
EcoVadis and Accenture say top procurement performers are now finding stronger returns from sustainability-led innovation than from compliance alone.

Henkel has set new 2030 sustainability targets covering emissions, packaging, gender equity and supplier standards.

Amazon Australia has signed nine new renewable-energy deals, adding 430MW of clean-energy capacity across New South Wales and Victoria.

Sustainability data is no longer sitting safely at the edge of banking compliance. A March 2026 briefing argues that ESG metrics are increasingly being treated as risk data, pulling sustainability teams into the heart of enterprise risk architecture.

Sustainability is being pulled out of the narrow ESG box. That shift matters because African companies now face tougher disclosure rules, investor scrutiny and local development pressures.

South Africa has launched a nature-linked bond that ties investor returns to water outcomes. The deal matters because it moves nature finance beyond labelled proceeds into measurable performance.

Roelf Meyer, the veteran apartheid-era negotiator who later became one of South Africa’s best-known bridge-builders, has been appointed the country’s ambassador to the United States, in a move that signals Pretoria’s attempt to steady strained ties with Washington.

ESG audits are moving closer to the corporate mainstream. That matters now as disclosure rules, assurance standards and investor expectations tighten across global and African markets.
Many companies still measure only a fraction of their emissions, leaving supply-chain, product and project-level impacts outside serious scrutiny.

Digital identity systems are becoming gateways to public services, finance, education and social protection. But for stateless people, the same systems can either unlock recognition or harden exclusion.

Many impact projects are not rejected because the ideas are weak. They fail because they are poorly structured, difficult to measure, and disconnected from funder priorities.

Singapore’s sustainability reporting model shows how ESG disclosure can move from glossy statements to board-level governance, measurable targets, and investor-ready data.

Pacific island cities are growing fast, but climate and disaster risks are growing with them.

Nature is moving from the margins of sustainability reporting into the centre of corporate risk management.

Land reform is often treated as a political issue, but the World Bank’s guidance note shows why it is also an economic investment question.

Two forces run through the World Economic Forum’s Top 10 Emerging Technologies of 2025: the race to scale breakthrough science, and the harder question of who is institutionally ready to benefit first.

AI may not transform labour markets in one single way. The World Economic Forum’s latest scenarios paper argues that the real fault line lies at the intersection of technological progress and workforce readiness: whether economies can build the talent, trust and institutional capacity to absorb AI before disruption outruns adaptation.

Waste is no longer a side issue in urban policy. The World Bank’s new What a Waste 3.0 argues that solid waste is fast becoming a core development, climate and public health care challenge, especially for fast-urbanising regions such as Sub-Saharan Africa.

The African governance debates often sound urgent, but too many still circle around familiar lines that explain away failure, flatten complexity, and excuse delay.
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.
Africa’s critical minerals moment is being framed as a green opportunity; however, raw extraction alone will not deliver green industrialisation. The real debate is whether the continent will supply the transition or shape it.
The UN-Water and UNESCO report reframes the global water crisis as a failure of governance and equity, rather than merely a resource shortage. Financing gaps, gender inequalities, and weak institutions continue to undermine access.
Indonesia’s Just Transition policy is ambitious, linking decarbonisation with jobs, equity, and growth, but its implementation reveals structural cracks. Governance instability, weak social financing, and fragmented policy execution threaten delivery.
Summary and evidence-based insights into corporate, government, and organisational sustainability disclosures across Africa, highlighting achievements, uncovering gaps, and spotlight opportunities for progress.