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Africa secures $900 million in new clean cooking commitments
BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM
Nearly one billion people across Africa cook over charcoal or firewood every day. $3.1 billion in commitments is what it’s going to take to change that, and the number keeps climbing.
African countries secured $900 million in new financial commitments to expand access to clean cooking technologies, the International Energy Agency announced last Thursday. The funding builds on the $2.2 billion mobilized at the inaugural Africa Clean Cooking Summit in Paris in 2024, bringing total pledges to more than $3.1 billion.
850,000 deaths a year
Charcoal and firewood still fuel most African kitchens. In many cases, it’s the only option available. Indoor air pollution from those fuels contributes to an estimated 850,000 premature deaths each year, according to the IEA. Women and children take the worst of it, spending the most hours near the fire.
“Access to clean cooking is one of the most impactful yet overlooked challenges of our time,” said U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright. “It directly affects the lives of billions of people, particularly women and children.”
Clean cooking technologies, including ethanol, biogas, and electric stoves, cut that pollution at the source. Not downstream. In the kitchen.
The money moving
The commitments were announced during a virtual meeting convened by the IEA and Kenya. Kenyan President William Ruto, Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store, African Union Infrastructure and Energy Commissioner Lerato Mataboge, and IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol all participated.
Birol reported that $740 million, roughly one-third of what was pledged in Paris, has already been deployed across 22 countries. Pledges that sit on paper don’t keep kitchens clean. This money is moving.
Ruto was direct about what’s still missing. “Ambition alone is not enough,” he said. “It must be backed by investment.”
What are the next steps?
The next Africa Clean Cooking Summit is expected later this year. Reaching everyone who needs access will cost far more than $3.1 billion. But money is moving faster than it was two years ago, and the number of countries with something concrete to point to keeps growing.
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