Prøve GULL - Gratis
FIGHTING CHANCE
Down To Earth
|October 01, 2025
Confronted with the twin pressures of climate change and economic malaise, African countries are taking matters into their own hands. By blending traditional practices with modern innovation, they are crafting homegrown solutions. Their pragmatic resilience offers a blueprint the rest of the Global South would do well to follow.

THE IRONY is hard to miss.
Going by each country's share of cumulative historical emissions from fossil fuels, sub-Saharan Africa has contributed just 1.9 per cent of global emissions. And most of that came from South Africa (1.3 per cent), while the remaining 48 countries together contributed just 0.6 per cent. Yet, the region is a hotspot of the planetary climate emergency.
According to an analysis by Washington DC-based Brookings Institution, seven of the 10 most climate-vulnerable countries in the world are in Africa. As the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), released in August 2021, poignantly put it: "Over the past 60 years, Africa has recorded a warming trend that has generally been more rapid than the global average...the climate has changed at rates unprecedented in at least 2,000 years." In fact, according to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), one in every three deaths from extreme weather, climate or water-related stress in the past 50 years occurred in Africa.
The year 2024 was either the warmest or second-warmest on record for Africa, accompanied by devastating floods, droughts and marine heatwaves, states wmo's "State of Climate in Africa 2024" report, released in May 2025. Estimates suggest that the continent is highly likely to cross the 1.5°C warming threshold by 2040, accelerating devastating impacts on Africa's agriculture-dependent populations, who are already experiencing significant losses due to climate change.
Denne historien er fra October 01, 2025-utgaven av Down To Earth.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Down To Earth
Down To Earth
Himalayan states reel even as monsoon ends
EVEN AS the 2025 southwest monsoon began withdrawing from western Rajasthan on September 14-three days ahead of its normal date and the earliest in the past 10 years-the Himalayan states continue to be battered by heavy rainfall and flooding.
1 min
October 01, 2025
Down To Earth
A generation in protest
ON SEPTEMBER 1, there were 30 anti-government protests globally, according to Carnegie's global protest tracker. In the 12 months prior to this, the world witnessed 159 anti-government protests in 71 countries. What defines these protests is an overwhelming participation from youth. “The proportion of people willing to participate in demonstrations has increased to its highest levels since the 1990s, and the number of protests has also risen in this period,” says a Unicef report. Massive protests have caused change in regimes in Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.
2 mins
October 01, 2025

Down To Earth
EU misses deadline to set new targets
EU'S CLIMATE ministers on September 18 confirmed that the bloc will miss a global deadline to set new emissions-cutting targets in time for a meeting of the UN General Assembly (UNGA) at the end of the month.
1 min
October 01, 2025

Down To Earth
The catalyst within
HORMONES NOT ONLY SHAPE ONE'S HEALTH, BUT HAVE LIKELY IMPACTED GLOBAL EVENTS
4 mins
October 01, 2025

Down To Earth
SIP AND UNWIND
Ashwagandha, one of the most revered herbs in ayurvedic medicine, has found its place in contemporary wellness recipes
3 mins
October 01, 2025

Down To Earth
Delhi court ban on Sci-Hub is bad news
Researchers will be hit by the loss of the free science website while big publishers are milking India on subscriptions
4 mins
October 01, 2025
Down To Earth
Don't push limits
WE CANNOT develop the Himalayas as if they were the plains, or a colony in South Delhi. This must be the lesson from this year's season of despair. The world's youngest mountain range, made of moraine, mud and rock, has been battered by rain. It has literally come crashing down, bringing with it homes, schools, fields, roads, bridges and much of the expensive infrastructure built by governments. The cost of this destruction—besides the tragic and irreplaceable loss of human lives—will be massive. Years of public and private investment have been lost.
3 mins
October 01, 2025

Down To Earth
'A separate Local Government Service Commission can be set up to recruit panchayat employees'
The 73rd Amendment to the Constitution of India calls upon states to enact laws that enable panchayats to function as local governments. To assess the extent of this devolution of power, the Union Ministry of Panchayati Raj has studied and ranked the states since 2004.
4 mins
October 01, 2025

Down To Earth
GLOBAL SOUTH REIMAGINED
In an increasingly fractured world marked by unilateralism and weakened climate cooperation, civil society must elevate Global South cohesion as a top climate agenda
4 mins
October 01, 2025

Down To Earth
A mandatory requirement
Assessment of a river's sand replenishment is now a legal requirement for obtaining environmental clearance to mine the resource
3 mins
October 01, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size