Still in Morocco. Still in the Newsroom trying to file stories before 6 pm. One down, and another left.
We usually know how these conferences are like: the speeches are so predictable it is not funny; so the challenge comes with how to make the stories jump out at you for the Paper the next day.
My first story about the African Union's African Risk Capacityu made it to the Paper, and I met a fortmer associate of my former workplace who has just found out am now with Radio.
How do you find it? She wondered. I must have said something like I find it liberating. Not quite sure exactly, but it was something close enough.
I was approached to write a blog post by close of the conference, and so, this is an attempt of sorts to do so. Actually, I just feel like venting!
I have met some incredible people; and found it hard to write about it as the keyboard is not particularly conducive -- there are too many Arabic characters! -- but I want to write this down for posterity.
Something tells me this experience here in Morocco is going to be a lot more memorable than I ever dreamt of.
So am counting on noone but myself to ensure it becomes so!
If you are reading this wondering whether I am back to my blogging habits, well, kind of. The Moroccans are a lot more friendlier than I imagined.
In 2005, I was in North Africa -- Tunisia to be precise for a UN World Summit on Information Society -- and I met some incredible people in a country that looked more European than African! Those stories can be read here: http://ekbensahinghana.blogspot.com/2005/11/tunis-mosaique-of-breathtaking.html
Yeah; that is how long I have been blogging. Almost a decade.
Humbling!!
Ghanaian; ECOWAS Community Citizen; AU Citizen. Development of life in Ghana is meaningless unless linked up with development of Africa!
Wednesday, October 08, 2014
Tuesday, October 07, 2014
The African Union as a ‘Game-changer’ in combating climate Change
Emmanuel is currently in
Morocco as part of the live-reporting team of the UN Economic Commission for
Africa/African Union Commission/African Development Bank-sponsored Fourth Climate Change and
Development in Africa (CCDA), which is underway till 10 October ;
and where he will also file stories for the African Development Forum from
12-16th October.
The African Union as a
‘Game-changer’ in combating climate Change
By Emmanuel.K.Bensah Jr Marakkech, Morocco
At a time when the African Union has come under
considerable criticism for doing little to address pertinent development issues
on the continent, along comes the African Risk Capacity to help combat climate
change. If Tosi Mpanu-Mpanu, Board Member of the ARC Agency Governing Board, is
to be believed, the ARC is a real “game-changer” in helping address climate
change in Africa.
Mr.Tosi Mpanu-Mpanu, Board Member, ARC Agency Governing Board |
Established in 2012, the ARC is a specialized agency
of the AU, established by a Conference of Plenipotentiaries, to help AU
Member States improve their capacities to better plan, prepare and respond to
extreme weather events and natural disasters.
According to Mpanu-Mpanu, it functions as an insurance
scheme that helps African countries pool resources together. He believes a
system like this “makes perfect economic sense as countries deal with drought”.
It further helps countries insure themselves against risk.
Once a request for assistance is approved by the Board, it takes around one hundred days for the money to be disbursed. This contrasts sharply with the donor agencies, which often take between four and six months. Against this backdrop is the idea that action must be taken quickly.
Pressed on why the idea of the insurance sector
helping address Africa’s problems at a time one barely hears of that sector,
Mpanu-Mpanu explained that one of the reasons why the ARC is a game-changer is
because it is about “changing the narrative” of African countries. It is also
about understanding the risk-profile associated with climate change in the
sense that when disaster strikes, a country will be well-covered.
According to their website, the ARC comprises two
entities: the Specialized Agency and a financial affiliate, ARC Insurance Company Limited (the Company). The Agency provides general oversight and supervising
development of ARC capacity and services. The Company is the financial affiliate
that carries out commercial insurance functions of risk pooling and risk
transfer in accordance with national regulations for parametric weather
insurance in Bermuda, the Caribbean, where it is located until such time that
an equally favourable legal and regulatory regime exists in an AU Member State.
Mpanu-Mpanu explained that had Mauritania known of ARC
when it experienced its severe drought last year, it would not have spent an
excess of around one million dollars to address it. He further elaborated on
the dynamics of the mechanism by explaining that, given that disaster cannot
hit countries all at once, when countries pay a premium, the pot will get
larger than the-over $100m that donors have helped capitalize as the ARC was
established.
The ARC is supported by DFID; SIDA; KFW(German
Development Bank) and Rockefeller Foundation, among others.
Mpanu-Mpanu looks forward to the day when all
fifty-four member countries will be covered by the ARC.
ENDs
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
I own these sites
Footer Fancies
My Photo Gallery
BlogCatalog Stuff!