Publications /
Opinion

Back
How to Make Carbon Pricing Work for Africa
January 30, 2025

This Opinion was originally published in Project Syndicate

 

As the world prepares for COP30 in Belém, Brazil, African countries have an opportunity to advocate for equitable carbon-pricing mechanisms that align climate action with sustainable development. While cutting emissions is important, so, too, is ensuring fairness and equity for the communities most vulnerable to climate change.

RABAT – Carbon pricing is a crucial climate-policy tool. By assigning a monetary value to greenhouse-gas emissions, it creates incentives for firms to emit less and generates revenue that can be spent on sustainable development. More than 70 jurisdictions worldwide have already implemented carbon taxes or emissions-trading systems, as a way to reconcile economic growth with climate objectives.

The international community has recently focused on strengthening the frameworks for global carbon markets. At last year’s United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP29) in Baku, Azerbaijan, countries finalized negotiations on Article 6 of the Paris climate agreement, which aims to standardize such markets. This involved adopting rules to facilitate cross-border cooperation on emissions-reduction projects.

While the transparency and accountability provided by these rules will almost surely build trust in carbon markets, a standardized framework poses some risks for Africa. Specifically, it could fail to address the continent’s needs, exacerbating inequality and impeding development. Nearly 600 million Africans still lack access to electricity, while biomass accounts for 45% of the continent’s energy supply, leaving rural and low-income households particularly vulnerable to carbon-pricing policies that are not tailored to Africa’s unique socioeconomic and environmental realities.

A flat carbon tax, for example, that is not accompanied by targeted subsidies, government investment, and international financing could disproportionately burden rural and low-income households, keeping them in poverty and hindering electrification efforts. The shift to renewables requires significant upfront spending on infrastructure, and carbon pricing must be structured to facilitate, not obstruct, this transition.

Moreover, Africa is acutely vulnerable to climate shocks, as shown by recurring droughts in the Sahel and catastrophic floods in Mozambique. African countries on average lose 2-5% of GDP per year to climate change, and many divert up to 9% of their annual budget to respond to extreme weather events, putting a severe strain on their economies.

To tailor carbon-pricing models to Africa’s realities, policymakers should push for the strategic reinvestment of any resulting revenue in essential sectors such as education, health care, and renewables. In South Africa, proceeds from the country’s carbon tax have been channeled into clean-energy projects, expanding access to solar power in underserved regions. Such “revenue recycling” mitigates carbon pricing’s regressive effects while also tackling energy poverty and fostering inclusive development.

Pursuing the phased implementation of carbon-pricing models, with initially modest prices, would enable African countries to adapt gradually to the demands of a green economy, without stifling growth. At the same time, the slow and steady development of frameworks for measuring, reporting, and verification would make it easier to identify and rectify errors, resulting in more robust and trustworthy systems. This approach minimizes the economic shocks often associated with abrupt transitions, offering a practical pathway to sustainable development.

Public-private partnerships are a powerful tool for mobilizing investment in green technology and carbon-credit projects and for aligning environmental and social objectives. For example, Rwanda’s clean-cooking initiative, which uses private-sector expertise and funding to distribute efficient cookstoves, has reduced emissions and improved health outcomes for rural households.

Leveraging nature-based solutions is equally important. Africa’s rainforests, wetlands, and peatlands store vast amounts of carbon, with the Congo Basin alone holding more than 30 billion tons of carbon dioxide. These assets could generate high-quality carbon credits, which would attract international financing and preserve critical ecosystems. Under the multi-donor, UN-hosted Central African Forest Initiative, Gabon’s pioneering carbon-credits program has conserved huge portions of its forests. As a result, Gabon secured a commitment of $150 million over ten years through a 2019 agreement with CAFI.

While carbon pricing has immense potential to address Africa’s climate and development needs, barriers to implementation remain, and overcoming them will require carefully targeted interventions. For starters, institutional weaknesses could undermine robust measurement, reporting, and verification, which are essential for ensuring credibility and attracting investment. International organizations such as the UN Environment Programme and the World Bank could assist with the operationalization of carbon-pricing mechanisms in African countries by providing technical training and supporting the development of necessary infrastructure.

