The eco African renaissance: reclaiming Africa’s future through ecological civilization

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Suigeneris Publishing House

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In the summer of 2023, Lake Chad — once one of Africa's largest freshwater bodies, sustaining more than 30 million people across four nations — shrank to a fraction of its former size. Satellite images revealed what scientists had long warned: the lake, which in 1963 covered approximately 25,000 square kilometres, had contracted to barely 1,500 square kilometres. Communities that had fished its shores for generations found themselves standing on cracked, sun-bleached earth where water once moved beneath their boats. That same year, a different set of images circulated across global media. In Morocco, the COP28 preparatory discussions highlighted Africa's extraordinary solar irradiance — a continent bathed in sunlight that, if harnessed even partially, could power not just Africa but significant portions of the world's energy needs. In Kenya, engineers commissioned the Lake Turkana Wind Power project, one of Africa's largest wind farms, demonstrating that the continent need not wait for Western technology transfers — it could build its own green future. These two realities sit at the heart of this book: the severity of Africa's ecological crisis and the spectacular magnitude of its ecological opportunity. Both truths must be held simultaneously, without diminishing either. The world will not be saved by those who caused the crisis. It will be saved by those who never consented to it. — African youth climate activist, COP28 This book was written because a dangerous narrative vacuum exists. Too many books about Africa's environmental challenges focus exclusively on victimhood — desertification, deforestation, food insecurity — while too many books about Africa's economic potential ignore the ecological costs of rapid industrialisation. Too few books attempt what this one strives toward: to present a coherent, evidence-based, philosophically grounded vision for how Africa can lead the world into an era of genuine ecological civilisation.

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Mulungi, A. (2025). The eco African renaissance: reclaiming Africa’s future through ecological civilization, Suigeneris Publishing House.

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