Sunday, March 22, 2026

COP32 as a Youth Development Turning Point: What Ethiopia Must Build, Not Just Host

By Tesfatsion Dominiko

When Ethiopia confirmed it would host COP32 in 2027, the announcement was rightly framed as a diplomatic achievement. It signals confidence, international recognition, and Africa’s growing presence in global climate negotiations. But once the ceremonies fade and the delegates leave Addis Ababa, a harder question will remain: what will COP32 leave behind for Ethiopia’s young people?

Hosting a global summit is never valuable in itself. Its real value lies in whether it produces skills, institutions, and economic pathways that endure beyond the event. Countries are rarely judged by the pageantry of the conferences they host, but by the legacies they manage to secure. COP32 should be approached with that lesson firmly in mind.

This matters because Ethiopia is one of the youngest countries in the world, facing climate stress, rapid urbanisation, and limited formal employment. Youth are often described in policy debates as a problem to be managed—unemployed, mobile, or restless. Yet this framing obscures a crucial reality: young Ethiopians are already adapting to climate and economic change, often faster than the institutions meant to support them. COP32 offers a rare chance to align national systems with this reality.

From Hosting an Event to Building Skills

Large international summits generate a wide range of skills that are usually treated as temporary or invisible. COP32 will require logistics coordination, interpretation, media production, digital systems, security planning, research support, and hospitality services. In many host countries, these functions are outsourced or forgotten once the event ends.

Ethiopia should instead treat COP32 as a national skills accelerator. Preparation for the summit can be linked deliberately to universities, technical and vocational education and training (TVET) colleges, and youth centres. Students can be trained and certified in project coordination, climate communication, interpretation, data management, and event logistics. These are not “conference skills” alone. They are transferable competencies relevant to tourism, public administration, civil society, and private enterprise.

Countries that successfully leveraged major events for youth development—from sports tournaments to cultural expos—did so by embedding them in education systems. COP32 can serve a similar role, strengthening Ethiopia’s applied learning pathways rather than becoming another standalone moment of global visibility.

Education as Climate Infrastructure

Over the past two decades, Ethiopia has expanded access to education dramatically. Universities and TVET institutions have multiplied, and enrollment has grown. Yet many graduates struggle to convert education into opportunity. This gap is often framed as a failure of youth or of labour markets. COP32 offers a chance to reframe the problem.

Climate action depends increasingly on human capacity: people who can collect data, manage projects, communicate across languages, and translate global knowledge into local solutions. Education systems should be treated as climate infrastructure, just like roads or energy grids. COP32 can pilot closer links between curricula and real-world climate challenges through applied projects, internships, and placements tied to summit preparation.

Formalising learning around COP32—through certification, portfolios, and practical assessment—can also help address a persistent issue: the invisibility of skills gained through informal work, volunteering, and mobility. Making youth capabilities more visible and portable matters as much as job creation itself.

From Climate Skills to Climate Enterprise

Skills alone are not enough. If COP32 is to leave a lasting legacy, those skills must connect to real economic opportunities—particularly in climate-related entrepreneurship.

Across Africa, climate finance is no longer peripheral. In Kenya, for example, the African Development Bank Group and KCB Bank have recently partnered on a $150 million package to expand green lending and climate-smart investment. KCB’s green portfolio rose rapidly within a year, signalling a broader shift: climate finance is becoming central to economic strategy.

For Ethiopia, this trend carries an important lesson. Youth are not only future employees; they are potential founders, innovators, and job creators. Climate entrepreneurship—in renewable energy, sustainable agriculture, waste management, green construction, eco-tourism, and digital climate services—offers one of the most plausible pathways for absorbing a growing youth population. But this potential will remain unrealised without institutional support.

COP32 should therefore catalyse dialogue between Ethiopian banks, development finance institutions, and investors to design green credit products suited to youth-led enterprises. Universities and TVET colleges can host incubation labs and mentorship programmes that help young people translate technical skills into viable business models. The summit’s convening power can also be used to connect Ethiopian youth entrepreneurs with regional and global markets, signalling that they are serious economic actors, not symbolic participants.

Importantly, climate entrepreneurship is not only high-tech. In rural and peri-urban areas, young people innovate through cooperatives, hybrid livelihoods, and community-based adaptation solutions. These forms of enterprise—often informal—should be recognised as part of Ethiopia’s climate economy, not sidelined by a narrow focus on start-ups alone.

Youth Mobility as Adaptation

Many young Ethiopians move—between rural and urban areas, across regions, and sometimes internationally. Policy debates often treat this mobility as a failure. In reality, it is one of the main ways youth adapt to declining agricultural viability, climate variability, and uneven development.

COP32 offers an opportunity to shift how mobility is understood. Youth who move acquire languages, networks, and problem-solving skills essential in a changing climate. Rather than attempting to freeze populations in place, policymakers could use COP32 to highlight approaches that help young people convert mobility into productive capacity: access to training regardless of residency status, recognition of informal skills, and support for livelihoods that link rural and urban economies.

Climate adaptation will fail if it assumes people remain fixed while environments change.

Beyond Addis Ababa

If COP32’s benefits remain concentrated in Addis Ababa, the opportunity will be lost. Ethiopia’s youth live everywhere. Regional universities, TVET colleges, and youth centres must be integrated into preparation and follow-up. Digital platforms, national competitions, and decentralised training programmes can ensure COP32 becomes a national learning moment rather than an urban spectacle.

This is not only a technical concern, but a political one. Youth development tied to COP32 should not privilege a small, urban elite. It should strengthen systems that shape everyday opportunities across the country.

Measuring Success Differently

COP32 will be measured globally by agreements, statements, and diplomatic outcomes. These matter. But for Ethiopia, another metric should be added: are young people better positioned after the summit than before it?

Are more youth equipped with practical skills? Are education pathways more connected to real-world climate challenges? Are youth entrepreneurs better able to access finance and markets? Are mobility and informal learning better recognised?

COP32 will not solve Ethiopia’s youth challenges. But it is a rare convergence of attention, resources, and expertise. If approached deliberately, it can become a turning point in how youth development, climate adaptation, and economic participation are linked.

Ethiopia does not need to project perfection to the world. It needs to demonstrate seriousness to itself. Treating COP32 as a youth development project—rather than only a diplomatic event—would be a powerful place to start.

Tesfatsion Dominiko (PhD) in Sociology from Stellenbosch University, is freelance research and advisory consultant at Telic Consulting. Tesfatsion can be reached at tesfatsiondominiko@gmail.com

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