doesn’t have the answers yet on how to take Malawi forward. We are driving towards the ditch (kuphompho) each day.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in the article are those of the author not necessarily of The Maravi Post or Editor

DRC: M23 rebel push worries residents of Goma

Residents in Goma, a city in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo with more than a million inhabitants, are becoming increasingly afraid as the M23 rebels (“March 23 Movement”) approach from the north, causing economic activity to grind to a halt as fear and uncertainty spread.

Citizens of the city of Goma in the democratic Republic of Congo express their concerns regarding the progression of dozens of armed groups whose recent advances in east have revived old animosities and led to a surge in tensions with neighboring Rwanda. 

“Today, my children also refuse to go to school,” says Nsimire Foybé, a shopkeeper in the city centre, “They think it could explode at any moment”.

Last week, the rebels, who some believe are being supported by Rwanda, seized the residential areas of Kiwanja and Rutshuru-centre, located 70km from Goma, as fighting continues in Rugari, a village located 40km from the city.

Kenya’s President William Ruto announced Wednesday that Nairobi was deploying troops to eastern DRC in a joint regional operation against the rebel offensive.

Leaders of the seven-nation East African Community (EAC) bloc, in which Kenya is the regional heavyweight, had agreed in April to establish a joint force in order to help restore security in the DRC. So far these efforts have not been fructuous.

Speaking at a ceremony in Nairobi to flag off the deployment, Ruto declared that the troops were “on a mission to protect humanity”.

“The destiny of DRC is intertwined with ours,” he added, without giving details of the deployment schedule.

“We will not allow any armed groups, criminals and terrorists to deny us our shared prosperity. We owe our brotherly duty to the DRC until the job is done.”

Kenya will command the force, which will also include soldiers from Burundi, South Sudan and Uganda.

Tensions with Rwanda

A Rwandan contingent will be deployed along the border, after Kinshasa objected to Kigali’s participation in any operations within the DRC in relation to Kigali being accused of collaborating with the M23 rebels, which resulted in the expulsion of Vincent Karega, ambassador to Rwanda in the DRC.

The M23 rebels, a mostly Congolese group, resumed fighting in late 2021 after lying dormant for years, accusing the DRC government of failing to honour an agreement to integrate its fighters into the army.

Fresh advances by the militia across the North Kivu province last month prompted the UN peacekeeping mission there to increase its alert level and boost support for the Congolese army.

Demonstrations and protests

As tensions have spiked, DRC residents have staged angry protests against M23 and Kigali, with hundreds taking to the streets in the South Kivu province on Wednesday and chanting: “Let the Rwandans go home!”

The demonstration followed a protest on Monday in Goma, the capital of the North Kivu province, where thousands marched through the city demanding weapons to fight against Rwanda.

The increase in violence has alarmed the international community, with the African Union appealing for a ceasefire.

Current EAC chairman, Burundi’s President Evariste Ndayishimiye, said on Tuesday he held talks with his regional counterparts on “managing the security crisis” and agreed to hold a summit at a date yet to be announced.

Source: Africanews

Humanitarians aid thousands in need across DR Congo; UN peacekeepers attacked by hostile crowd

n an update for journalists in New York during the regular press briefing on Wednesday, UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said many of those forced to flee their homes in the Rutshuru area, have found temporary shelter in schools, hospitals, churches and other sites, although most are living with host families who have taken them in.

Food to 50,000 in need

“Despite severe access constraints, humanitarian workers have started helping displaced people in Nyiragongo territory, providing them with water and healthcare. Our partners were also able to distribute food to some 50,000 people”, he added.

More than 180 unaccompanied children have been identified and assisted by child protection workers, while some 2,000 others are receiving psychological support, said Mr. Dujarric.

More supplies needed

“The needs still exceed present capacities, especially in the south of Kayna health zone in Lubero territory, which was already home to some 50,000 displaced people.”

The most urgent needs facing those caught up in the fighting include water, hygiene and sanitation; as well as a lack of essential household items, shelter, food, healthcare and basic protection.

