AfDB to insure farmers against effects of climate change

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By Lucy Ogalue

The African Development Bank(AfDB) has unveiled the Africa Climate Risk Insurance Facility for Adaptation (ACRIFA) to insulate countries against catastrophic weather-related events.

 

The AfDBโ€™s President, Dr Akinwumi Adesina, said this in a statement on the bankโ€™s website.

 

Adesina spoke on the sidelines of the African Climate Summit in Nairobi, Kenya.

 

The facility, which will be hosted by the bank, expands its pioneering Africa Disaster Risk Insurance Program into a facility that will develop insurance to help African countries.

 

โ€œSpecifically, their agriculture sectors, prepare for, adapt and build resilience against adverse effects of climate change such as flooding and drought.

 

โ€˜It will raise an initial one billion dollars of concessionary high-risk capital and grants to catalyse the development and uptake of insurance solutions.

 

โ€œThis will help countries, businesses and communities adapt to climate change,โ€he said.

 

According to the AfDB boss, the initiative is the bankโ€™s effort to scale up support to insure countries and households against extreme weather patterns.

 

He said extreme weather patterns negatively impact the livelihoods of millions of farmers in Africa, majority of who are women.

 

According to him, one way of tackling this issue is to ensure farmers have access to crop and livestock insurance.

 

โ€œThe Africa Climate Risk Insurance Facility for Adaptation will extend credit insurance to investment portfolios related to climate, agri-food system and enterprise development.

 

โ€œIt will engage primary insurers across Africa to ensure business opportunities flow through them to continental and international re-insurers.

 

โ€œIn addition, it will support national governments to more efficiently manage climate disasters,โ€ he said.

 

The Comoros President Azali Assoumani, Chair of the African Union, who spoke at the event described the initiative as a necessary innovation.

 

โ€œConsidering the frequency and impact of national disasters in African countries, ACRIFA has come at a time when African countries are facing enormous challenges affecting agriculture, such as floods and drought.

 

โ€œIt will help us to strengthen our adaptation and resilience capacities.

 

โ€œComoros is just 2,000 square kilometers. We cannot unlock our touristic potential when we face severe climate risks.

 

โ€œAnd therefore the importance of this facility to Comoros, which continues to experience adverse realities of climate change,โ€ he said.

 

Ibrahima Diong, the Director-General of the African Risk Capacity Group and United Nations Assistant Secretary-General, said ACRIFA would help to scale up what the African Risk Capacity Groupi s doing.

 

He said risk transfer is not just about premiums but also about what happens before the disaster strikes, hence the facility which would help to build data that feeds early warning systems in Africa.

 

He said ACRIFA would expand partnerships to carry out services to clients, such as the World Food Programme.

 

Martin Frick of the World Food Programme, expressed excitement about ACRIFAโ€™s potential to expand insurance cover to farmers who need it.

 

Frick said,โ€œThe Facility will help to unlock private sector capital and we can inject trust in the market and unleash more capital than is currently provided in the market.โ€

 

Following a panel discussion about the facilityโ€™s potential, AfDBโ€™s Vice President for Agriculture, Human and Social Development, Dr Beth Dunford, said it needs to move into action quickly.

 

โ€œWhat we are talking about today, is not just about policies; the impact of a thriving climate insurance industry in Africa is about lives.

 

โ€œIt is about an Africa that doesnโ€™t just survive in climate uncertainties but thrives in them,โ€ she added.(NAN)(www.nannews.ng)

Edited by Ijendu Iheaka/Julius Toba-Jegede

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