Tag Archives: Eritrea

Dealing with climate change in the real world + bonus track

The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) has published a paper in which they analyse how ten African countries are dealing with climate change (pdf). The countries studied are the members of the Association for Strengthening Agricultural Research in Eastern and Central Africa (ASARECA). They are Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Rwanda, Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda.

IFPRI studied 26 different strategies to cope with the challenges brought up by climate change:

Of the 26 strategies mentioned, only two are common to all 10 countries, while five more are common to five or more. The strategies common to all member countries include the development and promotion of drought-tolerant and early-maturing crop species and exploitation of new and renewable energy sources. Most countries have areas that are classifiable as arid or semiarid, hence the need to develop drought-tolerant and early-maturing crops. Strangely, only one country recognizes the conservation of genetic resources as an important strategy although this is also potentially important for dealing with drought. Biomass energy resources account for more than 70 percent of total energy consumption in ASARECA member countries. To mitigate the potential adverse effects of biomass energy depletion, ASARECA countries plan to harness new and renewable energy sources, including solar power, wind power, hydro and geothermal sources, and biofuels.

As it turns out, Sub Saharan Africa is the most vulnerable continent to the possible consequences of climate change. For example, the African Development Bank says about this:

Recent assessments have shown that the economic costs of climate change in Africa are likely to be significantly higher in relative terms than in other regions of the world. The costs of addressing the huge impacts of climate variability in Africa are already being felt on the continent. In East Africa, for example, major periodic droughts and floods have cost 5%-8% GDP per event. Their regular frequency has a direct long-term fiscal liability of over 2% GDP per year that is largely absorbed by the national governments.

And a few months ago, a US House Subcommittee on Africa and Global Health heard the US State Department’s Deputy Special Envoy for Climate Change, Jonathan Pershing, and four other experts from Conservation International (CI) – about the consequences of climate change in Africa:

Committee Chairman Donald Payne (D-NJ) in his opening remarks said, “African nations emitted only about 3% of world carbon dioxide from human-related sources in 2007. However Africa [because of its arid landscape, development challenges, and surging populations] is most likely to experiences rises in temperatures first. That’s not fair.”

“We are greatly concerned by climate change and believe that we are already living with its impacts”, testified Ambassador Rajaobelina, from severe droughts, to increasingly devastating cyclones, and rising continental temperatures.

For people in poverty and simply trying to survive on a daily basis, even small climatic changes that impact a harvest can be catastrophic. Adaptation responses that improve the ability of the rural poor to cope with events for which they cannot plan are clearly going to be needed.”

I found out about the IFPRI report via Duncan Green and, as he says:

While climate change negotiators seem to be wading through metaphorical cement, national governments have no choice but to get on with adapting to current and future climate change, as far as they are able.

The latest example? The 2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference held in Copenhagen last December. Which was either a failure or a failure.

But an important point is this: many Sub Saharan African countries are already struggling to feed their populations and, if anything, climate change could make this harder.

So it’s good to know that, while the international community talks and talks, some affected countries are trying to do something practical, according to the IFPRI’s report.

In Nairobi, there is the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI). ILRI is one among other centres which form the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR). According to their 2009 financial report (pdf), ILRI is funded “by more than 90 private, public and government organizations of the north and South”.

Last March, I went to ILRI and did a story for Efe on the opening of a new lab at ILRI. This new lab is the BecA hub, which stands for Biosciences eastern and central Africa hub. Even though it won’t be officially launched until November, the BecA was then already working at 95 percent of its capacity. Their main research programmes at the time were about drought-resistant crops, plant parasites and livestock diseases. They were studying the local crops and livestock varieties present around them, in Kenya and the rest of East Africa. The aim was to improve the practical and material conditions for farmers and herders to produce more and better stuff. It doesn’t sound very sexy and you won’t see very often these issues featuring in the mainstream media. But a new cassava crop or a new vaccine for cows could greatly improve the lives of many people in the region.

I talked to Carlos Seré, ILRI director general, and Segenet Kelemu, BecA director. We talked about how to improve the food security in East Africa. They both seemed no-nonsense to me. They acknowledged the complexities of farming in East Africa and the impossibility of a green revolution in the conventional sense. “Here, we need a million green revolutions for the million particular problems”, Seré would tell me. They wanted the researchers to go and talk to local farmers. They wanted the research done here about the very problems of the region. Instead of big plans to save Africa, they asked for better roads and irrigation infrastructures.

