“Inspiring Climate Action in African Cities” brings together 17 case studies that offer insights into creative ways that urban and peri-urban areas have found to address complex social, economic, and health issues that are surfacing with climate change. The publication shines a spotlight on cities’ adaptation, a crucial issue for a continent that is increasingly urban in nature. Africa’s cities, already struggling to cope with the rapid influx of people from rural areas, now confront the ramifications of climate change, including more extreme temperatures, more severe flooding and more prolonged droughts, all with implications for the health and safety of people living in the urban areas that are poised to become the world’s next “megacities.”
Against this backdrop, “Inspiring Climate Action in African Cities” is intended to spark ideas that may prove fruitful in addressing complex, interwoven climate-related issues at urban and peri-urban scales – within Africa and beyond – for adapting to climate change and for addressing many of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The approaches, which involve the efforts of governments, aid agencies, private businesses, NGOs, and individual community members.
Among the case studies are:
The working paper is part of a wider research project, Future Resilience for African CiTies and Lands (FRACTAL), which aims to improve scientific knowledge of future climate trends in Southern Africa, and to deepen urban policy-makers’ understanding of how climate change will affect water and energy services. The project is funded by the UK Department for International Development and the Natural Environment Research Council.
Design and development by Soapbox.