Pressure to reduce carbon emissions and regenerate biodiversity increases as the global climate crisis intensifies. However, it’s crucial that a clear distinction is drawn between the starting point for the global South and that of the global North in consideration of diversity.
In response, the Africa Finance Corporation (AFC) (https://www.AfricaFC.org/), the continent’s leading infrastructure solutions provider, is collaborating with Common Purpose (https://CommonPurpose.org/), an international leadership development organization, to launch the Climate Challenge Leadership Programme which will offer a different approach.
The program will aim to strengthen the capacity of a cohort of 50 dynamic emerging leaders from Africa and the rest of the world, who – as they progress in their careers – will build bridges between the global North and South and find new ways to address the environmental crisis. The program will be funded by AFC and run by Common Purpose and will take place later this year.
Considering that Africa, for example, produces less than 3.8% of carbon emissions, the continent has been disproportionately impacted by climate change, with frequent droughts, heavy rains, and severe heat waves.[1] Conversely, many of the highest carbon emissions nations are feeling relatively little impact, undermining the sense of urgency.
Based on these differing positions arose a need to bridge in order to reduce emissions and drive the regeneration of biodiversity.
Adirupa Sengupta, Chief Executive of the Common Purpose Charitable Trust (UK), said that to address the climate crisis, there’s a need for leaders who can cross boundaries and collaborate to transform the systems that support our way of life.
“The next generation of leaders will be at the heart of tackling these issues and we want to equip them to lead a different conversation between the global North and South. AFC is a natural partner for us because of their knowledge of, and ambition for, Africa and the global South,” added CEO Common Purpose.
The program is the latest iteration of the Common Purpose Innoventure Leadership Development Programme, which for the past 13 years has assembled young changemakers from across the globe to tackle everything from the reduction of the cost of surgery to the optimization of societal benefits derived from new technologies.
This latest edition is meant to focus squarely on the practical challenge of bridging the gap in positions and perspectives on climate between leaders from the global North and South. “The program will be fertile ground for innovative solutions to be crafted by the next generation of leaders from Africa and beyond,” said AFC´s President and CEO, Samaila Zubairu.
The programme will aim to strengthen the capacity of a cohort of 50 dynamic emerging leaders from Africa and the rest of the world.
Mr. Zubairu said that for far too long, Africa has been viewed by the rest of the world as a place of ‘problems’ – and yet Africa holds the solutions to many of the fundamental problems facing the world today like carbon emissions, particularly in relation to climate change.
“This is why we are supporting Common Purpose in the development of a rising generation of leaders from Africa and beyond who are enabled and empowered to offer global solutions to the climate challenge,” said Mr. Zubairu
AFC, through its investments and project advisory function, has a three-pronged approach to supporting Africa’s contribution to combating climate change: localizing production to minimize emissions from shipping and other forms of transport; rebuilding infrastructure in a way that will be resilient to changing climate conditions and that anticipates, prepares for, and adapts to climate risk; and using financial innovation to crowd-in investment to support everything from reforestation to renewable power plants.
AFC’s white paper, ‘A Pragmatic Path to Net Zero’ (https://apo-opa.info/3N68VNN), calls for African leaders to engage in a unified narrative with the rest of the world to assert the continent’s role in combating global warming and its impacts.[2]
Successful applicants to the Climate Challenge Leadership Programme will be emerging leaders with at least five years of professional experience and will come from different sectors, countries, and communities across Africa, the wider global South, and the global North.
By the program’s end, the participants will have increased their ability to ‘Lead Beyond Authority’ (https://apo-opa.info/3OhdPZg), a prerequisite to solving any complex problem. They will have made new connections with leaders across the global North and South. They will have developed their analytical and creative skills and enhanced their influence by tackling a complex challenge within a diverse group.
Applications are now open via the Common Purpose website. Apply at CommonPurpose.org.
[1] Africa accounts for the smallest share of global greenhouse gas emissions, at just 3.8 percent, https://apo-opa.info/3Q8wN6M
[2] Roadmap to Africa’s COP: A pragmatic path to net zero, https://apo-opa.info/3N68VNN