
Schneider Electric has used EAIF 2026 to promote mini-grids, solar systems and decentralised power for underserved African communities.

Sahara Power Group has called for faster deployment of digital grid technologies to improve Nigeria’s unreliable electricity supply.

Buildings are no longer judged only by location, size and design. Efficiency, air quality and lifecycle cost are becoming market fundamentals.

UNICEF and Dalberg warn climate disasters could disrupt learning for 440 million to 520 million children in Eastern and Southern Africa by 2050.

Conflict around Iran and the Persian Gulf is disrupting fertiliser flows through the Strait of Hormuz. That matters because sub-Saharan Africa imports about 80% of the fertiliser it uses.

The African Development Bank is expanding results-based financing across Southern Africa. The model releases funds only after agreed outcomes are independently verified.

São Tomé and Príncipe has secured a $24.5 million grant from the African Development Fund for clean energy.

The African Development Bank and Green Climate Fund have deepened cooperation following high-level meetings in Abidjan.
Land is feeding the world, but it is also quietly losing strength. FAO’s The State of Food and Agriculture 2025 warns that land degradation is now eroding productivity, food security and ecosystem resilience.

Africa’s debt debate is shifting from how much countries owe to how borrowing is governed, disclosed and used.

Nigeria’s power sector reform is moving into a more technical phase: mini-grid rules, regional loss reporting and sector debt reforms are now central to market stability.

Cabo Verde needs about $842 million for climate mitigation and adaptation between 2024 and 2030, but public finance and traditional aid cannot close the gap.

Africa is still making development gains, but the 2026 Africa Sustainable Development Report warns that current progress is not fast enough to meet the 2030 Agenda.

Global hunger is easing slightly, but Africa is moving in the opposite direction. The 2025 State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World warns that food price inflation is keeping healthy diets out of reach.

The world must produce about 50% more food, feed and fibre by 2050, yet the land and water systems that sustain agriculture are already under severe pressure.

Critical minerals are no longer only a mining story. They are becoming a story of security, governance and market access for countries supplying batteries, grids, electric vehicles and digital infrastructure.

Global energy demand kept rising in 2025, but the story changed: solar PV became the largest single source of growth, while electricity expanded more than twice as fast as overall energy demand.

Africa’s minigrid industry says the continent’s electrification promise will not be met by ambition alone.

Rare earth elements are no longer a specialist mining issue. They are now central to electric vehicles, wind turbines, artificial intelligence infrastructure, defence systems and the future of industrial competitiveness.
Nigeria’s first Nigerian Corporate Sustainability Report and Sustainability Index show a split market: a small circle of ESG‑ready leaders and a long tail of silent reporters.
Nigeria's proposed Petroleum Industry Act (Amendment) Bill 2025 seeks to transfer the government's representative role in upstream oil contracts from NNPC Limited to the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), making the sector's primary regulator its own commercial counterparty.
A Lagos High Court has ruled that Meta Platforms Inc., operator of Facebook, is jointly liable as a data controller for a false, health-related video posted by a third party, awarding $25,000 to human rights lawyer Femi Falana, SAN.
Nigeria holds N29.43 trillion in pension assets yet channels under 1% into infrastructure, even as the country faces an estimated $878 billion investment gap through 2040.
African and emerging markets are entering a new carbon-market era with Article 6 largely settled; however, it is not yet safely governed.
Africa’s democracy debate is no longer about whether citizens still value democratic rule. It is about why support for democracy remains high while democratic outcomes, in many countries, remain fragile, uneven, or in retreat.
Summary and evidence-based insights into corporate, government, and organisational sustainability disclosures across Africa, highlighting achievements, uncovering gaps, and spotlight opportunities for progress.