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February 17, 2025

Green skills to help nature repair itself are scarce: What we're doing to train more experts in South Africa and Senegal

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Africa's population is growing. This means more landscape change and development of supporting infrastructure. Ecosystems are under pressure, made worse by natural disasters induced by climate change.

In response, governments, scientists and environmentalists are turning their attention to . These are environmental strategies that aim to address environmental damage, including the impact of disasters, climate change, and water and food insecurity.

For example, wetlands are a natural resource for humans and create a habitat for wildlife. They filter water and control floods. But they've been degraded all over the world, which threatens biodiversity and human livelihoods. is a nature-based . Other examples are , and setting up in cities, such as urban forests and roof gardens.

Nature-based solutions are taking off all over the world. In Kenya, about 8,000 are being restored every year. These shield communities who live on the coast from storms, and absorb large amounts of greenhouse gases. The landscape restoration initiative in Africa's Sahel region is also a nature-based solution.

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In China, 30 pilot "" have been set up. These contain (ditches filled with plants that absorb stormwater during heavy rains and prevent floods), and made up of plants grown on hillsides that also soak up heavy rains.

However, nature-based solutions are not being established fast enough to decrease global warming. , there is a shortage of people who have the green skills needed. Engineers with the skills to design , and environmental scientists who oversee environmental and social impact assessments, are in short supply. Nature-based solutions can't be set up without them.

Until now, universities have not offered specific degrees in this field. And there are very few professional training courses for ecologists and scientists. The result is a green skills gap.

We are part of a team of ecologists, engineers, sustainability scientists, hydrologists and social scientists who are working on filling this gap. We are revamping curricula at South African and Senegalese universities.

Our academic project, , aims to identify the missing green skills in university degrees, and develop nature-based solutions curricula.

If we do not take urgent action to integrate these green skills into education and training, Africa could miss out on opportunities to build a sustainable future.

The green skills education gap

We conducted interviews and surveys with more than 50 experts at South African universities, professionals in consulting firms, and decision-makers in government bodies, to see what kind of training was missing from university degrees and short courses for professionals.

They identified these gaps:

Building green skills

Having identified these gaps, decided to set up for students and professionals in these areas:

Educational institutions will need to develop specialized courses and integrate this kind of interdisciplinary learning into their curricula:

Why green skills matter for Africa's future

African countries need to act now to set up nature-based solutions to the problems caused by global warming and environmental damage. There is still time to do something. If the continent does not act quickly, the cost will be high. The United Nations Environment Programme developing countries need to adapt to climate change urgently if they want to protect their food, water and agriculture systems.

The International Federations of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies found could result in as a result of climate-related disasters by 2050—up from the 108 million who need it today.

Nature-based solutions can drive sustainable development and create new jobs in climate-change related work. Rhodes University's is a start. However, this task goes beyond academia. It needs partnerships between universities, business, non-profit agencies, communities and others to develop the skills for society to become resilient to global warming.

Provided by The Conversation

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Africa faces a shortage of green skills necessary for implementing nature-based solutions to combat environmental challenges exacerbated by climate change. These solutions, such as wetland restoration and urban greening, require interdisciplinary expertise that is currently lacking in university curricula. Efforts are underway in South Africa and Senegal to address this gap by revamping educational programs to include training in environmental project design, community engagement, and policy development. This initiative aims to equip future professionals with the skills needed to foster sustainable development and resilience against climate-related impacts.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.