The UN peacekeeping Mission in the country, MONUSCO, continues to protect civilians in line with its core mandate, and to work alongside the Congolese army to deter the M23 movement – an armed group of mainly ethnic Tutsi formed to oppose Hutu militia ten years ago which has gained ground in recent weeks – and other armed groups which hold sway across large swathes of the east.

Maintaining ‘multiple positions’

The UN Spokesperson said that to maximize civilian protection, peacekeepers are “maintaining multiple positions, where possible, in the zone of hostilities.”

Following consultations with national partners, the Mission withdrew peacekeepers from its base in Rumangabo, in North Kivu, an area where the Congolese army is no longer present, he added.

MONUSCO tweeted that it had made the tactical withdrawal, in order to prepare for next steps with national partners, in the effort to contain the advance of M23, which occupied the town of Kiwanja on Saturday. Four peacekeepers were injured in fighting at the weekend, carrying our protection operations.

Peacekeepers attacked

Mr. Dujarric also reported that a convoy of peacekeepers had been stoned by a hostile crowd, at an army checkpoint near a site for displaced people, around 8 kms north of regional capital, Goma.

“Two peacekeepers were injured and [at least] one mission vehicle was set on fire. Peacekeepers fired warning shots to ensure safe passage of the convoy.

“Our colleagues note that this type of violence and destruction of equipment limits the mission’s capacity to carry out its mandate to protect civilians and support the delivery of humanitarian assistance to vulnerable communities.”

Sourced from United Nations Africa Pages

Ethiopia: Peace agreement between Government and Tigray ‘a critical first step’: Guterres

In a statement issued by his Spokesperson, Secretary-General António Guterres said the Agreement for Lasting Peace through a Permanent Cessation of Hostilities brokered by the African Union and mediated by former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, was a promising start to finally stopping the fighting which erupted in November 2020 after months of tension, and which has destroyed so many lives and livelihoods.

‘Bold step’

“The Secretary General urges all Ethiopians and the international community to support the bold step taken today by the Federal Government of Ethiopia and the Tigrayan leadership”, the statement said.

There are around 5.2 million in need of humanitarian assistance in Tigray, including 3.8 million who need healthcare, said the UN World Health Organization on Friday, and it has been two months since the last humanitarian aid reached the region.

Earlier in the day, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said large numbers of displaced were arriving in, or moving towards Tigray’s regional capital, with needs rising by the day.

Thousands have been killed, with allegations of serious human rights violations, including possible war crimes, committed by both sides. 

The AU reportedly hailed the agreement as a “new dawn”, and hailed the disarmament plan which both sides have officially signed up to after weeks of extensive negotiations, including the restoration of aid supplies.

Resolve outstanding issues

The Secretary-General pledged his support to the parties in the implementation of the agreement and urged both sides “to continue with negotiations on the outstanding issues in a spirit of reconciliation in order to reach a lasting political settlement, silence the guns and put the country back on the path to peace and stability.”

He appealed to all stakeholders to seize the opportunity provided by the ceasefire, “to scale up humanitarian assistance to all civilians in need and to restore the desperately needed public services.”

Mr. Guterres commended the AU and its High-Level Panel for the facilitation of the peace talks and South Africa, for its key role hosting the peace talks.

“The United Nations stands ready to assist the next steps of the African Union-led process and will continue to mobilize much-needed assistance to alleviate suffering in the affected areas”, the statement concluded.

Sourced from United Nations Africa Pages

Africa is open for business, continent’s leaders tell investors as Africa Investment Forum kicks off

African leaders on Wednesday laid out the continent’s vast potential and invited global investors to seize investment opportunities.

Speaking during the 2022 Africa Investment Forum Market Days being held in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire’s economic capital, the leaders vowed to continue working to strengthen the economic resilience of their countries against external shocks.

The three-day forum has drawn project sponsors, investors, and heads of state from around the world to participate in boardroom sessions that could lead to transactions worth billions of dollars. 

