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During the opening of its first office in the continent, Amadou 
Kanoute, Executive Director Greenpeace Africa stresses Africa is in a 
position to leapfrog dirty development and become a leader in helping 
to avert catastrophic climate change and protect the natural 
environment.

Amadou Kanoute, Executive Director Greenpeace Africa stresses Africa is in a position to leapfrog dirty development and become a leader in helping to avert catastrophic climate change and protect the natural environment.

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Johannesburg, South Africa — Greenpeace Africa has opened its first office in Johannesburg, announcing a long-term commitment to building a strong presence in Africa dedicated to tackling the most urgent environmental problems facing the continent - climate change, deforestation, and overfishing.

A second office will be opened on November 24th in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, followed by a third in Dakar, Senegal, next year. These areas are central to tackling climate change, deforestation and overfishing.

While the environmental threats facing Africans are urgent and critical, Africa is in a position to leapfrog dirty development and become a leader in helping to avert catastrophic climate change and protect the natural environment. While Africa contributes very little to global warming, the region will be one of the hardest hit by its effects. Over 180 million people in sub-Saharan Africa could die as a result of climate change by the end of the century. Unpredictable rainfall, lower crop yields and dwindling resources are causing mass migration, increased tension and conflict.

 

The launch comes just weeks ahead of the United Nations climate change talks in Poznan, Poland (December 1st - 13th), where agreements will be made to set the world on a path to cut greenhouse gas emissions and prevent human induced climate change. South Africa needs to take a strong stand at the UN climate talks for a deal that includes substantial funding from the industrialized world for developing countries to adapt to and mitigate the devastating effects of climate change. The South African government should also support Central African countries by backing moves to create a funding mechanism that makes protecting tropical forests and the climate more economical than logging. Tropical forest destruction accounts for about 20 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions.

Climate change

South Africa, the 14th highest carbon emitter in the world, must commit to measurable actions to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions, including ending its dependence on coal, without resorting to expansions in nuclear power. The country, as with Africa as a whole, is in a position to harness abundant renewable energy sources - solar, wind and biomass - and take a lead in an African energy revolution. An energy revolution that would not only help reduce climate changes but would bring electricity to rural areas, which is crucial for rural development, provide jobs and economic growth.

Protecting the rainforest 

Industrial logging threatens the Congo Basin rainforest and the 40 million people who depend on it for their livelihoods. It plays a vital role in regulating the global climate and is the fourth largest forest carbon reservoir in the world. Yet if logging is allowed to continue at the projected rate, the Democratic Republic of the Congo risks losing 40 percent of its forest within 40 years. Greenpeace is calling for the adoption of an international financing mechanism, Forests for Climate, that makes the Congo Basin rainforest and others like it more economically valuable intact than as timber.

Defending the oceans

Off the coast of West Africa marine life is being carried away by foreign trawlers, devastating local communities and depriving them of critical nutrition while also causing poverty and food insecurity to increase. Illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing must stop. Greenpeace will work for sustainable fishing and fish processing operations, managed and financed by Africans, as well as increased monitoring and control. The area needs a network of well enforced marine reserves.

Tackling environmental problems in Africa is vital to ensuring a future for its children and the world as a whole. While it is most likely to be one of the hardest and quickest hit by the effects of climate change, some of which can already be seen, Africa is also a major part of the solution. Through harnessing its renewable energy potential and protecing its tropical forests Africa can lead the way in environmental development.

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