The summit has sought to reframe the African continent, which has enormous amounts of clean energy minerals and renewable energy sources, as less of a victim of climate change driven by the world’s biggest economies and more of the solution.

But investment in the continent in exchange for the ability to keep polluting elsewhere has angered some in Africa who prefer to see China, the United States, India, the European Union and others rein in their emissions of planet-warming greenhouse gases.

“We reject forced solutions on our land,” Priscilla Achakpa, founder of the Nigeria-based Women Environmental Programme, told summit participants on the event’s final day. She urged the so-called “Global North” to “remove yourself from the perspective of the colonial past.”

  • SCB@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    The free market is the only solution to climate change, and it is absolutely profitable to solve climate change.

    The problem, as the article indicates, is that we currently subsidize fossil fuels and do not tax them to pay for their externalities, stacking the deck in favor of fossil fuels companies and away from green energy transitions.

    Even with that in place, capital is flying toward green/renewable energy.

    A carbon tax is 100% needed, and dividends can be handed out to bottom quintile earners to offset the cost for those who literally cannot survive the increases a carbon tax causes. Problem there is just that taxing fuel in the US almost guarantees you lose your next election.

    • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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      10 months ago

      The free market is the only solution to climate change, and it is absolutely profitable to solve climate change.

      Problem there is just that taxing fuel in the US almost guarantees you lose your next election.

      These are not mutually exclusive.