President of Cote d’Ivoire Alassane Ouattara expressed the hope that Market Days 2022 would break the $100 billion threshold in investment interest. Vice President Tiemoko Meyliet Koné delivered his remarks.

Ouattara acknowledged the wave of threats African countries continue to face, including the Covid-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine and the impacts of climate change. The Market Days 2022 theme, Building Economic Resilience Through Sustainable Investments, reflects these realities.

‘Immediately following the challenges of the pandemic, African countries are once again facing external shocks because of the war in Ukraine, with heavy economic, financial and social consequences,’ Ouattara said.

The current crisis makes us even more vulnerable to food insecurity, Ouattara said. ‘This is paradoxical for a continent that has 60% of the world’s arable land and abundant and youthful manpower.’

African Development Bank Group President Dr. Akinwumi Adesina gave a preview of the three-day event, saying, ‘You are in the right place: Africa! In the next 72 hours, we will have curated several investment-ready projects for you as investors. These range from renewable energy hydropower, gas infrastructure, railways, road, and water transport.’  

Other priority investment sectors for 2022 include agriculture, health, mining, fertilizer manufacturing, port infrastructure, and urban green transport. The Africa Investment Forum is an initiative of the African Development Bank and seven partners. 

The African leaders present had the opportunity to pitch their countries as investment destinations. They included Ethiopia’s President Sahle-Work Zewde; Ghanaian President Nana Akufo-Addo; President Emmerson Mnangagwa of Zimbabwe; Vice President of Liberia Jewel Howard Taylor; Tanzania’s Vice President Philip Mpango; José Ulisses Correia e Silva, Prime Minister of Cabo Verde; and Prime Minister Patrick Achi of Cote d’Ivoire.

A common thread in their remarks was the existence of a gap between perception and reality in terms of Africa’s investment risk.

President Mnangagwa spoke about what he termed Zimbabwe’s peculiar circumstances. ‘There are a lot of misperceptions about Zimbabwe just because we have chosen to be ourselves.’ He assured investors, saying: ‘For those who want to make money, Zimbabwe is open to business.’

For Adesina, the perception gap is not borne out by data. He pointed out that Moody’s Analytics research indicates Africa has the lowest default rate on infrastructure projects among the world’s regions – 5.5% – compared to 12.9% in Latin America, 8.8% in Asia, and 5.9% in Western Europe. ‘Africa is not as risky as you think,’ Adesina said. ‘Perception is not the same as reality.’

President Akufo-Addo said that Africa’s promising future should make it very hard to overlook its opportunities. ‘There are problems but look beyond the challenges to what the future holds,’ he urged. He pointed to the continent’s demographic dividend and abundant arable land as causes for optimism.

One of the key themes of the Africa Investment Forum is women as investment champions, a topic that President Sahle-Work Zewde addressed at length. ‘We must accelerate women’s digital literacy as a matter of urgency given the enormous potential of e-commerce and digital finance. Otherwise we risk deepening yet another gap in the gender digital divide,’ she said.

Africa Investment Forum Market Days 2022 will feature boardroom sessions that also promote sectors where Africa has a comparative advantage, such as music, film, fashion, textiles, and sports.

The event will also cover potential investment and development in areas such as food security, environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing, and emerging technologies including the internet of things and blockchain. Click here for the full agenda.

Since its inception in 2018, the Africa Investment Forum platform has mobilized investment interests in excess of $100 billion. It is an initiative of the African Development Bank; Africa 50; the Africa Finance Corporation; the African Export-Import Bank; the Development Bank of Southern Africa; the Trade and Development Bank; the European Investment Bank; and the Islamic Development Bank.
Source African Development Bank Group

Senegalese opposition warns of political ‘subterfuge’ on eve of leader’s hearing

Senegal’s main opposition leader and presidential candidate, Ousmane Sonko, has urged his supporters to remain calm on the eve of a court hearing in a rape case brought against him.

His arrest and indictment in March last year led to several days of deadly riots, looting and destruction.

