35.6 C
Lagos
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Home Blog Page 8

Why IEA should be at forefront of Africa’s clean cooking development

0

The U.S. has intensified pressure on the International Energy Agency (IEA) – signaling that it could withdraw from the institution unless it refocuses on its founding mandate of safeguarding global energy security.

U.S. Secretary of Energy, Chris Wright, said Washington is not satisfied with the Paris-based agency’s current direction, arguing that its modelling and outlooks have become overly shaped by climate ideology at the expense of practical energy realities. He was direct in his messaging when he said that the IEA must return to prioritising energy access and solvable clean cooking solutions.

Fatih Birol
Fatih Birol, Executive Director of the International Energy Agency (IEA)

For years, African leaders and private-sector stakeholders have argued that the IEA drifted from its original purpose – becoming increasingly politicised in its outlooks and instrumental in shaping restrictive financing narratives around oil and gas.

The African Energy Chamber (AEC) has consistently maintained that this shift has had real consequences for developing economies, contributing to capital flight from African hydrocarbons and slowing the continent’s ability to tackle widespread energy poverty. If the IEA is now reassessing its position, the question is whether this represents genuine reform – or political expediency under mounting global pressure.

A History of Weaponising Energy Outlooks  

The IEA has politicised its outlooks and adopted an anti-oil and gas agenda that directly undermined African development ambitions for years. Its 2021 net-zero roadmap – updated in 2025 – became a weapon used by financiers and multilateral institutions to restrict capital flows into Africa’s energy sector. Some of the objectives include no new investment for fossil fuel supply after 2021 and sales of fossil fuel boilers after 2025. It also condemns international combustion engine car sales after 2035, targeting 60% electric car sales and 50% electric heavy trucks from 2035.

These steps assume a lot about the state of the world – assumptions that are faulty, especially for Africa. For one, it will require universal energy access by 2030 – including electricity and clean cooking. With approximately 592 million Africans currently without this access, the continent is going to be hard-pressed to flip that switch in less than 10 years.

The IEA’s roadmap also relies on unprecedented investments in renewables – a substantial boost in clean energy investments from the $1 trillion made over the last five years all the way up to $5 trillion annually by 2030 – and cooperation from policymakers who are unified in their efforts. In this idyllic partnership, Africa’s Western counterparts talk a good game.

But the fact is, to date, these same Western countries have invested little to no funding into Africa’s renewables space. To our dismay even the international oil companies that have tried to accept the IEA’s publicity stunt have little or no renewable projects in Africa.

OPEC wrote in response to IEA’s roadmap release that “For many developing countries, the pathway to net zero without international assistance is not clear. Technical and financial support is needed to ensure deployment of key technologies and infrastructure. Without greater international co‐operation, global CO2 emissions will not fall to net zero by 2050.”

The damage of the roadmap has been profound. Global financiers such as BNP Paribas and HSBC halted all new oil and gas financing while institutions such as Barclays, Nedbank and Deutsche Bank moved to selectively finance projects. In 2019, the World Bank also announced that it will stop direct investments in upstream oil and gas. When African countries were fighting for the development of strategic gas resources, one of the continent’s biggest institutional opponents was the IEA.  

“A bank should evaluate investment in an African oil field based on a project’s viability and associated risk, just as it would for a Norwegian, British or American project. Yet they don’t. This is precisely why the AEC plans to hold several banks legally accountable for promoting financial apartheid in the energy sector,” states NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman, AEC.

The Clean Cooking Challenge

With over 900 million people in Africa living without access to clean cooking solutions, addressing the problem of energy security is no longer an isolated challenge – it’s a strategic imperative. If Africa were to listen to the IEA, there would be no investment to address this challenge. Europe would not gain access to African gas supplies, making projects such as Angola LNG, Congo LNG, Greater Tortue Ahmeyim in Senegal/Mauritania, Equatorial Guinea’s Gas Mega Hub and Algerian production facilities obsolete. At a time when Mozambique LNG is resuming and Libya, Egypt and Nigeria are looking to produce more, IEA recommendations could prove catastrophic for Africa’s clean cooking quest.

