Africa @ the G20 Youth Leadership Dialogue
The G20 moment presents a critical opportunity for African political leadership to shape global governance in ways that reflect its priorities around climate justice,…
The CEGP programme works within four principles that help us define and work towards climate, energy, and environmental democracy.
The CEGP programme works within four principles that help us define and work towards climate, energy, and environmental democracy. These principles inform our project design, strategic partnership formation, and advocacy agendas, and include:
Every mitigation investment — whether public or private —must support or unlock resources for local adaptation and resilience.
The energy transition cannot succeed without simultaneously building resilience to climate shocks, especially for vulnerable and underserved communities. While investments in renewable energy, green hydrogen, and electric vehicles are critical to achieving mitigation goals, they often overlook local adaptation needs such as food security, water access, and disaster preparedness. This principle demands a twin-track approach: every dollar, pula, rand, Kwacha, or euro spent on mitigation must either directly fund or mobilise additional resources for community-level adaptation.
Local governance is at the frontline of climate impacts and natural resource management, and it should, therefore, be supported as leaders in mitigation and adaptation efforts.
Local governments are increasingly tasked with setting and delivering on climate change mandates[1]. However, governance decentralisation in many African countries has not been coupled with meaningful capacity development and resourcing. For climate policy to be effective, it must be anchored in the statutory planning systems that govern land use, service delivery, budgeting, and infrastructure decisions, especially at the local level. This creates more sustainable climate and environmental interventions and provides an opportunity to strengthen broader local governance infrastructure through climate investment.
As responsibilities for service delivery, land use management, and infrastructure planning shift closer to the people, municipalities emerge as frontline institutions in climate mitigation and adaptation. Their growing mandate is reinforced by their participation in global and regional environmental network governance platforms—such as C40 Cities, ICLEI, and the Covenant of Mayors for Sub-Saharan Africa—which provide technical support, policy guidance, and a forum for peer learning.
Tackling gender, youth, class, and spatial inequities with climate change yields faster systemic change and higher social and economic returns on development investments.
Climate change is not a neutral force—it magnifies existing inequalities. Women, youth, informal workers, rural communities, and people living with disabilities often face the harshest impacts yet have the least voice in decision-making. At the same time, they possess critical knowledge, networks, and capabilities that are essential for building resilient systems. Intersectionality is not just a value; it is a multiplier of programme impact. This principle rejects siloed approaches and instead adopts intersectional environmentalism as a core methodology. By recognising and addressing how multiple forms of marginalisation interact, we build more inclusive governance processes and unlock new forms of climate intelligence, innovation, and participation.
Collective impact platforms—linking CSOs, all tiers of government and companies—are essential for scale and legitimacy.
No single actor—government, civil society, or business—can solve the climate crisis alone. Fragmented action, even when well-intentioned, leads to duplicated efforts, misaligned priorities, and missed opportunities. Collective impact models, which bring diverse stakeholders together under shared goals and coordinated strategies, are essential to achieving transformational outcomes at scale. This principle prioritises structured collaboration and mutual accountability across sectors. CEDP fosters multi-stakeholder platforms—such as municipal-CSO-private sector steering committees, open data forums, and climate dialogue roundtables—to build trust, align efforts, and pool resources. It also draws from initiatives like the UN Global Compact, F20, and Industry Transition Coalition, linking local governance efforts to national and international green industrialisation and transition frameworks.
Fostering Inclusive Growth through Climate Change Champions (FIGCCC) →
The G20 moment presents a critical opportunity for African political leadership to shape global governance in ways that reflect its priorities around climate justice,…
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In this episode, we’re joined by Justin Sylvester, Senior Strategist for Just Transition at the ClimateWorks Foundation. Justin leads work supporting energy transition initiatives…
Democracy Works Foundation is proud to announce that we’re hosting an official side event at this year’s Africa Climate Summit (ACS). Our side event…
Welcome to Africa @ the G20, the podcast where we explore how African voices, priorities, and leadership can shape global governance spaces. …
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Climate change challenges socio-economic development and environmental sustainability, especially in vulnerable regions like the Witzenberg and Karoo Hoogland Municipalities. While both the public and…