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Africa’s $250bn climate finance gap: Ghana hosts summit to shift ESG from reports to real investment

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Dr. Shelter Lotsu

As Africa grapples with an estimated US$250 billion annual climate financing gap, policymakers and investors are being urged to move beyond environmental, social and governance (ESG) reporting and focus on mobilising real capital into bankable, climate-resilient projects.

That challenge will take centre stage in Accra when Ghana hosts the 2nd Africa Global ESG & Sustainability Summit from September 1–2, 2026.

But organisers insist the conversation must go deeper than conferences and communiqués.

Under the theme “Beyond Reporting: Accelerating ESG Integration and Climate Action through Impact Investing and Green Innovation in Africa,” the summit seeks to confront a persistent weakness in Africa’s sustainability agenda: strong policy rhetoric but weak investment pipelines.

Organised by TSL Sustainability in collaboration with the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources, the Ministry of Environment, Science and Technology and the Bureau of Climate Change and Sustainability, the summit aims to reposition ESG as a tool for competitiveness, capital access and economic resilience.

The Real Problem: Projects Without Capital, Capital Without Projects

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Across the continent, opportunities abound in renewable energy, climate-smart agriculture, green manufacturing, carbon markets and climate-resilient infrastructure. Yet investors frequently cite weak project structuring, regulatory inconsistencies and limited pipeline visibility as barriers to large-scale capital deployment.

At the same time, African institutions and governments often struggle to translate sustainability commitments into investment-grade proposals capable of attracting blended finance, institutional capital and impact investment.

The Accra summit is expected to focus on closing this disconnect by:

-Structuring bankable ESG-aligned projects

-Unlocking blended finance and impact investment vehicles

-Strengthening regulatory harmonisation

-Accelerating private-sector ESG integration

-Mobilising green climate finance

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-Beyond Compliance

While ESG reporting has gained traction across African markets, critics argue that compliance-driven disclosure alone will not solve the continent’s climate and development challenges.

Organisers of the summit say Africa must reposition ESG as a strategic growth lever — one that drives innovation, attracts long-term capital and supports job creation.

Ministers, institutional investors, development finance institutions, commercial banks, capital market operators, sustainability executives, climate innovators and multilateral agencies are expected to participate in what is being framed as a platform for actionable collaboration rather than policy statements.

The statement announcing the summit was signed by Dr. Shelter Lotsu, Chairman of the Summit Organising Committee at TSL Sustainability.

As climate pressures intensify and global capital becomes increasingly selective, the central question emerging ahead of the Accra gathering is whether Africa can convert sustainability ambition into scalable investment pipelines or remain stuck in the reporting phase of the ESG journey.

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Source: www.myjoyonline.com
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