Author

About the Author
Sophie is an Environmental Journalist based in Kenya and the founder: Africa Climate Conversations. Sophie spends her days shaping the African climate change and environmental narratives aimed at bridging their reporting gaps in the continent.

Can the world solve the climate crisis without tackling degradation?

Nairobi Kenya: World leaders gathered in Stockholm, Sweden, 50 years ago, and remarked that man is both a creature and a moulder of his environment. The environment provides physical nourishment (food, air, and nutrients) as well as opportunities for intellectual, moral, social, and spiritual growth. The 1972 United Nations Conference on the Human Environment was…

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Wool spinning means more birds and money in Kenya.

Njambini Kenya: Long before people began farming, many bird species adapted to exist in open environments such as grasslands. In order to save the Sharpe’s Longclaw bird species, a youth group from Kenya is persuading farmers to preserve grasslands at the foot of the Aberdare Mountains, around an hour’s drive from Lake Naivasha. The Njambini…

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Kinangop Grasslands Kenya: A birds paradise now lost to farming

Njambini Kenya: The Kinangop Plateau is located about an hour and a half’s drive from Nairobi, Kenya’s capital city. It is located in the midst of the catchment region between the Aberdares/Nyandarua mountain range and Lake Naivasha. The grassland was originally 70 000 hectares of treeless tussocky grasses, bogs, and marshlands. Today, only around 10%…

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How a Kenyan community is saving one tree at a time.

Limuru Kenya: The Kereita forest in Kenya is a crucial water catchment area and home to the endangered Abbott’s Starling bird as well as threatened tree species such as Prunus africana, which is threatened for its medicinal value. The Kikuyu Escarpment Forest is made up of eight blocks, one of which being Kereita Forest. The escarpment is part of the southern Aberdare or Nyandarua Mountains, an isolated volcanic range that forms the Great Rift Valley’s easternmost border. Kereita Forest covers an area of 4,722 hectares. 80% of the trees here are indigenous, with the remaining 20% being planted. This forest’s rivers and streams flow into the Athi River downstream, making it a major water catchment area.The Athi River is Kenya’s second-longest river. Why is biodiversity important not just for wild creatures but also for human survival? In the 1970s, the local people raided the forest for firewood to stay warm during the cold weather. Deforestation peaked in the early 1990s, according to Mary Wambui, a 60-year-old mother of five who lives approximately two kilometres from Kereita forest. Kenyan officials prohibited access to the forest. However, local women would still sneak into the forest on a daily basis because wood was the sole source of heat for their families. At the same time, a group of young locals dedicated to defend Kereita Forest formed. They began educating the villagers about alternative energy sources such as biogas and fuel-efficient stoves. The group urged them to plant trees on their fields and to experiment with novel farming and culinary ways in order to protect the forest and its resources. How have conservation efforts aided in the preservation of this Kenyan forest?

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Biodiversity is not just about Wild animals but humanity’s survival.

Nairobi Kenya: Biodiversity refers to the variety of life on Earth as well as the natural patterns it creates. According to the United Nations, species are disappearing at a rate that is 50–100 times greater than usual, and this rate is projected to increase dramatically. Roughly 34,000 plant and 5,200 animal species, including one-eighth of…

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2022: another hottest year on record! Welcome Back!

Happy New Year: 2023.Last year the year 2022, the average global temperature was about 1.15 degrees Celsius. 2022 marks the 8thconsecutive year from 2015-2022 where each year the annual global temperatures have reached at least 1°C above pre-industrial levels. This is according to datasets compiled by the World Meteorological organization from six international temperature datasets….

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Good policies but not enough to protect forests in Kenya.

Kenya’s Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) has come with its fair share of blessings in terms of communication and transport. The Mombasa to the Kenyan capital Nairobi line was completed in 2017. Phase two of the railway aimed to link Nairobi with Malaba on the Kenya–Uganda border cut through the pristine Olooula Forest -one of the…

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Did the COP27 benefit the African Continent?

The Sharm el-Sheikh, decision was reached early morning on last Sunday the 20thas official plenary started at 4am. Among the wins for the Continent was the establishment of a loss and damage facility which was pushed hard by the G77 and China- Africa is in this group – as well as the civil society. But…

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COP27: Unlocking the sticky climate finance for developing nations

Climate finance and financing loss and damage deadlocked at COP27: Photo by Sophie Mbugua As the UN climate talks in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, near the official end – of Friday, the 18th – climate finance and financing loss, damage and adaptation remain deadlocked. At COP27, developed countries strongly opposed having any financial mechanism under the…

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Congo DRC to produce Low cost, climate-friendly battery materials.

Participants during the COP27 Minerals side event Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt: With the world adopting cleaner energy transitions, ambitious efforts to accelerate plans for low-cost and low-emissions lithium-ion battery cathode precursor materials in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Zambia are nearing reality, with a feasibility study outcome expected in five months. While addressing the…

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