Global climate change summits are fun to attend as a delegate or a journalist or to protest against. Big plans to save the world are great to make the headlines and to write flowery speeches. And, hey, both things may have actual good consequences and everything. But I keep thinking organisations and institutions based locally and dealing with local problems to improve the local situation will have a much bigger impact to improve people’s lives.

Bonus track: global warming, climate change and blah blah

Now, I’m no expert on climate change (I think I’m no expert on anything, actually). But it’s for people like me that Wikipedia was created. There is some controversy surrounding whether the current global warming is being mostly caused by humans or not. That’s not my point now (even though there’s almost complete scientific consensus on human-made climate change). One point is that the consensus about global warming actually happening, no matter whose fault it is, is even greater and that this will have likely negative consequences for us people.

Climate model projections summarized in the latest IPCC report indicate that the global surface temperature is likely to rise a further 1.1 to 6.4 °C (2.0 to 11.5 °F) during the 21st century. The uncertainty in this estimate arises from the use of models with differing sensitivity to greenhouse gas concentrations and the use of differing estimates of future greenhouse gas emissions. An increase in global temperature will cause sea levels to rise and will change the amount and pattern of precipitation, probably including expansion of subtropical deserts. Warming is expected to be strongest in the Arctic and would be associated with continuing retreat of glaciers, permafrost and sea ice. Other likely effects include changes in the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, species extinctions, and changes in agricultural yields. Warming and related changes will vary from region to region around the globe, though the nature of these regional variations is uncertain. Another major worldwide concomitant of global warming, and one which is presently happening as well as being predicted to continue, is ocean acidification, which is likewise a result of contemporary increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide.

Of course, that’s Wikipedia speaking. But if you are really bored, go and check all those links and the sources the articles quote, that’s where all the meat is.

And the other point is, no matter whether climate change is real or if it’s our or the cows’ fault, food security in Sub Saharan Africa is already very fragile and should be addressed in ways that actually make change.

(The bolding in the quotes is mine.)

Es viernes, lee algo sobre África / It’s Friday, read something about Africa

In English_

- There is a gold rush in Eritrea:

But among the stories of the mining boom in Eritrea and the mining companies’ stocks going up and down, the dirtiest secret that has remained untold is the extensive use of slave labor in these mining projects.

- Unlike many think, piracy in Somalia looks pretty much like any other ‘business’, pirates themselves are just the cheap labour force that’s trying to save some money and move to doing something else:

Piracy has become a sophisticated business. Pirates say the operations are now run by a small group of warlords and financiers based around the world. The men who do the dirty work get only a tiny piece of those multimillion-dollar ransoms.

- In the slum of Kibera in Nairobi, a “merry-go-round” microfinance program is keeping some residents fed and allowing them to send their childreen to school.

- ICC’s prosecutor, Luis Moreno-Ocampo is finally coming to Kenya to officially launch the investigation on the 2007-2008 post-election violence. Expectations are high among most Kenyans except, maybe, for the very witnesses that are supposed to give evidence:

On top of this they also will be the least likely to be supported by either the ICC’s witness protection programme or the state’s witness protection agency.

Because both programmes are, for obvious reasons of law, most interested in the kinds of witnesses who can connect the dots and establish chain of command for the organised violence and the equally organised counter-attacks.

- Sonangol and the looting of Angola’s oil.

—————

En español_

- Casa África, una curiosa iniciativa del gobierno español para ‘acercar’ África a España.

- Human Rights Watch denuncia que hasta 50.000 niños en las escuelas coránicas de Senegal viven prácticamente como esclavos:

Muchos de los morabitos en daaras urbanas (profesores de las escuelas coránicas) demandan una cuota diaria a los niños que obligan a pedir limosna, e infringen graves abusos físicos y psicológicos a los que no cumplen con ello. Human Rights Watch documentó numerosos casos de palizas, y varios casos en que niños fueron encadenados, atados, y obligados a ponerse en posiciones de estrés mientras fueron golpeados.

- Hoy se estrena Viaje Mágico a África, la primera película española rodada en 3D.

- “Alejandría, una ciudad con encanto eterno”.

Es viernes, lee algo sobre África / It’s Friday, read something about Africa

- Aunque no está directamente relacionado con África, este texto de Ramón Lobo sirve para recordar que, se trate de Bin Laden, Obama o el político español de turno, simplemente retransmitir las declaraciones de cualquier persona no es periodismo.

- Kenya is so worried about being infiltrated by al Shabaab militants that has arrested even those Somali in Nairobi who work at the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia or who are refugees who fled because of al Shabaab.

