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Africa Roundtable: ‘Health is economy and economy is health’

  • June 09, 2021

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier set the tone in his opening remarks for the “The Africa Roundtable” held on Wednesday when he called for greater cooperation between Europe and Africa. “We, Africa and Europe, need each other to tackle the big challenges, and we can learn a lot from each other in the process,” he said at the start of the online debate organized by the Global Perspectives Initiative (GPI).

Steinmeier said that it was crucial to cooperate closely in fighting the pandemic, climate change, migration, digitization, terrorism, and globalization. He called for a more significant contribution by western countries to the global vaccination campaign against the coronavirus virus. All panelists agreed that one thing the pandemic had taught the world was, as Nigerian economist Oby Ezekwesili put it: “Health is economy and economy is health.”

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala had already warned in February, when she took over as director-general of the World Trade Organization (WTO), that there would be no “business as usual” after the pandemic. At the online debate, she specified that she intended to dismantle existing trade barriers for basic medical products, vaccines, and active ingredients.

DW’s Christine Mhundwa and Ambassador Wolfgang Ischinger hosted the event

Fair play for Africa

Senegalese President Macky Sall agreed that it was important to vaccinate global populations to ensure an end to the pandemic for all and restart the global economy. But this alone will not solve Africa’s problems. “We must support the economic recovery through strong and innovative measures,” Sall said. Such measures include greater flexibility vis-à-vis debt ceiling rules and the budget deficit threshold for developing countries. Other support could come via “easier access to loans on terms compatible with the enormous investment required in heavy infrastructure and more transparent and fairer assessments of investment risk in Africa,” Sall proposed.

Many panelists concurred that the exaggerated perception of Africa as high-risk for business investments has significantly hampered needed investments on the continent.

This is all the more urgent since African populations, while not as badly hit by Covid-19 as those in Europe and other parts of the world, will, as is often the case in international crises, bear the brunt of the pandemic’s economic fallout, several panelists said. That also applies to the second big issue identified by the panelists: the danger of climate change to health and economies.

  • Fighting climate change with comics and superheroes

    Climate change: the elephant in the room

    Raising awareness of climate change through comics — that’s the goal of Zambian cartoonist Mwelwa Musonko, founder of Foresight Comics. His work includes cartoons on Germany’s energy transition, drawn in 2018 while on the International Journalists’ Programme (IJP). This cartoon looks at the focus on immigration in Germany and Europe — ignoring the “elephant in the room” that is climate change.

  • Fighting climate change with comics and superheroes

    Cows as the climate change culprits

    In another cartoon, Mwelwa’s pen takes aim at how the world’s meat and dairy sector is heating up the planet. Drawn while on a placement at Clean Energy Wire in Germany as part of the IJP, it followed a report from the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy and GRAIN in 2018 that said the world’s livestock industry could eat up 80 percent of the globe’s allowable carbon budget by 2050.

  • Fighting climate change with comics and superheroes

    Germans counting the cost of climate change

    Mwelwa, aka “Tax,” also gave his take on Germans’ attitudes to the energy transition. This came on the back of surveys suggesting that while Germans support a switch to renewables in principal, they’re less keen on the costs that come with it. The artist told DW that cartoons are a great way to communicate the dangers of climate change, saying: “Art is a perfect way of getting a message through.”

  • Fighting climate change with comics and superheroes

    Reluctant to part with petrol

    This cartoon was inspired by data showing Germans are reluctant to say goodbye to their petrol and diesel cars in exchange for an electric vehicle, despite the government offering a €4,000 ($4,676) subsidy per car. Two years after Germany launched the subsidy scheme, only one-sixth of the earmarked funds have been used, said a report from the Federal Office for Economic Affairs and Export Control.

  • Fighting climate change with comics and superheroes

    Germany’s lignite mines ‘visible from space’

    Germany’s lignite mines also got Mwelwa’s satirical treatment in this cartoon. Lignite, or brown coal, is extracted using opencast mining in Germany and it made up around 23 percent of the country’s power production in 2017, according to AG Energiebilanzen (Energy Balances Group). Lignite-burning power stations are high on the list of Europe’s largest CO2 producers.

  • Fighting climate change with comics and superheroes

    Climate change’s superhero comic book

    In 2018, Mwelwa came up with a unique way to raise climate change awareness by launching a comic book series. The Fifth Element follows the adventures of superhero Quin Ence, a 10th grader in Lusaka, Zambia, as she battles to save the planet from global warming. He told DW he created the series over concerns that “the majority of Zambians think that climate change is a foreign problem.”

  • Fighting climate change with comics and superheroes

    Reaching the next generation with comics

    Mwelwa hopes the comics will raise awareness of climate change among children and teens — using eye-catching cartoons to overcome what he calls an aversion to reading in Zambia. “The reading culture where I am from in Zambia is really, really bad,” he told DW. “So, if you would give somebody a book with pictures in it, I think it sparks their interest. Trying to create value with this art.”

  • Fighting climate change with comics and superheroes

    A heroine to save the world

    Mwelwa decided to make his superhero a girl because it “brings a different thing to the table,” telling DW that comic book writers are increasingly talking about creating more female characters. He added: “If you follow my comic book, you start to see that this character is not perfect. Her life is miserable, and she rises above all of that to save the world and fight climate change.”

    Author: Melanie Hall


Europe’s responsibility

Economist Ezekwesili admitted the importance of economic growth in Africa, notably in an equal partnership with rich countries. But for this to happen required “the continent first taking responsibility for its development. There is no way that Germany or any other country can parachute development to Africa,” she said.

For a partnership to be equal, Europe needs to acknowledge its special responsibilities, for instance, regarding climate change, said Ska Keller, head of the Greens/EFA Group in the European Parliament. She stressed that “the contribution of the African continent to that climate crisis has been marginal, especially compared to what the EU has historically been emitting as greenhouse gases.” In her view, “the EU needs to step up efforts a lot to do a fair share of the global effort to combat the climate crisis.” 

Keller also said it was important not to see the green transition everybody agrees must come as separate from a social transition. In a direct reply to the executive Vice-President of the European Commission Frans Timmermans, who had referred to the huge economic opportunity renewable energies could create for Africa, she cautioned: “It’s important that we don’t do with renewable energies what we did before with fossil energy, namely producing vast amounts maybe on the African continent and then exporting it to Europe.”

Africa and small Caribbean nations bear the brunt of climate change

No development without clean energy

The importance of access to clean and abundant energy for all on the African continent cannot be stressed enough, according to Sierra Leonean Agricultural economist Kandeh Yumkella. “It is critical for enhancing the incomes of rural communities and providing long-term climate resilience or, for that matter, economic resilience,” he said, adding, “You cannot run intensive care without reliable energy. You cannot have the concentration of oxygen to fight Covid-19 without power sources. You cannot reduce maternal mortality without storing blood when the women need it when they are bleeding after childbirth.”

Cooking with unclean energy alone claims over one million lives every year, of which 60% are women and children, the economist explained. “So for social protection, you need that nexus energy and health.”

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/africa-roundtable-health-is-economy-and-economy-is-health/a-57830359?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

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