Climate action offers an opportunity to safeguard development gains and accompany the ambitious transformation Senegal is embarking on to achieve its objective of reaching middle income status in the next decade. While the country was among the fastest growing economies in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), poverty reduction was slow, vulnerabilities persisted, and inequalities increased. In addition, overall productivity remained low, with lagging structural transformation, high informality, and low job creation. To attain its middle-income goal, Senegal must initiate a series of reforms for a productive, sustainable, and inclusive growth model, with climate considerations at the center given the country’s high vulnerability. Senegal’s high climate vulnerability is caused by the country’s coastal exposure and reliance on natural resources for food, jobs, and growth (partly a consequence of its slow structural transformation). With temperatures soaring, precipitation expected to decrease, and erosion threatening 75 percent of the coastline at term, Senegal’s population and assets are under high risk. The poorest are particularly vulnerable, with 55 percent of total households teetering on the edge of poverty because of recurrent shocks. Without action, annual economic losses could reach 3-4 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) as soon as 2030 and further increase to 9.4 percent by 2050, wiping years of per capita income growth and eroding any potential human capital accumulation. Overall, climate change could push two more million Senegalese in poverty by mid-century. Building resilience and leveraging the low-carbon economy will help Senegal realizing its growth ambitions, contributing to a more productive, sustainable, and inclusive development pathway. The macro-economic analysis for this CCDR finds that adaptation measures in selected sectors could bring GDP gains of about 2 percent by 2030, and between 0.5 and 1 percent afterwards (for climate financing needs of about 0.9 percent of GDP in the period to 2030 and 0.1 percent afterwards). Adaptation could also reduce poverty headcount, with 40 percent less people pushed into poverty by climate change compared to no adaptation action. In addition, emission reductions could reach 20MtCO2e per year over the period to 2050, from interventions in forestry, improved cooking services, urban transport, waste management, and energy production. The energy transition provides an opportunity to meet both development and climate objectives, exceeding NDC targets and putting the country well on track for net zero by 2050, but significant downside risks remain, linked to delays in the deployment and financing availability for renewable generation and domestic gas. Senegal’s formidable renewable energy potential (chiefly around solar) offers the lowest cost generation option to meet rising energy demand while accelerating decarbonization. At term, the country could play a leading role in decarbonizing the region though export opportunities and bolster resilience across the regional grid. In the short term, given constraints to the fast deployment of renewables, the transitional use of domestic gas will help phase out expensive and high-emitting coal and Heavy Fuel Oil (HFO) generation, while balancing the electricity system and lowering the cost of electricity. Climate action will require a financing of US$8.2 billion over 2025-30 (in present value, at 6 percent per year), or 4.5 percent of discounted cumulative GDP over the same period, and US$10.6 billion over 2031-50 (in present value terms), or 2.0 percent of discounted cumulative GDP over the same period. Water security, sustainable (urban) transport, and the energy transition account for the largest share. Importantly, climate action is expected to bring significant benefits over time, beyond climate adaptation and mitigation – including health or jobs, (as in the primary sector, with 155,000 jobs created, of which 80 percent in agriculture). Many benefits could not be properly estimated, implying that the returns from climate action might well be underestimated.
