Funding Flows for Climate Change Research on Africa: Where Do They Come from and Where Do They Go?

Climate and Development 2021, DOI: 10.1080/17565529.2021

21 Pages Posted: 19 Nov 2021

See all articles by Indra Overland

Indra Overland

NUPI - Norwegian Institute of International Affairs; NUPI - Norwegian Institute for International Affairs

Haakon Fossum Sagbakken

NUPI - Norwegian Institute for International Affairs

Aidai Isataeva

NUPI - Norwegian Institute for International Affairs

Galina Kolodzinskaia

NUPI - Norwegian Institute for International Affairs

Nicholas Simpson

University of Cape Town (UCT)

Christopher Trisos

University of Cape Town (UCT)

Roman Vakulchuk

NUPI - Norwegian Institute for International Affairs

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: September 25, 2021

Abstract

Africa has only contributed a small fraction of global greenhouse gas emissions yet faces disproportionate risks from climate change. This imbalance is one of many inequities associated with climate change and raises questions concerning the origin, distribution and thematic prioritization of funding for climate-change research on Africa. This article analyses a database comprising USD 1.51 trillion of research grants from 521 organizations around the world and covering all fields of research from 1990 to 2020. At most 3.8% of global funding for climate-change research is spent on African topics – a figure incommensurate with Africa’s share of the world population and vulnerability to climate change. Moreover, institutions based in Europe and North America received 78% of funding for climate research on Africa, while African institutions received only 14.5%. Research on climate mitigation received only 17% of the funding while climate impacts and adaptation each received around 40%. Except for Egypt and Nigeria, funding supported research on former British colonies more than other African countries. The findings highlight the need to prioritise research on a broader set of climate-change issues in Africa and to increase funding for Africa-based researchers in order to strengthen African ownership of research informing African responses to climate change.

Suggested Citation

Overland, Indra and Sagbakken, Haakon Fossum and Isataeva, Aidai and Kolodzinskaia, Galina and Simpson, Nicholas and Trisos, Christopher and Vakulchuk, Roman, Funding Flows for Climate Change Research on Africa: Where Do They Come from and Where Do They Go? (September 25, 2021). Climate and Development 2021, DOI: 10.1080/17565529.2021, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3930523

Indra Overland (Contact Author)

NUPI - Norwegian Institute of International Affairs ( email )

Oslo
Norway

NUPI - Norwegian Institute for International Affairs ( email )

Oslo
Norway

Haakon Fossum Sagbakken

NUPI - Norwegian Institute for International Affairs ( email )

Oslo
Norway

Aidai Isataeva

NUPI - Norwegian Institute for International Affairs ( email )

Oslo
Norway

Galina Kolodzinskaia

NUPI - Norwegian Institute for International Affairs ( email )

Oslo
Norway

Nicholas Simpson

University of Cape Town (UCT) ( email )

Private Bag X3
Rondebosch, Western Cape 7701
South Africa

Christopher Trisos

University of Cape Town (UCT) ( email )

Private Bag X3
Rondebosch, Western Cape 7701
South Africa

Roman Vakulchuk

NUPI - Norwegian Institute for International Affairs ( email )

Oslo
Norway

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