75 African groups demand Obama stop pushing dirty energy through Power Africa

75 African groups demand Obama stop pushing dirty energy through Power Africa

75 African groups demand Obama stop pushing dirty energy through Power Africa

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Coinciding with the UN climate conference in Warsaw, 75 African groups from 18 countries sent a letter to President Obama concerning his Power Africa initiative. The letter was released as the world commemorated the anniversary of the murder of Nigerian playwright and activist Ken Saro-Wiwa, who was sentenced to death on November 10, 1995 by the ruling military junta for speaking out against Shell’s devastating dirty energy exploits in Nigeria’s Niger Delta.

I’ll let this powerful letter speak for itself.

Have a read:

10 November 2013

Subject: Leave the oil in the soil; leave the coal in the hole

Dear President Obama,

We are African organizations working for the realization of a healthy and just environment for the people of our countries. We believe that every person has the right to a dignified life of quality on a livable planet. The climate crisis — brought on by developed countries — poses a monumental threat to this basic human right.

It is with this in mind that we write to you concerning the Power Africa initiative, as well as congressional legislation apparently meant to operationalize your initiative, including the Electrify Africa Act of 2013. Like you, we feel a great sense of urgency to address the pervasive energy poverty found in most African countries. It is shameful that in 2013, more than two-thirds of sub-Saharan Africa’s population lacks electricity, with that number growing to more than 85 per cent in rural areas.

We are therefore working hard to bring decentralized, truly clean, community-controlled renewable energy to all of our people. We do not need to poison communities in Africa in order to develop sustainably. Consequently, we reject any further extraction and exploitation of fossil fuels, including natural gas, oil, coal, and unconventional fossil fuels. These dirty fuel projects cause devastating impacts on local health, communities, and the environment. We similarly reject large hydropower projects, and other ‘false solutions’ such as carbon trading and offsetting. Smaller scale solar, wind, and geothermal, and mini-hydro, can provide us with sustainable lives and livelihoods without sinking our health along with that of the continent and the planet.

When we read statements from the White House about “new discoveries of vast reserves of oil and gas”, and that “The recent discoveries of oil and gas in sub-Saharan Africa will play a critical role in defining the region’s prospects for economic growth and stability, as well as contributing to broader near-term global energy security”[1] – our response is to say, “Leave the oil in the soil; leave the coal in the hole”.

It is simply impossible to continue to exploit fossil fuels if we want to avoid climate catastrophe. And we want to avoid climate catastrophe. So do you. Climate change is already having a heightened impact in Africa, with increasing temperatures, more floods and droughts, and failing agriculture, which is increasing conflict and threatening the lives and livelihoods of many millions.

Furthermore, we know from many decades of direct experience that the World Bank-driven development model pushing large-scale infrastructure and power projects rarely, if ever, alleviates poverty. Instead, such projects exacerbate inequality and conflict, devastate the environment, and frequently involve human rights violations (i.e. the well-documented “resource curse”). These projects do not help us at home but rather are for export and to line the pockets of multinational corporations and local elites.

But even more troubling is how African poverty has historically been used to line the pockets of U.S. corporations and “experts”. Much of the money given as “aid” to African and other countries actually returns right back to the “experts” and consultants of donor countries[2]. It thus troubles us tremendously that Power Africa has been advertised to U.S. audiences as an initiative to benefit U.S. corporations. For example, upon Power Africa’s launch, Forbes[3] wrote that it “greases billions in deals for General Electric”, saying the firm is “perhaps the biggest beneficiary” of the initiative, noting the U.S. Export-Import Bank’s[4] central role in financing its ambitions in the region. Indeed, the chair of the Export-Import Bank was quite frank about this over Twitter, referring to Power Africa as a “$7B plan to power up @General Electric”, and he posted a picture of President Obama’s speech on the initiative in Tanzania with a GE logo more than twice the size of the presidential seal. 

We therefore urge you to re-think any support for large scale power and infrastructure projects in the name of increasing energy access for Africa. We know that this hasn’t worked in the past, and it won’t work now. What will work are small-scale, decentralized, community-owned renewable energy initiatives throughout the African countryside and cities. Even the International Energy Agency has said as much. Its 2010 World Energy Outlook found that for universal energy access to occur by 2030, 70 per cent of rural populations will need to be served by decentralized renewable energy, and that electrification strategies should focus heavily on decentralized renewable energy systems, such as small-scale, democratically controlled wind, solar and microhydro co-operatives which meet local needs and end peoples’ reliance on the corporate-controlled energy system.  Advances in distributed renewable energy in recent years have made this technology more cost effective than outmoded grid extension from centralized fossil fuel projects; much like cheaper mobile phone technology has made extension of phone lines obsolete.  When the externalized cost of fossil fuel projects is factored in — including the cost of harmful health impacts, loss of land, environmental and agricultural damage, and conflicts — distributed renewable energy solutions become even more cost effective than fossil fuel projects. 

