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AGESI presents 40-year environmental blueprint as AMCEN-20 ministers, delegates meet

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As the 20th session of the African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) drew to a close, the Africa Green Economy and Sustainability Institute (AGESI) has released a blueprint, urging ministers to chart a new path for Africa’s environmental leadership over the next forty years.

AMCEN
African environment ministers

As the continent reflects on four decades of environmental action, AGESI, in a statement addressed to the assembled ministers and delegates on Thursday, July 17, 2025, reiterated that Africa must move beyond the legacy of external dependency and take charge of its future.

In its submission, AGESI declared that old models have failed to shield the continent from escalating crises, climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution, and that the time has come for a shift toward economic sovereignty, homegrown innovation, and decisive collective action.

AGESI called on the ministers to seize this pivotal moment by transforming their deliberations into a unified and actionable blueprint.

Rather than continuing to petition for international aid, AGESI proposed that Africa build its own Coalitions of Implementation—comprehensive mechanisms that would ensure the resolutions made in Nairobi deliver tangible results on the ground.

In its submission, AGESI outlined a framework to structure Africa’s common position at crucial international forums such as COP 30 and UNEA-7.

AGESI urged ministers to establish national green growth coalitions by creating integrated task forces that bring together stakeholders from the environment, finance, trade, and development, thereby accelerating the domestic implementation of key agreements, such as the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, as well as new protocols on drought and plastic pollution.

Further, AGESI advocated for the championing of a ‘Green AfCFTA’, leveraging the African Continental Free Trade Area to create an internal market where clean energy technologies, climate-smart agriculture, and sustainable innovations can flourish tariff-free, ensuring that economic growth and value creation remain within Africa.

In addressing climate finance, AGESI highlighted that fragmented approaches are no longer effective. It called on ministers to build a unified African position that demands direct, unconditional access to global climate funds, while simultaneously pioneering self-financing instruments such as green bonds and carbon markets.

AGESI also stressed the importance of investing in Africa’s human capital.

It proposed the launch of “Capacity Unleashed” initiatives – national programmes that would nurture a new generation of African negotiators, climate scientists, and green-tech entrepreneurs, ensuring competent, homegrown leadership for years to come.

Affirming their commitment, AGESI reminded the ministers that they do not seek to act as external advisors but as dedicated partners for implementation. With their new continental office inaugurated in Nigeria, AGESI pledged to stand ready to help translate these ministerial declarations into funded, actionable programmes across Africa.

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