Delivering remarks during the IEA’s 2026 Ministerial this week, Secretary Wright underscored that with $4 billion invested annually, the world can accelerate the rollout of clean cooking solutions and lift nearly two billion people out of energy poverty. While the IEA should be at the forefront of this drive, Secretary Wright highlighted how a focus on climate change has redirected critical financing away from hydrocarbons.

“The world today spends $1 trillion in the name of fighting climate change – collectively over $10 trillion in the last 20 years. What has been the upside of that? Only 2.6% of global energy comes from solar, wind, batteries and the increased transmission lines to promote them. This has only had meaningful penetration in rich countries,” he said.

A 2024 report by U.S. Senator John Barrasso further condemns the IEA for its renewable approach, arguing that the organisation is increasingly responsible for feeding the unrealistic view that emerging economies can develop using only renewables. This shift began in 2020 when the IEA ceased creating energy market forecasts based on actual demand and decided to focus exclusively on hypothetical scenarios aligned with extreme emissions reduction targets.

This goes against the very mandate by which the IEA was established. Following an oil crisis and spike in prices in 1974, the IEA was established to ensure reliable, affordable and secure energy supplies worldwide. The organisation’s recent history has contradicted this mandate.

“Africa will not make energy poverty history by abandoning the very resources that can fund its development. Oil and gas are not the problem – underdevelopment is. Organizations such as the IEA have played a central role in restricting financing, politicizing fossil fuels and impacting African energy development. That needs to stop,” adds Ayuk.

A Step in the Right Direction

Despite its history of inaction, the IEA seems to be moving in the right direction, announcing that it will host the Clean Cooking Alliance (CCA) – launched in 2010 – to tackle the global clean cooking crisis. The IEA will partner with governments and industry to accelerate universal clean cooking access, integrating the CCA within the IEA. The U.S. is also ramping-up its clean cooking support. Secretary Wright announced the launch of a Clean Cooking Accelerator Programme to help build infrastructure to enable faster deployment of clean cooking solutions – focusing primarily on Africa. While these efforts are notable, much more needs to be done.

“Reform at the IEA must go beyond press releases. It must include a recalibration of outlooks to reflect differentiated development pathways, a rejection of blanket investment bans and an acknowledgment that African hydrocarbons are compatible with global climate goals,” Ayuk stated. “The AEC believes that Secretary Wright needs to put more teeth on his clean cooking and energy poverty plan. The African private sector will fund it. We don’t want aid – we want partnerships.”

ACReSAL secures statutory backing for Kaduna gully works

0

The Kaduna State Agro-Climatic Resilience in Semi-Arid Landscapes (ACReSAL) Project has secured statutory land validation to advance planned gully erosion control works in parts of the state.

The State Project Coordinator, Hadiza Halid, disclosed this during a courtesy visit to the Kaduna Geographic Information Service (KADGIS) on Friday, February 20, 2026, in Kaduna, the state capital.

Halid said the engagement was to harmonise land records and validate property data under the project’s Resettlement Action Plan (RAP), ahead of civil works on identified erosion corridors.

Abdulhamid Umar
Abdulhamid Umar, National Project Coordinator, Agro-Climatic Resilience in Semi-Arid Landscapes (ACReSAL)

According to her, the process is designed to ensure lawful compensation for Project Affected Persons (PAPs) in Rigasa, Tudun Wada, Kawo and Zaria, in line with established safeguard procedures.

“This engagement provides the statutory backing required for a project of this scale. It guarantees transparency, due process and credible documentation before construction begins,” she said.

Halid explained that accurate mapping and verification of land titles were critical to preventing disputes and ensuring smooth project implementation.

The project coordinator recalled that ACReSAL had earlier sensitised residents of the affected communities to prepare them for the erosion control intervention.

She described ACReSAL as a tripartite initiative of the Federal Government, Kaduna State Government and the World Bank aimed at strengthening environmental resilience and livelihoods in climate vulnerable communities.

The coordinator added that the targeted corridors had recorded recurring flooding and severe gully erosion, particularly during peak rainy seasons.

She added that civil works would commence upon completion of compensation and final validation processes.

