Thursday, September 11, 2025

African Governments Allocate Significant Budgets to Climate Action

By our staff reporter

As African nations confront escalating climate risks, new analysis reveals that governments across the continent are deliberately dedicating portions of their national budgets to climate action, despite severe fiscal constraints and pressing development needs. A recent report by Development Transformations (DevTransform) highlights the scale and implications of these budgetary commitments across ten African countries, including Ethiopia.

The study shows that these countries allocate between 0.1% and 2.8% of their national budgets specifically to climate-focused programmes. Ethiopia stands out with climate allocations close to or above 2% of its budget, underscoring its political commitment to addressing climate challenges even amid limited fiscal space.

However, this dedication comes with significant trade-offs. The report illustrates that climate budget allocations in countries like Ethiopia are substantial enough to potentially cover large portions or even the entirety of critical public services such as health, education, social protection, and road infrastructure. For example, Ethiopia’s climate budget allocation could hypothetically finance over twice the Universal Health Coverage line and nearly 40% of national university education costs.

The report emphasizes the dual fiscal burden faced by these governments: not only must they fund critical services and climate action, but they also spend on external debt servicing at levels 10 to 30 times higher than their climate budgets. Ethiopia, for instance, spends about 12 times more on debt servicing than on dedicated climate programmes. This disproportionate fiscal pressure highlights a structural challenge, as debt repayments limit governments’ ability to expand climate investments or social spending.

Development Transformations calls for international climate finance to be provided predominantly as grants rather than loans, to avoid exacerbating debt burdens. The report stresses the need for justice in climate funding, recognizing that African nations are mobilizing scarce domestic resources to tackle a crisis they contributed least to historically.

Officials and policymakers are urged to protect existing climate budget lines as vital signals of commitment and to design climate investments that deliver co-benefits across human development sectors. The findings underscore that with adequate, additional international support, climate action can be scaled without undermining essential social services.

The report’s comprehensive fiscal analysis ultimately reveals the persistent dilemma faced by African countries: striving to build resilient, low-carbon economies while navigating debt pressures and competing development priorities. It serves as a crucial evidence base for policymakers, climate negotiators, and development partners seeking to enhance financing mechanisms that are equitable, sustainable, and conducive to Africa’s climate and development goals.

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