Washington, United States (AFP) – Africa’s vast potential in the global fight against climate change is at risk due to the heavy burden of debt and lack of international investment, Kenyan President William Ruto said Thursday.

On a state visit to Washington, Ruto highlighted how Kenya already generates some 90 percent of energy from renewables and said the rest of Africa had “massive” potential in the green economy, both through natural resources — including forest “sinks” that counteract carbon emissions — and a young workforce.

“Our continent has the fundamentals to be a major player” in several areas “needed to avert the climate catastrophe,” Ruto said in a speech.

But he regretted that Africa was only receiving two percent of global investment in renewable energy and that some countries were spending more on servicing their debts than on health care.

“Africa’s role in addressing climate change is not guaranteed and nobody should take it for granted,” Ruto said at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies.

“It is not our business to keep trees. It is not our business to keep forest. It will not materialize if we are so crippled by debt that we cannot educate our youth, if investors deem us too risky to engage,” he said.

Ruto pointed to the growing costs of disasters related to climate change, with Africa particularly hard hit, but said that green investment in Africa also made economic sense.

The continent, he said, holds 60 percent of the potential resources for global solar energy.

Ruto was speaking after talks at the White House where he said he had a “candid conversation” with President Joe Biden about how the United States can assist through its clout at the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.

Ruto said he appealed to Biden to double the US contribution to replenishing the International Development Association, a division of the World Bank that assists low-income countries, from $4 billion to $8 billion.

In a joint statement, Ruto and Biden called for “bold action” by the world to assist developing countries, including on their debt.

It called for more international support for countries that “commit to ambitious reforms and high-quality plans” in areas such as climate change.

sct/md

© Agence France-Presse

Featured image credit: wirestock | Freepik.com

Satellite imagery and digital elevation model: Earthquakes, Cyclades Islands, Greece
Image of the day: Cyclades Islands hit by seismic swarmNews

Image of the day: Cyclades Islands hit by seismic swarm

A surge of undersea earthquakes has been shaking Greece’s Cyclades Islands since January 27, 2025, with more than 1,000 tremors recorded so far. Several quakes…
Muser NewsDeskMuser NewsDeskFebruary 6, 2025 Full article
Lake Naivasha, Kenya - satellite images
Image of the day: Invasive water hyacinth blankets Lake NaivashaNews

Image of the day: Invasive water hyacinth blankets Lake Naivasha

The Copernicus Sentinel-2 satellite captured a striking image of Lake Naivasha, Kenya, on January 7, 2025, revealing an unsettling phenomenon: vast mats of water hyacinth…
Muser NewsDeskMuser NewsDeskJanuary 9, 2025 Full article
Image: Beautiful shot of the dolphin silhouette in the water (s. ocean heat, climate change)
Rate of ocean warming has nearly doubled since 2005: EU monitorNews

Rate of ocean warming has nearly doubled since 2005: EU monitor

Brest, France | AFP The pace at which oceans are warming has almost doubled since 2005 as global temperatures rise because of human-caused climate change,…
SourceSourceSeptember 30, 2024 Full article