In his remarks, the Director-General of KADGIS, Bashir Ibrahim, commended ACReSAL for the collaboration, describing it as procedural and necessary.

He assured the agency’s support to ensure the seamless documentation and successful delivery of the intervention.

By Ezra Musa

Africa’s LNG expansion to dominate Paris Energy Forum

0

With governments and operators from across Africa’s gas frontier confirmed to participate, the Invest in African Energy Forum in Paris from April 22 to 23, 2026, arrives as the continent’s LNG sector enters a new growth phase marked by expansion projects, floating liquefaction scale-ups and commercialisation of large undeveloped discoveries.

The forum is expected to spotlight where capital, partnerships and infrastructure investment will flow as Africa advances its next wave of liquefied natural gas (LNG) opportunities.

Paris, France
Paris, France

Grand Tortue Ahmeyim Expansion – Mauritania & Senegal

Following first LNG production, attention has shifted to Phase 2 of the cross-border Grand Tortue Ahmeyim (GTA) development between Mauritania and Senegal.

Partners are advancing a low-cost scale-up that could nearly double liquefaction capacity before the end of the decade, leveraging existing floating LNG infrastructure and offshore reserves. With export routes already established, Phase 2 is widely viewed as one of Africa’s clearest near-term LNG growth opportunities, offering comparatively lower development risk and significant production upside.

Yakaar-Teranga – Senegal’s Pre-FID Gas Anchor

Senegal’s Yakaar-Teranga discovery remains among the world’s largest undeveloped gas resources. Commercialisation terms and domestic-versus-export allocations are still under negotiation, placing the project among Africa’s most consequential pre-final investment decision (FID) opportunities.

The resource has the potential to anchor future LNG trains, long-term gas-to-power supply and industrial feedstock development, making it a focal point for upstream financiers and infrastructure developers seeking scalable, long-life reserves.

Nigeria’s Domestic LNG & Gas-to-Power Strategy

Nigeria is accelerating gas monetization through supply growth, LNG expansion and downstream utilisation.

A 2026 gas master plan targets an additional 1.8 billion cubic feet per day (bcf/d) of supply, contributing to ambitions of 10 bcf/d by 2027 and 12 bcf/d by 2030, alongside more than $60 billion in sector investment.

Parallel deployment of mini-LNG and small-scale liquefaction projects is expanding gas access for off-grid industries, transport and distributed power.

For capital markets, Nigeria’s strategy signals a pivot from export-only LNG toward integrated domestic gas ecosystems with diversified revenue streams.

Libya’s Gas Redevelopment Drive

Libya aims to increase gas production to nearly 1 billion cubic feet per day in the second half of 2026 through offshore redevelopment and rehabilitation of legacy infrastructure.

The strategy seeks to stabilise domestic electricity supply while rebuilding export capacity.

If financing conditions and political alignment improve, Libya could re-emerge as a major Mediterranean gas supplier later this decade, presenting one of North Africa’s most undercapitalised gas investment opportunities.

Congo LNG – Fast-Track Floating Liquefaction

The Congo LNG project has rapidly positioned the Republic of the Congo as a new LNG exporter. Phase 2 began operations in December 2025, adding 2.4 million tons per year of capacity and raising total output to roughly 3 million tons annually.

Built around floating LNG units and modular upstream tie-ins, the project demonstrates a replicable, lower-cost commercialisation model that reduces timelines compared with traditional onshore terminals.

The modular structure and expansion-ready design present opportunities across upstream supply, LNG shipping, processing services and regional infrastructure partnerships.

As Africa’s LNG landscape evolves from frontier exploration to scalable production and integrated domestic gas ecosystems, the Paris forum is expected to play a central role in shaping investment decisions across the continent’s next generation of gas developments.

By Winston Mwale, AfricaBrief

AfDB releases $16m, approves Phase III of TAAT programme

0

The African Development Bank (AfDB) has approved the commencement of Phase III of the Technologies for African Agricultural Transformation (TAAT) programme. The Bank Group’s Board of Directors on January 14, 2026, approved the release of an additional US$16 million to implement the third phase of the programme.