Ensuring the social acceptance of carbon pricing is another challenge for African countries. Because these policies can trigger a public backlash if they are perceived as unjust, or even just poorly explained, governments must be transparent about reinvesting the revenue that they generate. It is also possible that these funds will fall short of meeting Africa’s energy and infrastructure needs, in which case complementary tools such as green bonds, blended-finance mechanisms, and international climate finance can help bridge the gap.

A pan-African carbon market, coordinated through institutions like the African Continental Free Trade Area, could consolidate fragmented national efforts into a unified platform. Such a market would lower entry barriers for smaller economies, streamline standards, and attract international investment. It would also bolster Africa’s role in advancing nature-based climate solutions, allowing the continent to deliver global emissions reductions while supporting local communities.

As the world prepares for COP30 in Belém, Brazil, African countries have an opportunity to advocate for equitable carbon-pricing mechanisms that align climate action with sustainable development. While cutting emissions is important, so, too, is ensuring fairness and equity for the communities most vulnerable to climate change.

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    Abdelmonim Amcharaa
    Hassnae Maad
    February 1, 2023
    La double crise actuelle de l’énergie et du conflit militaire en Ukraine freine énormément les processus qui se développaient dans l’ère post-Covid 19. Dans ce contexte fragile et tourmenté, la vulnérabilité touche également les chaînes globales de valeur et les systèmes agroalimentaires. La vulnérabilité de la Chaîne Globale de Valeur (GVC) est une fonction de la capacité d’adaptation (CA) face aux chocs et aux impacts potentiels que présentent la fragmentation du ...
  • July 6, 2022
    Le Policy Center for the New South et Enel Green Power Maroc co-organisent un webinaire sur "la tarification du carbone et le développement économique". Cette rencontre permettra de débattre des défis, des avantages et des limites des mécanismes de tarification du carbone et de leur imp...
  • May 10, 2022
    This is an exclusive interview with Rim Berahab, Senior Economist at the Policy Center for the New South, who engages with Helmut Sorge, Columnist at the Policy Center for the New South, in a conversation about the great threat of the climate crisis. Rim Berahab is the author of Chapter...
  • Authors
    Niranjali Amerasinghe 
    Chiara Colesanti Senni 
    Simon Dikau 
    Yaroslav Lissovolik 
    Claude Lopez 
    Serafín Martínez-Jaramillo 
    Andrew McConnell 
    Christina Parajon Skinner 
    Jon Sward 
    Viviane Helena Torinelli 
    Boyan Yanovski 
    March 28, 2022
    Climate change has quickly become one of the most pressing challenges of our society. Financial actors could play a key role in supporting and fostering a shift towards a low-carbon economy. In this context, central banks could have a primary function in both tackling climate-related risks and the ones related to the transition and, potentially, proactively redirecting resources towards green initiatives. Central banks are indeed exploring how different types of climate-related risk ...
  • Authors
    March 16, 2022
    The 2021 German federal election brought about a historic reshuffle of the political parties’ hierarchy in Europe’s biggest economy. The Social Democratic Party are back in control of the Chancellery for the first time since 2005, as part of a three-party coalition at the federal level with the Greens and the Liberals, a first in Germany’s post-war history. Now, the federal government has turned its gaze towards its founding mission: more progress. The first 100 days of the three-pa ...
  • Authors
    February 9, 2022
    Energy markets have experienced significant disruptions since the outbreak of COVID-19. In late 2021, soaring natural gas prices triggered a new crisis, leading to risks of energy supply shortages worldwide and propelling the issue of energy security to the forefront. Africa will not be spared the repercussions of this crisis, which could further increase energy inequality, which is in turn linked to other forms of inequality. Indeed, in a context of persistent inflation, the lack o ...