Unfortunately, to our dismay, we have learned that fossil fuel companies, the ONE Campaign, and even some in the Obama administration are using Power Africa and the Electrify Africa Act to try to weaken crucial gains in U.S. development financing at the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC). OPIC’s landmark climate and development policy, which is already having a positive effect in directing the agency’s portfolio toward renewable energy, requires the agency to reduce its fossil fuel financing and increase its renewable energy financing, bringing cleaner energy access to the poor. OPIC’s cap on greenhouse gas emissions must not be tampered with, most certainly not in the false name of supplying power to Africa’s poor. Weakening this policy will mean more polluting energy for Africa. What’s more, it may result in increased numbers of large centralized fossil fuel power projects that serve industrial customers but do not increase energy access for the poor, particularly in rural areas.

We thank you for your attention to these most important matters as we all move boldly toward sustainable livelihoods in the face of the climate crisis.

Sincerely,
 

Abibiman Foundation, Ghana

ADEID, Cameroun

African Alliance for Rangeland Management and Development, Kenya

African Biodiversity Network, Kenya

African Biosafety Centre, South Africa

African Research Association managing Development in Nigeria

AME, Cameroun

Association Nigérienne des Scouts de l’Environnement, Niger

ATTAC Burkina, Burkina Faso

Caravane D’Animation Culturelle Pour Le Development Durably, DRC

Center for Secured Health and Environmental Development Initiatives, Nigeria

Centre for 21st Century Issues, Nigeria

Centre for Civil Society, South Africa

CIKOD, Ghana

Climate Change Network Nigeria

Committee on Vital Environmental Resources, Nigeria

Daughters of Mumbi Global Resource Center, Kenya

Direction Générle des Forêts et des Ressources Naturelles, Bénin

Earth Peoples, Africa

Earthlife Africa Durban, South Africa

Earthlife Africa Jhb, South Africa

Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria

Friends of Lake Turkana, Kenya

Friends of the Earth Africa

Friends of the Earth Ghana

Greater Middelburg Resident’s Association, South Africa

Greenpeace Africa

groundWork, Friends of the Earth, South Africa

Growing Power NPC, South Africa

Health of Mother Earth, Nigeria

Host Community  Network Gwagwalada-Abuja, Nigeria

Host Community Network Federal Capital Territory, Nigeria

Host Community Network Chika-Lugbe, Nigeria

Host community Network Karimo, Nigeria

Host Community Network Mape, Nigeria

Institute for Sustainable Development, Ethiopia

Irrigation Training and Economic Empowerment Organization – IRTECO,Tanzania

Jamaa Resource Initiatives, Kenya

Jeunes volontaires pour l’Environnement de la RDC (JVE-RDC), DRC

JFE, Cameeroon

Johannesburg Anglican Environmental Initiative, South Africa

Justiça Ambiental/ Friends of the Earth Mozambique

Kenya Debt Relief Network – KENDREN, Kenya

Labour, Health and Human Rights Development Centre, Nigeria

Les Amis de la Terre-Togo

Maendeleo Endelevu Action Program, Kenya

National Association of Professional Environmentalists, Uganda

Never Ending Food, Malawi

Newcastle Environmental Justice Alliance, South Africa

Next Generation Youth Initiative International (NEGYII), Nigeria

NGO Coalition for Environment (NGOCE), Calabar, Nigeria

Nigerian Conservation Foundation, Nigeria

No REDD in Africa Network

Ogoni Solidarity Forum, Nigeria

Organisation de Bienfaisance et de Dévellopement, Djibouti

Project 90 by 2030, South Africa

Rainforest Resource and Development Centre (RRDC), Nigeria

RAINS, Ghana

SAFCEI, South Africa

South Durban Community Environmental Alliance, South Africa

Southern Cape Land Committee, South Africa

TCOE, South Africa

The Rules, Africa

The Young Environment Network, Nigeria

Unemployed People’s Movement, South Africa

Uniao Nacional de Camponeses (National Farmer Union of Mozambique), Mozambique

University of Kwazulu Natal, South Africa

Wise Administration of Terrestrial Environment and Resources (WATER), Nigeria

Women Environmental Programme Burkina, Burkina Faso

World Neighbours, Africa

Worldview -The Gambia      

Young Volunteers for Environment, Ethiopia

Youth Volounteers for the Environment, Zambia

YVE Ghana    

350.org Durban, South Africa

[1] The White House Fact Sheet: Power Africa, 30 June, 2013, http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/06/30/fact-sheet-power-africa.

[2] Timothy Mitchell. Rule of Experts: Egypt, Techno-Politics, Modernity, University of California press, 2002

[3] See http://www.forbes.com/sites/christopherhelman/2013/07/01/with-power-africa-plan-obama-to-grease-billions-in-deals-for-g-e/.

[4] We note that the U.S. Export-Import Bank has gained notoriety for its skyrocketing financing of fossil fuels, including the 4800 MW Kusile power project in South Africa, which is exacerbating energy poverty and causing tremendous local and climate pollution. Indeed, we vociferously protested the Export-Import Bank’s financing of Kusile.

Photo credit: Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria

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