This approval, which comes as an added boost to the programme, underscores the Bank’s core commitment to addressing the critical challenges hindering African agriculture, notably low productivity stemming from limited access to modern technologies, inadequate infrastructure, and insufficient investment in climate-resilient practices.

Abdul Kamara
AfDB Director for Nigeria, Dr. Abdul Kamara

The Bank further contends that the urgency driving this approval is amplified by the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict, which has disrupted global supply chains and driven up the prices of essential inputs, such as seeds and fertilizers.

At the February 18, 2026, signing of the protocol of agreement between the Bank and the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) – the executing agency for TAAT,  the Bank lauded the giant strides recorded under the first and second phases of TAAT which have galvanised engagements that influenced a total of US$3.18 billion in agricultural investments – US$857.5 million through the African Emergency Food Production Facility (AEFPF) large-scale operations and US$2.31 billion through non-AEFPF projects.

Speaking at the ceremony, the Bank’s Director for Nigeria, Dr. Abdul Kamara, said: “TAAT III reflects the Bank’s commitment to ensuring that proven, climate‑resilient technologies reach farmers faster and at scale. This new phase strengthens the systems that deliver innovation, helping countries boost productivity, enhance resilience, and align agricultural transformation efforts with the Bank’s Four Cardinal Points.”

Dr Martin Fregene, the Officer in Charge of the Bank’s Vice Presidency for Agriculture, Human and Social Development, affirmed that TAAT I and TAAT II have laid the foundational groundwork to address the challenges facing African agriculture by vetting technologies, accelerating the adoption and scaling of proven agricultural technologies, promoting climate-resilient agricultural practices, building capacities within the farming’ and seed ecosystem, and developing e-platforms to facilitate access to technologies, primarily for smallholder farmers.

“Through technical assistance and collaboration with Regional Member Countries (RMCs) of the Bank and development partners, TAAT has supported the integration of 238 technology use cases into 46 countries and regional investment projects spanning 31 countries,” Dr Fregene said.

“The Bank is well positioned to harness the power of science, knowledge, and innovation needed to catalyse Africa’s agricultural transformation through this investment. The Bank already has extensive experience in agricultural development assistance in Africa, and this additional funding will help us to consolidate the achievements of TAATs I and II,” Dr Abdul Kamara, the Bank’s Director General for Nigeria, added.

The IITA Director General and CGIAR’s Regional Director for Continental Africa, Dr Simeon Ehui, in his remarks at the signing ceremony, commended the Bank’s commitment to transforming African agriculture through its Feed Africa strategy as well as the trust placed in the CGIAR-driven consortium of agricultural research institutions led by IITA to implement the goal of transforming African agriculture and ensuring food and nutritional security.

Dr Ehui assured the Bank of TAAT’s unwavering commitment to deepening its pathway of providing technical assistance, strengthening seed systems, disseminating climate-smart and high-yielding crop varieties, promoting post-harvest and mechanisation innovations, providing knowledge and ensuring learning and uptake of innovations, and supporting policy and digital solutions to enhance agricultural productivity and resilience across Africa.

“These efforts,” according to Dr Ehui, “have led to productivity increases of up to 69% across targeted crops, reaching over 25 million farmers. Additionally, under the implementation of the AEFPF, TAAT has provided technical assistance to RMCs, including technical specifications for the supply and quality assurance of certified seeds. This assistance has enabled the distribution of 476,747.96 metric tons of improved, climate-resilient seeds to 14.437 million smallholder farmers.”

“This third phase of the programme will achieve sustainability through the institutionalization of the TAAT model within CGIAR and fostering regional cooperation among Regional Economic Communities (RECs) and private sector actors, supporting the Dakar 2 vision of achieving food sovereignty, increased productivity, and resilient food systems across Africa and contributing directly to the Sustainable Development Goals 1, 2, 13, & 15 (No Poverty; Zero Hunger; Climate Action; and Life on Land), and the African Union’s Agenda 2063 vision for a prosperous Africa based on inclusive growth and sustainable development,” Dr Ehui added.