‘If we accept to fight, we will do it. But we are not there, dear compatriots. And that is why I ask you solemnly to go about your business, not to come to my house, nor to the court, nor to rally, because this is an ordinary procedure. It will not be resolved tomorrow,’ he said.

The 48-year-old politician, who came third in the last presidential election and plans to run again in 2024, has been accused of raping an employee of a beauty salon where he was getting a massage.

A political plot

Sonko says he believes the case against him was ‘a plot hatched at the top of the state’, and a ‘trap’ set by President Macky Sall, as a ‘strategy of chaos’ to discredit his political opponents.

Members of Sonko’s Yewwi Askan Wi opposition coalition have expressed their support for their leader, saying they will stand together in the face of any injustice.

‘We ask [our fellow citizens] to stand up and stand together with the opposition coalition, to face this president of the republic who is obsessed with a third candidacy,’ said coalition member, Cheikh Tidiane Youm.

Members of the Senegal’s opposition added that ‘all these strategies, all these subterfuges’ were based on the incumbent ‘wanting to put forward a third candidacy’’.

Two of the president’s other opponents, the former mayor of Dakar, Khalifa Sall, and former minister, Karim Wade, have seen their careers interrupted by legal problems.

Sall, who was elected in 2012 for seven years and re-elected in 2019 for five years, has remained vague on whether he intends to run for a controversial third term in office.

Source: Africanews

The priority actions needed to limit global warming

– –

Despite positive progress at COP26, current country pledges and commitments, even if fully implemented, still do not put the world on trajectory to limit global warming to 1.5°C.

If the world is to have even a 50% chance of meeting that objective, COP27 must act as a catalyst to turn broad national commitments into secific actions and pave the way to more forceful measures to phase-out coal and end deforestation.

The economic and political situation ahead of COP27 is highly challenging. In addition to lingering pressures resulting from the Covid-19 pandemic and supply chain disruptions, the world now faces record energy and high food prices in many regions resulting from the war in Ukraine. Together these are leading to high inflation, lower growth and risks of recession in many countries.

There is a danger that energy security and short-term economic pressures, together with geopolitical tensions, will divert national and international attention from climate change related issues.

But many of the actions needed to build greater energy security could also drive a faster transition to a low-carbon economy, as described in the ETC’s paper Energy Security Through Accelerated Transition. Despite the global geopolitical and macroeconomic headwinds, there is some evidence of progress on climate commitments.

– –

Keeping 1.5°C on the table

Some voices are challenging whether a 1.5°C trajectory is still feasible. However, each 0.1°C rise above 1.5°C will have hugely significant climate change impacts. The world must continue to aim for this target, and to ensure that any overshoot of it is as low as possible. Both full implementation of COP26 commitments and further progress at COP27 are therefore essential if the world is to have a chance of limiting global warming to 1.5°C.

“Despite the current global economic and political challenges, we must keep focused on the global crises presented by climate change. Each 0.1 °C rise above 1.5°C will have a hugely significant impact.  Many of the actions needed to build greater energy security could also drive a faster transition to a more resilient and stable low-carbon economy.

Both full implementation of COP26 commitments and further progress at COP27 are therefore essential if the world is to have a 50-50 chance of limiting global warming”, commented Adair Turner, Chair, Energy Transitions Commission.

– –

3 priority areas for accelerated progress

Against this backdrop the ETC’s new report Degree of Urgency: Accelerating Action to Keep 1.5°C on the Table highlights three priority areas for accelerated progress:

  1. Closing the ‘ambition gap’ via more ambitious country targets, with strengthened NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions) which reflect both country specific actions and the potential impact of sectoral commitments agreed at Glasgow and subsequently.
  2. Closing the ‘implementation gap’ via targeted policies and company actions to drive further real-world progress across six critical sectors (methane, deforestation, power, road transport, heavy industry, and energy efficiency).
  3. Closing the ‘financing gap’ in particular to support middle and low-income countries to peak and then reduce emissions as soon as possible; in total at least $300 billion per annum could be required to support early coal phase-out, and end deforestation, and carbon dioxide removals in a scenario where sufficient action from policy and industry isn’t taken. This funding should come from corporates in voluntary carbon markets, philanthropic capital, hybrid payment and investment instruments, and intergovernmental transfers of climate-related funding from developed to developing countries.