Authors
- Citation
- “ World Bank Group . 2024 . Senegal Country Climate and Development Report . CCDR Series . © Washington, DC: World Bank . http://hdl.handle.net/10986/42364 License: CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO . ”
- Collection(s)
- Country Climate and Development Reports (CCDRs) French PDFs Available
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1596/42364
- Identifier externaldocumentum
- 34417978
- Identifier internaldocumentum
- 34417978
- Pages
- 24
- Published in
- United States of America
- Region country
- Senegal
- RelationisPartofseries
- CCDR Series
- Report
- 194531
- Rights
- CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO
- Rights Holder
- World Bank
- Rights URI
- https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/
- UNIT
- AFR ENR PM 1 (SAWE1)
- URI
- https://hdl.handle.net/10986/42364
- date disclosure
- 2024-11-05
- region administrative
- Western and Central Africa
- theme
- Inclusive Growth,Mitigation,Gender,Human Development and Gender,Economic Policy,Green Growth,Economic Growth and Planning,Environment and Natural Resource Management,Private Sector Development,Environmental policies and institutions,Climate change,Urban and Rural Development,Adaptation,Flood and Drought Risk Management,Macroeconomic & Structural Policy Modelling,Disaster Risk Management,Public Private Partnerships
Files
Table of Contents
- Country Climate and Development Report 1
- WESTERN AND CENTRAL AFRICA 1
- Country Climate and Development Report 3
- WESTERN AND CENTRAL AFRICA 3
- Climate change is challenging Senegals development aspirations. 6
- Rising uncertainty overlapping crises and exposure to climate risks accentuate existing vulnerabilities and threaten the achievement of sustainable social and economic development. 6
- Senegals exposure to external shocks revealed the persistence of underlying key constraints to achieving productive sustainable and inclusive growth. 6
- Exposed coastal zones. 7
- Natural capital under pressure. 7
- More prevalent natural hazards. 7
- Worsening health status of populations. 7
- Climate change impacts are magnified by high levels of poverty and inequality. 7
- Climate inaction is costly while climate action will bring benefits. 8
- Recent global crises have emphasized the crucial need for accelerating structural change and fostering innovation to reach a more inclusive and resilient growth model. 8
- Figure ES.1. Cost of Inaction over Time Deviation in GDP from the Baseline 9
- The time for action is now. 9
- Climate-resilient low-carbon development growth can reduce annual economic losses and bring significant benefits. 9
- Figure ES.2. Poverty Reduction over Time due to the Implementation of Adaptation Measures Percentage Points Change Relative to a Climate Change Scenario without Adaptation 10
- The CCDR recommendations are prioritized along the sense of urgency 10
- Table ES.1. Recommendations for Climate Action 11
- From a transversal cross-cutting point of view two important conclusions are emerging 12
- The financing requirements of climate action are large but they are relatively small compared to Senegals economy 2.0 to 4.5 percent of cumulative GDP. 12
- Figure ES.3. Net Present Value of CA OPEX of Climate Action and Corresponding Benefits by Sector and Time Frame 12
- Senegals energy sector has experienced tremendous growth in the past decade serving as a catalyst for the countrys economic growth and shaping its role as a regional power hub. 13
- Significant investments will be needed in the short to medium term to ramp up the deployment of renewable energy at scale and implement the gas-to-power strategy which has been delayed. 14
- Improved natural resource management is a priority for resilient economic activities jobs and livelihoods. 15
- Water security in Senegal is threatened by deteriorating water resources and poor management and climate change will further compound these challenges. 16
- Climate change will increase pressure on ecosystems and the services they provide such as forests which are critical to sustaining economic development and livelihoods and mitigating climate change. 16
- Investing in sustainable cities will drive economic growth while increasing resilience and reducing climate impact. 16
- With almost half of its population living in urban areas Senegals level of urbanization 49 percent is higher than the average for SSA 42 percent. 16
- The CCDR underscores the urgency to take swift adaptation and mitigation measures to safeguard cities and regions against climate change. 16
- Digital innovations like smart city solutions integrating the Internet of Things IoT sensors and AI analytics are pivotal for urban climate resilience and sustainability 17
- If no action is taken to safeguard human capital climate change will inflict severe consequences on future generations. 17
- Climate change poses a long-term threat to Senegals young population and exacerbates gender and income inequalities. 18
- The impacts of climate change will also worsen the health status of the Senegalese population. 18
- Investing in human capital is essential for creating jobs that are resilient to the impacts of climate change and that can accompany the transition. 18
- Senegal is a party to the Paris Agreement on climate change and has committed to both adaptation objectives and GHG emissions reduction in its NDC. 19
- Achieving Senegals ambitious NDC goals will require substantial participation by the private sector both in developing climate solutions and participating in their financing. 19
- The CCDR estimates the financing needs of climate action at US1.36 billion per annum over to 2030 in present value discounted at 6 percent per year. 20
- Senegal can avail itself of various financing opportunities to address its joint development and climate needs drawing from a range of fiscal sovereign market and concessional sources as follows 20
- Carbon finance and energy subsidy reform 20
- The domestic financial sector 20
- Short-run priorities for DRF 21
- Senegals Sustainable Financing Framework 21