Brought to you by The High Street Journal
Imagine a Ghana where clean energy powers homes, green jobs thrive, and sustainable businesses lead the way. That future is closer than you think, but it’s also more complicated. Behind the promise of Ghana’s growing green economy lie real challenges: fragmented policies, high costs, skills shortages, and governance gaps that threaten to stall progress.
Over the next five days, The High Street Journal will take you through an in-depth exploration of Ghana’s green economy, drawing from a landmark report by the IMANI Centre for Policy and Education and the Africa Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP).
This series, Ghana’s Green Business Ecosystem Series by IMANI, will unpack key issues like:
- The fiscal and humanitarian urgency driven by climate change
- How fragmented policies are slowing progress
- Market barriers such as high costs and skills gaps
- Practical solutions around policy reforms, financing, and education
Findings would be broken down into clear insights for policymakers, investors, entrepreneurs, and anyone interested in Ghana’s sustainable future.
This matters because Ghana’s green economy isn’t just about the environment, it’s about creating jobs, strengthening communities, and building resilience in a rapidly changing world. But without addressing governance gaps and market inefficiencies, this potential risks going unrealized.
Look out for each article in this series right here on The High Street Journal over the coming days.
About the Report: This series is based on the IMANI/ACEP report, “Ghana’s Green Business Ecosystem Is Growing Rapidly, but Governance and Market Constraints Are Stalling Scalability.”