“The developed countries must seize the opportunity created by Lula’s election, providing the financial support which can enable Brazil to end deforestation fast: this is a deal waiting to be done at COP27“, said Adair Turner, Chair, Energy Transitions Commission.

Progress at COP26 but still an ‘ambition gap’ 

Despite positive momentum at COP26, an ‘ambition gap’ remains – current country pledges (NDCs) and commitments do not yet put the world on a 1.5°C trajectory.

The formal country pledges (NDCs) and net-zero targets coming out of COP26 put the world on a pathway to above 2°C of warming. Although since then 24 countries have submitted updated NDCs, only Australia’s makes a material impact on closing the emissions gap in 2030.

COP26 also produced a series of sector agreements – including across deforestation, methane, and coal phase out – by countries and private participants that, if fully realised, could put the world on a pathway towards 1.8°C. However, the vast majority are yet to translate into formal country commitments, and critical agreements such as ending deforestation by 2030 are severely underfinanced.

Positive developments but still an “implementation gap”

Despite encouraging developments in policy and technology, the world is also facing an ‘implementation gap’ between pledged targets and on-the-ground progress.

This year there has been substantial policy action in the EU, US and China which has started to bridge the implementation gap, with ambitious targets (and strong prospects for implementation) set out in the REPowerEU package, the US Inflation Reduction Act, and in China’s 14th Five-Year-Plan.

Keeping 1.5°C Alive – what can be done?

The world has a dwindling carbon budget for 1.5°C (500 Gt from 2020, 420 Gt from the beginning of 2022), so the time to act is running out.

Despite good news on developed country and China commitments and implementation, the current numbers do not add up to 1.5°C – under a full implementation trajectory, developed countries, China and India alone would likely overshoot the carbon budget needed to “keep 1.5°C alive”.

To square the objectives of global emissions reductions and economic development needs in emerging and developing economies, it will be necessary that all countries – but in particular the developed economies and China – at the very least achieve and ideally overachieve or increase emissions reduction commitments. Doing this will drive technological progress which will reduce mitigation costs across the world.

“The ETC highlights critical actions for nations and companies if the world is to stand any chance of limiting global warming to 1.5°C. Rallying global leadership is at the heart of the Race to Resilience and the Race to Zero campaigns; and the ETC’s recommendations demonstrate that it is technically and economically feasible to get us back on track through the power of collaboration. Momentum-building is one thing, but it is now crucial that we pivot to rapid delivery for what’s left of the 2020s,” remarked Nigel Topping, the UN Climate Change High-Level Champion for the UK

Across all areas ambitious policy action can lead the way, but we identify two key additional drivers of action:

  • the need to tackle emissions from the agriculture, forests and other land-use sectors, and in particular methane emissions and CO2 emissions from deforestation which result from red meat consumption: fixing these will require either shifts in diet or technological changes such as the development of synthetic meat.
  • And the need for a large scale up in financing to phase-out coal, end deforestation and develop large scale carbon dioxide removals soon.

“In the year since COP26 where national priorities have appeared to drift away from climate, a stocktake of progress on the ground reveals a mixed picture. Rollout of renewables and electric vehicles is rapid and rising, and there is also optimism around progress in heavy industry and progressing energy efficiency. However, this alone is not enough and progress is urgently required in reducing methane emissions, early coal phase-out and ending deforestation,” said Mike Hemsley, Deputy Director, Energy Transitions Commission.