The Bank affirms that TAAT III’s objective is to consolidate and scale TAAT I and II achievements, while strengthening their operational and financial sustainability. TAAT III will strengthen the regional technology delivery infrastructure by supporting National Agricultural Research Systems (NARS) and private seed companies to sustainably increase the production and availability of early-generation (EGS) and certified high-yielding, climate-resilient seeds, respectively.

The third phase of the programme will equally promote the digitalisation of TAAT-vetted technologies and the development of information and communication technology (ICT) platforms and other digital solutions to facilitate the deployment and accessibility of appropriate agricultural technologies, E-extension, and advisory services. To further scale TAAT technology deployment, TAAT III will support the development of the Regional Technology Market, enhancing technology deployment and accessibility across borders.

TAAT, in this third phase, will deploy its extensive partnership ecosystem to drive capacity-building initiatives for agricultural extensionists (Training of Trainers, ToT) and farmers, enhancing smallholder farmers’ awareness, access, and adoption of agricultural technologies and e-advisory services. To catalyse the financial sustainability of the TAAT technology delivery ecosystem, TAAT III will provide technical assistance to RMCs to attract private-sector investment and mainstream TAAT-vetted technologies into national and large-scale agricultural investment projects.

To enhance farmer resilience, TAAT III will build the capacities of meteorological institutions and frontline extension workers to collect, analyse, and disseminate climate data to improve weather forecasts and early warning systems, and expand the integration of weather forecasts into the planning of agricultural activities at the smallholder farmer level.

With the signing of the TAAT Phase III grant agreement, the African Development Bank envisions a continent accelerating agricultural transformation for food systems resilience through strengthened regional technology delivery infrastructure; increased productivity through scaling up climate-resilient and nutrition-sensitive technologies and reinforced, efficient production and distribution systems for improved seeds and fertilisers; enhanced farmers’ capacity and learning, and resilience to climate change; and advanced adoption of innovative digital solutions and enhanced market integration and regional trade competitiveness through strategic private sector participation.

LAWMA secures convictions for 19 environmental offenders

0

Seventeen persons arrested for open urination and defecation, along with two others apprehended for indiscriminate dumping of refuse, have been convicted by the Magistrate Court sitting at Bolade, Oshodi, after prosecution by the Lagos Waste Management Authority (LAWMA).

The Managing Director/ Chief Executive Officer of LAWMA, Dr. Muyiwa Gbadegesin, disclosed this on Thursday, February 19, 2026.

He said that the court sentenced the 17 offenders to pay a fine of N40,000 each or serve one month imprisonment.

LAWMA
Environmental offenders

He stated further that, for indiscriminate dumping of refuse, Obinna Nzugbe and Ifeanyi Ibe were also sentenced to five months imprisonment each after pleading guilty to the charges.

Meanwhile, Daniel Alfred, who was arraigned alongside them for indiscriminate dumping of refuse, pleaded not guilty, and his case was adjourned to April 3, 2026, for trial.

“The convictions underscored the Authority’s commitment to sustained enforcement of environmental laws across the state as open defecation, public urination, and indiscriminate dumping of refuse pose serious public health, environmental and sanitation risks,” he said.

He enjoined residents to comply with sanitation regulations and utilise approved waste disposal channels, adding that violators would continue to face prosecution in accordance with the law.

Green Energy, Lekoil seek to strike out suit, vacate ex parte orders

0

Green Energy International Limited and Lekoil Oil and Gas Investments Limited have filed applications before the Federal High Court seeking to strike out Suit No. FHC/L/CP/237/2026 and to set aside the ex parte interim orders granted in the matter.

The companies have filed a Notice of Preliminary Objection challenging the jurisdiction of the Court and seeking dismissal or stay of the action, together with a Motion on Notice to vacate and discharge the interim administration orders made on February 13, 2026.

Lekoil Nigeria Limited
Lekoil Nigeria Limited

The dispute arises from a contractual claim under a Turnkey Drilling Agreement dated September 1, 2024. The agreement contains a binding arbitration clause, and arbitration proceedings have already been commenced before the Lagos Chamber of Commerce International Arbitration Centre with pleadings filed prior to the initiation of the new suit at the Federal High Court on the same subject contract.

