
Ethiopia has signed its first private sector transmission agreement, marking a structural shift in how the country finances and expands its national grid.

AKADEMIYA2063 has appointed public policy veteran Dr Debisi Araba as its new Managing Director, effective September 15, 2025.

The Miombo Restoration Alliance has launched Article 6-aligned carbon removal projects across four African countries, marking one of the continent’s most coordinated entries into the Paris Agreement’s carbon market framework.

Nigeria’s rivers are carrying more than water. They are carrying fragments of its development model.

African boardrooms recalibrated in 2025. Faced with tightening global disclosure rules, rising investor scrutiny and domestic regulatory reforms, directors across sectors shifted ESG from peripheral reporting to core governance architecture.

ESG in Africa is no longer a voluntary add-on; it now significantly represents the currency enabling capital access, regulatory approval, and market relevance.

The African Development Bank has approved a $3.9 million grant to enable African countries to convert high-level energy transition compacts into real electricity connections.

Africa’s first G20 summit on its own soil was more than a ceremony. Johannesburg 2025 marked a recalibration of voice, visibility and ambition in global governance.
A structural slowdown is tightening its grip on the global economy. Investment growth has halved, productivity gains are thinning, and trade no longer outpaces output.

The global economy proved more resilient than expected in 2025. Yet beneath the headline recovery lies a sobering truth: growth has reduced to its weakest decade since the 1960s.

Technology is reshaping demography faster than policy can adapt. From AI diagnostics to robotics in eldercare, digital systems are transforming how societies age, migrate, learn, and reproduce.

Angel investors are quietly underwriting the future of emerging markets. Across Africa, Latin America, Southeast Asia and South Asia, more than 220 angel networks are shaping the earliest stages of innovation, often before venture capital steps in.

Low- and middle-income countries are under pressure to create millions of jobs annually; however, formal employment lags labour force growth.

South Africa’s proposed 2035 climate target is not merely an environmental pledge; it is a strategic economic positioning.

A 1% increase in public investment can raise output by 1.1% within five years across emerging markets and developing economies (EMDEs). In countries with ample fiscal space and efficient public investment systems, that impact climbs to 1.6%.

As global ESG rules tighten, African businesses are confronting a critical question: how can they comply with international standards without undermining local realities?

The Middle East and North Africa generate more waste per capita than the global average, at rising fiscal and environmental costs. Without reform, volumes are projected to nearly double by 2050.

Across Africa, agrifood innovators are no longer selling promise; they are reporting measurable outcomes.

The world economy is heading toward its weakest long-term growth stretch in three decades. According to the World Bank’s report Falling Long-Term Growth Prospects, potential global GDP growth could slow to just 2.2% annually through 2030, down sharply from 3.5% in the early 2000s.
Nigeria’s rivers are carrying more than water. They are carrying fragments of its development model.
ESG in Africa is no longer a voluntary add-on; it now significantly represents the currency enabling capital access, regulatory approval, and market relevance.
Across classrooms from Lagos to London, a quiet shortcut is rewriting how young people learn to think, feel, and belong in an AI-saturated world. Students are embracing chatbots as study buddies, emotional confidants, and ghostwriters, often faster than schools, regulators, and even parents can keep up.
Artificial intelligence will not wait for Africa to be ready. It is already reshaping governance, growth, and power across regions.
AI diffusion in Africa will amplify institutional strengths or weaknesses, shaping whether digital adoption narrows or widens development gaps.
UNDP warns AI's gains will concentrate where governance, skills and infrastructure exist, risking unequal integration in Africa unless institutions enforce inclusion and accountability.
Summary and evidence-based insights into corporate, government, and organisational sustainability disclosures across Africa, highlighting achievements, uncovering gaps, and spotlight opportunities for progress.