- The foreign affairs head of the main opposition coalition in Eritrea talks about making the country a true democracy. Shame he doesn’t say a word about how to actually change the current regime.

- Officials from the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia have lately been bragging about taking over the whole country in the next few days, which would be amazing, as now -and in despite of the cool name of the government- they only control a few streets of Mogadishu and the way to the airport. Anyway, maybe this is the reason behind their bragging.

- Lóbrego relato sobre la realidad de un hospital en Mogadiscio. Discutible por su dureza pero interesante como todas las historias hechas a pie de calle y con gente de verdad.

- Y como no todo van a ser malas noticias desde África, aquí El Viajero habla de ese otro lado de Kenia, el de los safaris y los paisajes de película.

- On Wednesday, the International Criminal Court said it’s going to re-assess whether Sudan’s president Omar al-Bashir may be charged with genocide or not. As well as not meaning almost anything in itself and just giving al-Bashir more time and fame, some believe this genocide charge could backfire in the hands of the ICC.

- What is worse, finding oil in your country or not finding it? Ugandan courts ally themselves with the government to stop the people from knowing anything about how they are dealing with the big oil reserves recently discovered.

- Y por último, otra forma de ver África.

- And finally, another view of Africa.

Y mientras tanto en el este de África – 13/01/10

Ayer, un terremoto de 7 grados en la escala de Richter sacudió Haití y ha causado enormes destrozos en el que es el país más pobre de América. Según la Cruz Roja, hasta 3 millones de personas podrían verse afectadas. Google ha anunciado que va a dejar de censurar los resultados de sus búsquedas en China (¿por qué aceptó esta censura en un principio?) después de descubrir ataques cibernéticos contra cuentas de Gmail de activistas chinos de derechos humanos. Según la ONU, 2.412 civiles murieron en Afganistán durante 2009, la cifra más alta desde el inicio del conflicto en 2001 con la invasión estadounidense.

Y mientras tanto, en el este de África:

- El clérigo musulmán Abudllah al-Faisal seguirá por ahora en prisión en Kenia. Al-Faisal, de nacionalidad jamaicana, entró en Kenia el 24 de diciembre, fue detenido en Mombasa el 1 de enero y de inmediato se inició su proceso de extradición. Pero hasta el día 7 no pudieron deportarlo porque ningún país quería acoger a al-Faisal en su territorio. El clérigo fue enviado, vía Nigeria, a Gambia, desde donde continuaría su viaje a Jamaica. Pero en Nigeria no se le permitió embarcar y el día 11 se le envió de vuelta a Kenia, donde aún sigue encarcelado. Al-Faisal cumplió condena en el Reino Unido por “incitar al odio contra los judíos, hindúes y occidentales”. Actualmente ni Kenia ni ningún otro país tienen cargos contra al-Faisal, y el gobierno keniano le detuvo como “inmigrante no deseado” porque supuestamente su nombre aparece en una lista internacional de sospechosos de terrorismo. Hasta que fue devuelto a Kenia el 11 de enero, al-Faisal no había podido hablar con un abogado.

- En Uganda se sigue discutiendo sobre un proyecto de ley que criminalizaría la homosexualidad y podría conllevar penas de muerte para los gays. En general, la homosexualidad no está muy bien vista en el África subsahariana.

- Reporteros Sin Fronteras (RSF) ha pedido a la ONU que investigue la situación de los periodistas detenidos por el gobierno en Eritrea. Según RSF, 26 periodistas y dos trabajadores de medios de comunicación están actualmente encarcelados en Eritrea y cuatro habrían muerto en prisión desde 2005. Eritrea es el país que ocupa el último lugar en el ranking de libertad de expresión de RSF. En 2001, el gobierno eritreo “suspendió” las actividades de todos los medios de comunicación privados del país y detuvo y encarceló alrededor de 15 periodistas y otras personas opuestas al régimen de Issaías Afewerki.

Hace unas semanas, durante un torneo regional en Kenia, 12 jugadores de la selección eritrea de fútbol se escaparon de la concentración y pidieron asilo en Kenia.

- Etiopía y China han firmado un acuerdo comercial que dará a los productos etíopes acceso preferencial al mercado chino. La semana pasada, China ofreció una ayuda de 5 millones de euros a Kenia y se comprometió a financiar diversos proyectos. Estos acuerdos son el resultado de una estrategia general china de incrementar sus lazos comerciales con el África subsahariana.