Whilst both high-income and developing countries can do more to accelerate their own emissions reductions, two further options exist that can accelerate progress:

  1. Flows of funding in the form of investments and payments from public and private sector to enable lower income countries to move faster than technology & policy sharing alone would enable.
  2. Faster scaling and increased contribution of negative emissions solutions alongside rapid and deep cuts to emissions, as highlighted by the ETC in Mind the Gap: How Carbon Dioxide Removals Must Complement Deep Decarbonisation to Keep 1.5°C Alive.

Sumant Sinha, Chairman, Founder and CEO of ReNew Power stated that, “It is vital that countries around the world continue to move ahead and face the global challenge of climate change together. Urgent action is required to meet the dual objectives of emissions reductions and economic development needs in emerging and developing counties. Speedy deployment of zero-carbon power supported by the right policy environment is key to ensuring a real economy transition that will benefit the planet.”

To read the full report, visit: https://www.energy-transitions.org/publications/degree-of-urgency/

Source: Africa Feeds

FARMSE Project hailed for instilling a saving culture in Chikwawa

Chikwawa farmer


By Salome Gangire

CHIKWAWA-(MANA)-Financial Access for Rural Markets, Smallholders and Enterprises (FARMSE) beneficiaries have hailed the project for instilling a saving culture amongst them.

Speaking during a media tour one of the participants Levison Joseph from Sam Village, Traditional Authority Maseya in Chikwawa, said the finance management training she received when she was enrolled in the program, made her join a Village, Savings and Loans (VSL) group where she saves money.
“During the training, we were drilled on financial management on saving amongst others so that we should be saving money and graduate into self-reliance,” she said.

Joseph said under the program, she received MK236, 000 seed capital in 2021 to venture into business.
She said through the business and VSL she has acquired livestock’s and managed change her grass thatched house to iron roofed.

She said her life now has been transformed she attributes the change to current status to the seed capital she received which made her switch business from cotton farming to livestock rearing.

She said the new business has enabled her to realise more disposable income to meet more of her daily domestic needs while she saves some money with Tiyese VSL.

Another beneficiary from Chikwatu Village in the area of Traditional Authority, Mgabu, Charles Million said when he received his seed capital from the project, he joined Tikondane VSL where he is able to make savings which make it easy for him to pay school fees for his children.

“Through my savings I pay school fees for my children at Madziabango Community Day Secondary School.

Million too says he managed to replace his grass thatched house with corrugated iron sheets.
Grace Namseta from Namasonya Village, Traditional Authority Namseta in Thyolo is also singing a new tune.

She now boasts of owning a dairy cow through FARMSE program which is now a source of her livelihood.

The Project being implemented in Chikwawa by Care Malawi targets beneficiaries of Social Cash Transfer VSL trained beneficiaries how to manage their funds in order to achieve self-reliance.

Farmse Ultra Graduation Specialist O’Brien Mandala said almost 15,700 of the 20,800 beneficiaries of the utra-poor component have graduated by meeting the program’s bench marks for graduation.

“Under this program we have seen that beneficiaries are moving up. We started with 20, 800 beneficiaries almost 15,700 have graduated by meeting the indicators put on the program for graduation,” he said.

He said the project has three components; utra –poor program where they are working with beneficiaries under Social cash transfer to support them so that they attain sustainable livelihoods.

Mandala said most of the beneficiaries’ livelihood has improved as most of them when the program was rolling out did not have assets like livestock.

But now most of these beneficiaries own livestock and have permanent housing structures with corrugated iron sheets and are able to send their children to school.

He said the other component is Community based financial organisation where they are promoting savings and loans groups to have a saving culture and it is pleasing to note that most beneficiaries are in (VSL) groups.

He added that the VSL groups were well trained such that they believe that even if the programs winds up, most of them will be sustainable.

The Ultra Graduation Specialist said on the component of renovation outreach facility, they are supporting financial services to scale up in the rural areas so that the rural communities without banks should have a chance to banking facilities.

He said over 95percent of the beneficiaries are still doing business after receiving support from FARMSE.

FARMSE is a seven-year national wide development programme implemented by the Ministry of finance from 2018-2025 with joint funding from the international fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the government of Malawi and the private sector.

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