Green Energy and Lekoil maintain that the matter is properly before the arbitral tribunal, that the sums referenced in certain reports are disputed and subject to audit, and that the ex parte orders were obtained in defiance of the pendency of arbitration in respect of which where there was also a pending motion for injunctive orders.

Green Energy and Lekoil view the recent filing of Suit No. FHC/L/CP/237/2026 and suppression of the extent of prior engagements (including ongoing dispute resolution proceedings) in respect of obligations arising from the same turnkey contract as an abuse and improper use of judicial process.

The companies will pursue all appropriate legal remedies to protect the agreed dispute resolution framework and to safeguard their operations.

Operations at the Otakikpo Marginal Field (PML 11) remain fully operational and compliant with all regulatory and contractual obligations. There has been no disruption to production or export activities.

Green Energy and Lekoil claim they reserve all rights in respect of any inaccurate or defamatory publications concerning this matter, adding that further updates will be provided as appropriate.

Zero-waste economy: Foundation urges methane cut, plastic reduction

0

The Community Development Advocacy Foundation (CODAF) has called for an urgent reduction of methane and plastic production cuts, to advance a just transition to a zero-waste economy.

This is contained in a communique issued by Mr. Philip Jakpor, a civil society partner and member of the Waste Parliament on Thursday, February 19, 2026, in Lagos.

The communique stated that the Expanded Zero Waste Parliament 2026, was convened by CODAF in collaboration with Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives Africa.

Plastic waste reduction
Plastic waste reduction

It noted that the event which held on Tuesday in Lagos, brought together over 80 stakeholders.

Participants included government agencies, environmental regulators, farmers, academics, waste pickers, youth leaders, civil society groups and the media.

According to the communiqué, the forum, with the theme: “Cutting Methane, Curbing Plastics; A Just Transition to Zero Waste”, examined Nigeria’s waste management policies, methane mitigation strategies and plastics governance.

It noted that delegates observed that rapid urbanisation, population growth and poor waste management had worsened methane emissions from open dumping and landfills.

The communiqué said delegates noted that organic waste constituted significant share of municipal waste, generating methane through anaerobic decomposition.

It said the parliament warned against waste-to-energy incineration technologies, describing them as false climate solutions, incompatible with zero waste principles.

Participants stressed that methane reduction must not justify expansion of incineration infrastructure.

They also highlighted weak enforcement of plastic regulations and limited implementation of Extended Producer Responsibility.

The communiqué stated that the forum called for mandatory source segregation of waste, expansion of decentralised composting and integration of methane targets into climate plans.

It added that delegates also urged a formal recognition and protection of informal waste pickers, as essential service providers.

They then called on Lagos State and the Federal Government to adopt zero waste policies aligned with climate science and social justice principles.

By Fabian Ekeruche

Senate seeks special funding for Environment Ministry to tackle erosion, flooding

0

The Senate has called for provision of special funding for Federal Ministry of Environment to tackle erosion, flooding and other environmental challenges across the country.

Chairman of the Senate Committee on Environment, Sen. Olubiyi Fadeyi, made the call when the ministry officials appeared to defend the 2026 budget of the ministry on Thursday, February 19, 2026.

Fadeyi said fund appropriated annually to the ministry and its agencies was “very inadequate” to tackle the environmental issues.

The Nigerian Senate
The Nigerian Senate

He listed the issues that required urgent attention to include: environmental management, erosion control, environmental health, forest protection and other forms of environmental degradation.

Others are: pollution and drainage mitigation as well as coastal flood mitigation.

He stressed the need for ensuring release of appropriated funds for the discharge of the mandates of the ministry.

“We must focus on solutions that addresses oil pollution, control tools from the enforcement and clean-up technology and erosion control to protect our lands and the environment,” he said.

The senator said that efforts should be intensified on coastal flood mitigation, shoreline protection, forestation, land reclamation processes, agriculture and land repair.

He emphasised the importance of Nigeria meeting its environmental obligations and commitments to climate-related organisations.

“Doing so will unlock international climate finance and strengthen our global partnerships.

“This committee remains committed to ensuring transparency, accountability and impact-raising budgets so that together, we can deliver a cleaner, safer and more resilient Nigeria.

