Thierry Kaore and Andrea Tadic contributed to this report.NEW YORK/WASHINGTON — Zambian President Edgar Lungu says climate change threatens to derail his country’s economy, and disruptions to the rainy season have already dampened its outlook.“Climate change is the biggest problem that we’re encountering now,” Lungu said in a one-on-one interview with VOA last week.“In terms of economic growth and whatever we want to do, we encounter the effects of climate change. So I think we need to take a serious look at it and see what solutions we can find amongst ourselves,” he said.Economic woesZambia’s $25 billion economy, its industries and its population have all been growing, Lungu said, and demands for electricity have exceeded expectations.Meanwhile, the country has experienced more frequent and severe seasonal droughts, along with rising temperatures, according to the Zambia’s President Edgar Chagwa Lungu addresses the 74th session of the United Nations General Assembly, Sept. 25, 2019.At the U.N. General Assembly in September, Lungu sought a consensus and expressed his hope for collective action. He called on other countries to shift to renewables and reduce emissions, even if there is a political price to pay.Too often, he said, politicians have a tendency to kick the can down the road when it comes to acting on climate change. Lungu said he doesn’t mind if Zambia’s green initiatives upset voters, who will go to the polls in 2021 for a presidential election.“Sometimes these decisions come at a time when you have an election coming in less than two years from now,” he said.“We have to explain to the people that we are going to take these measures not because we enjoy your suffering. We are taking these measures because we want to keep you alive and want to keep the wheels of the economy turning and want to go beyond 2021 with hope that the country is getting better,” Lungu added.Opposition voicesTo adopt renewables on a large scale, Lungu said Zambia’s private sector will need to be convinced that it’s worth investing. That could require changes to tariff laws and buy-in from political adversaries.“Only the private sector can invest with that magnitude that we” need, Lungu said, “but the private sector will not invest if the tariffs, for example, that you’re charging are not cost-reflective” for them, Lungu said.Lungu assumed office in January 2015. Some 18 months later, his approval rating stood at 49%, Gallup reported, and opposition parties remain strong.Last year, the leading opposition party lobbied for Lungu’s impeachment, on the grounds he violated the constitution.Lungu called insults and accusations directed toward him “outrageous,” but said he’s open to working with adversaries who have ideas for the country.“If you insult me, I’ll let people judge you, but if you talk to me, I’ll call you in and we talk with these guys. It’s about dialogue,” he said.“I think the solution lies in implementing, implementing, implementing, whatever you agreed upon. No matter how unpalatable. You have to bite the bullet,” Lungu said.
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