The Africa green economy summit 2026 opened today in Cape Town, South Africa, running from February 24 to 27 at the Century City Conference Centre. The pan-African dealmaking event is designed to connect global capital with investment-ready green and blue economy projects across Africa. The African Development Bank is attending as a lead participant, focusing on green investment mobilisation, carbon markets, green jobs, and nature-based financing. The AfDB has already approved $110 million for Tunisia and $1 million for Morocco in climate-related finance in the weeks leading up to the summit.
Key points
- The summit runs 24 to 27 February 2026 in Cape Town, South Africa
- The African Development Bank is leading engagement on green investment, carbon markets, and climate finance
- Focus sectors include renewable energy, sustainable transport, water, agriculture, and climate technology
- The AfDB recently approved $110 million for Tunisia’s chemical sector environmental upgrade
- Drone technology financed by the AfDB was deployed in Mozambique following recent floods
- Africa holds 60% of the world’s best solar resources but receives only 3% of global renewable investment
The summit serves as a dealmaking platform connecting investors, policymakers, and project developers to move from climate commitments to funded implementation. The gap between Africa’s renewable energy potential and the capital actually flowing into it represents one of the largest mismatches in global finance, and events like this are specifically designed to close it with bankable projects and verified partners.
Why it matters: Africa’s green transition is not a future aspiration. It is being financed, structured, and signed right now in Cape Town. For investors in clean energy, infrastructure, and climate technology, the continent’s combination of resources, growth, and policy intent is increasingly hard to ignore.
Source: African Development Bank