“This committee shall discharge its constitutional mandate for oversights and ensure that all forests are protected and released to respect climate-related guidelines,” he said.

The Minister of Environment, Mr. Balarabe Lawal, said that the ministry had the responsibility to care and ensure quality environment for good health and wellbeing of cities and promote sustainable use of natural resources.

Lawal said that the structure of the 2026 budget proposal was anchored on the needs of the people, agenda of the present administration and the national development plan.

According to him, it aligns with priority areas of President Bola Tinubu’s administration, including unlocking energy for sustainable development and boosting agriculture to achieve food security, among others.

He said that the ministry was working to address fundamental issues that affect the nation’s forests, saying that the ministry was still expecting release of funds for some of its capital projects.

Lawal said that the ministry had embarked on provision of solar-powered boreholes and solar street lights across the country.

He said that the ministry also embarked on flood aggression control, given the serious cases of flood, particularly in the northern part of the country.

According to him, the 2026 budget estimate is a roll-over of most projects in 2025.

By Kingsley Okoye

Ministerial Meeting underscores IEA’s central role in tackling global energy challenges

0

Ministers deliver expanded mandate on critical minerals and build institutional ties with key countries around the world including Brazil, Colombia, India and Viet Nam

Global energy leaders met in Paris from February 18 to 19, 2026, for the International Energy Agency’s Ministerial Meeting, affirming the IEA’s central role in international cooperation to address the major energy challenges and opportunities facing the world.

The two-day event was attended by top government officials from a record 54 countries, with some 40 of them at Ministerial level. Top executives from 55 companies, with a combined market capitalisation of $14 trillion, as well as leaders from a range of intergovernmental organisations, also participated.

IEA Ministerial Meeting
Delegates at the IEA Ministerial Meeting in Paris

At the Ministerial, IEA Member governments unanimously agreed to move ahead on building deeper institutional ties with BrazilColombia, India and Viet Nam – and to expanded cooperation on critical minerals through the IEA’s Critical Minerals Security Programme.

“These two days in Paris have reaffirmed how essential energy is to our daily lives – it is the invisible driving force behind everything we do. Under the umbrella of knowledge of the International Energy Agency, we have once again seen that international cooperation is key,” said Deputy Prime Minister Sophie Hermans of the Netherlands, who chaired the Ministerial. “Our priority is clear: secure, affordable and sustainable energy – and resilient systems that can endure in an uncertain world.”

“This Ministerial Meeting, our largest ever, affirmed the immense value of the IEA at a moment when global energy demand is rising and the challenges facing the energy system are intensifying. In this context, our wide range of objective data and analysis is more important than ever,” said IEA Executive Director, Fatih Birol.

“In a strong step forward for global energy governance, key countries such as Brazil, Colombia, India and Viet Nam are strengthening their ties with the IEA. This puts the IEA Family’s share of global energy use at more than 80%, up from less than 40% ten years ago. With major energy issues high on the international agenda, we stand ready to support governments with the insights they need to plan for the future, helping leaders deliver on their goals of ensuring greater energy security, affordability and sustainability,” Birol added.

The Chair’s Summary from the Ministerial acknowledged the IEA’s significant contributions to advancing the energy goals of its Members for more than five decades, noting its strong ability to adapt and expand as the energy sector has evolved. It also stressed the Agency’s ongoing importance as countries work to ensure energy security, affordability and sustainability, pointing to its leading data and analysis as a trusted source of information for decision makers worldwide.

In a video address at the opening of the Ministerial, President Emmanuel Macron of France, the host nation of the IEA, said: “Through its in-depth analyses, and the technical expertise of its team, the IEA, under the leadership of its Executive Director Fatih Birol, plays an essential role. It enlightens us to help us guarantee our energy security and steer the energy transition.”

In a special declaration, Ministers from IEA Member countries endorsed expanding cooperation under the IEA Critical Minerals Security Programme to address rising risks to global critical mineral supply chains. Highlighting the Programme as a key international platform for ensuring mineral security, they called for the IEA to continue to build out its data tools, while expanding collaborative exercises and guidance on topics such as stockpiling. Such measures, they said, would support broader efforts to diversify mineral supply chains and build resilience to supply shocks.

