
Egypt and the European Union (EU) have turned years of energy‑transition diplomacy into concrete deals, signing €124.3 million in green grants at the Egypt Sustainable Energy Outlook 2040 conference in Cairo.

A new GlobeScan survey warns that “greenhushing”, brands going quiet on their sustainability work, is quietly eroding consumer trust worldwide.

Africa is adding workers faster than any region in history, about 12 million young people a year, for just 3 million new formal wage jobs. Without a radical shift in how the continent grows, that math points to mounting frustration rather than shared prosperity.

Egypt will invest $565 million in the 2025 Fiscal Year (FY) to upgrade and expand its national electricity transmission network. The deal alleviates grid stability and renewable energy integration.

Africa’s green hydrogen pipeline is expanding on paper, but contracts remain scarce. Despite multibillion-dollar project announcements across Namibia, Egypt and Mauritania, developers are finding it difficult to secure binding off-take agreements from European and Asian buyers.

Africa installs more solar each year; however, it manufactures almost none of it. New trade and import data reveal a widening gap between the continent’s renewable ambitions and its industrial base. Billions of dollars flow outward annually to purchase modules, inverters and battery components.

Aid is shrinking just as Africa’s investment needs and debt pressures intensify, forcing a hard reset. The new development playbook is less about pleading for concessional flows and more about mobilising domestic resources: taxes, natural capital, diaspora giving, and credibility in global capital markets.

Nigeria will hold a minority equity stake in a $2 billion nationwide fibre broadband rollout aimed at expanding high-speed internet access across underserved regions.
The world spends up to $143 billion annually protecting biodiversity, but needs as much as $967 billion to halt ecosystem collapse by 2030.

Global long-term growth is slowing in ways not seen in three decades. A new World Bank analysis warns that without decisive reform, potential global GDP growth could fall to 2.2% annually through 2030, down from 3.5% in the early 2000s.

Cybersecurity, liquidity stress, fraud, and digital disruption now define Africa’s corporate risk landscape, according to the 2026 Africa Risk in Focus report.

Africa’s Blue Tech sector has attracted over $230 million across more than 150 deals; however, scale remains elusive. Fewer than one-third of ventures raise more than $1 million, and only about 3% have raised more than $20 million.

As Gulf sovereign wealth funds and development banks scale up climate finance, a new analysis argues the Middle East could become one of the world’s most consequential backers of clean energy infrastructure, if capital is channelled strategically.

Ghana is moving to tighten methane oversight in its oil and gas sector, partnering with the Clean Air Task Force (CATF) to strengthen regulatory capacity and technical standards.

Ghana’s ESG conversation is shifting from buzzword to balance-sheet risk, with a clear warning: by 2028, non-compliant companies could find themselves locked out of parts of global commerce.

Nigeria can reach a net-zero electricity system, only if it moves beyond a single-technology mindset. A new analysis by Clean Air Task Force (CATF) argues that wind and solar alone will not deliver reliability, affordability, and deep decarbonisation across Africa’s largest economy.

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.
Africa is adding workers faster than any region in history, about 12 million young people a year, for just 3 million new formal wage jobs. Without a radical shift in how the continent grows, that math points to mounting frustration rather than shared prosperity.
Aid is shrinking just as Africa’s investment needs and debt pressures intensify, forcing a hard reset. The new development playbook is less about pleading for concessional flows and more about mobilising domestic resources: taxes, natural capital, diaspora giving, and credibility in global capital markets.
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.
Summary and evidence-based insights into corporate, government, and organisational sustainability disclosures across Africa, highlighting achievements, uncovering gaps, and spotlight opportunities for progress.