
A geopolitical conflict thousands of kilometres away is squeezing Africa's fuel and food supplies and exposing how deeply the continent's economies remain shackled to fossil fuel imports.

China's electric vehicle industry has overtaken Western automakers in sales, cost, and technology, ending decades of Western automotive dominance.

Nigeria has lifted its first cargo of Cawthorne Blend crude through FSO Cawthorne, a floating storage and offtake vessel that represents the country's first new crude oil terminal in half a century.

The International Finance Corporation (IFC) has committed $45 million to IPT PowerTech to deploy solar and battery hybrid energy systems across 2,235 telecom tower sites in Ethiopia, Liberia, and Sierra Leone, more than 90% of which are off-grid or in weak-grid areas.

The International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) has published new exposure drafts proposing sweeping amendments to three sector-specific SASB sustainability reporting standards, covering Agricultural Products, Meat, Poultry & Dairy, and Electric Utilities & Power Generators.

Germany has adopted its Climate Action Programme 2026, a sweeping package of 67 measures backed by €8 billion, designed to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 65% from 1990 levels by 2030 and achieve full climate neutrality by 2045.

Global food and agriculture systems are responsible for nearly 30% of all greenhouse gas emissions; however, they receive just 7% of global climate finance, a gap undermining every climate commitment made at international summits.

Electricity theft and billing inefficiencies drain an estimated $96 billion from utilities worldwide every year, with emerging market countries bearing the heaviest losses. Smart metering technology is now being deployed at scale to close this gap.
Africa holds the renewable resources to anchor a global green hydrogen economy. However, only three projects, totalling just 23.5 MW, are operational across the entire continent.

Geopolitical risk is no longer a background variable in corporate strategy; it is the defining pressure test of ESG resilience.

Eight major sustainability reporting frameworks, built over decades, have converged into two dominant global standards: IFRS S1 & S2 (ISSB) and the EU's ESRS/CSRD.

A staggering 251 million children remain out of school globally, a number that has fallen by just 1% since 2015. Even those who attend school face a learning crisis: three in four children in developing countries cannot read a simple text by age 10.

ESG, CSR, and the UN Sustainable Development Goals are the three most cited frameworks in global sustainability; however, they are routinely conflated, misapplied, or treated as interchangeable. They are not. Each plays a distinct and non-negotiable role.

Trust is no longer a soft metric buried in brand sentiment surveys. According to a landmark 2025 study by LinkedIn and Ipsos, surveying 1,500 senior B2B marketing leaders across six countries, 94% of marketers now agree that building trust is the single most important factor for achieving B2B brand success.

The comprehensive ESG Reporting Framework, aligned to six global standards, offers organisations a structured path from fragmented disclosure to credible, investor-ready sustainability reporting.

Europe's landmark regulatory framework for ESG rating providers enters full force in July 2026, establishing the most rigorous oversight regime for sustainability scores ever enacted by a major market authority.

The global demand for ESG and sustainability professionals has never been higher. For the first time, Africa's youth-rich workforce is positioned at the centre of this career revolution.

Not all gas is the same. The distinction between Compressed Natural Gas, Liquefied Petroleum Gas, Piped Natural Gas, and Liquefied Natural Gas determines which communities gain access to energy, which industries can scale, which transport systems can decarbonise, and which nations can attract investment.

Global warming is no longer just rising; it is accelerating, according to new scientific analysis. The implications extend beyond climate science into economic resilience, policy urgency, and development pathways, especially for Africa.
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.
Malawi’s reform moment has arrived under pressure, not prosperity. With inflation near 30%, exports shrinking and reserves critically low, the country faces a narrowing window to restore macroeconomic credibility.
Africa’s energy transition has entered a decisive acceleration phase, enabled by innovative climate finance mechanisms that are reshaping capital flows, infrastructure deployment and economic transformation.
Africa stands at a decisive geopolitical and economic turning point. Declining foreign aid, rising global competition, and shifting power dynamics are forcing the continent to redefine its development model, moving from dependency toward self-determined growth.
Africa’s next economic transformation will not be driven entirely by aid or external financing, but by integration, digital innovation and new financing architectures such as tokenisation.
Summary and evidence-based insights into corporate, government, and organisational sustainability disclosures across Africa, highlighting achievements, uncovering gaps, and spotlight opportunities for progress.