In addition, IEA Ministers approved new phases of institutional ties with several key countries around the world that are increasingly shaping energy trends. They unanimously invited Colombia to become the Agency’s 33rd Member. Responding to a request from the Brazilian government, IEA Members agreed to invite Brazil to begin the process of becoming a full Member.

They also all welcomed recent developments in discussions with India following the Indian government’s request to become a full IEA Member. And Viet Nam was announced as the newest member of the IEA Family, joining as an Association country.

Further strengthening the IEA’s leadership on key energy issues, Member countries approved the integration of the Clean Cooking Alliance into the Agency. This establishes the IEA as the principal multilateral forum for expanding clean cooking solutions, helping countries and industry speed up efforts to extend access to the more than 2 billion people who still lack it.

The announcement comes as the IEA prepares to host its second Summit on Clean Cooking in Africa in Nairobi, Kenya, from July 9 to 10, 2026. In a high-level dialogue at the Ministerial Meeting, leaders discussed progress since the first IEA Summit on Clean Cooking in Africa in 2024, as well as recent approaches and initiatives that have proven effective.

Two other high-level dialogues featured discussions on safeguarding energy security in the Age of Electricity and on investing in Ukraine’s future energy security, with the participation of Ukrainian First Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Energy, Denys Shmyhal. The 3rd annual IEA Energy Innovation Forum took place in conjunction with the Ministerial Meeting on February 18.

It brought together participants from government, industry, start-ups, and the investment and research communities, allowing for in-depth exchanges on topics related to energy innovation policy and development of the innovation ecosystem. Topics covered include innovations to support resilient electricity grids, fusion energy, and sustainable fuels, as well as the links between innovation, technology supply chains and economic competitiveness.

UN Climate Change launches Capacity-Building for Negotiators initiative

0

UN Climate Change has launched a new Capacity-Building for Negotiators (CB4N) initiative to ensure all Party delegates, particularly those from developing countries and youth negotiators, can participate effectively and on equal footing in climate negotiations.

The initiative was officially launched during an online event on Wednesday, February 18, 2026, bringing together nearly 400 participants from around the world, including representatives from Parties, UN agencies, intergovernmental organisations and other partners and experts engaged in the UNFCCC process.

UNFCCC
Participants at the UNFCCC Capacity-Building for Negotiators (CB4N) initiative

In a video message delivered at the launch event, UN Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell emphasised the importance of investing in negotiation capacity to strengthen inclusive participation.

“Inclusive, effective climate negotiations depend on people, on their knowledge, preparation and confidence to engage meaningfully,” said Stiell. “Through the Capacity-Building for Negotiators initiative, we are investing in negotiation capacity to ensure all Parties, particularly youth delegates, can participate on an equal footing in the UNFCCC process.”

The CB4N initiative provides targeted training and knowledge-sharing opportunities that support delegates’ understanding of UNFCCC procedures, legal frameworks and negotiation techniques. By strengthening these skills, the initiative empowers delegates to engage more confidently and effectively in the intergovernmental process. It will be rolled out through UN Climate Change and its six Regional Collaboration Centres (RCCs), ensuring it responds to local contexts and needs.

During the event, the COP30 Presidency, represented by Ambassador Liliam Chagas, and the incoming COP31 Presidency, represented by deputy minister Fatma Varank, agreed that capacity building for climate negotiators is critical to navigating increasingly complex climate negotiations and ensuring effective, inclusive implementation.

The initiative responds to a mandate from Parties at the sixty-second session of the Subsidiary Body for Implementation (SBI 62), which requested that the secretariat support Party delegates in building their capacity to engage in the negotiation process and make relevant training and materials available on the UN Climate Change website.

CB4N builds on insights from a pilot training delivered in September 2025, which tested key modules and approaches. Lessons learned from the pilot are informing refinement of the programme and the development of future training activities, including online resources.

The secretariat will continue to develop and institutionalise CB4N, working closely with Parties, partners and stakeholders to strengthen inclusive and effective participation in the UNFCCC negotiation process.

×