Key Points

Windhoek has officially launched Zero Emissions Week 2025 to raise awareness about climate action and sustainable transportation. The event includes an electric vehicle exhibition, cycling promotions, and the city's first EV charging station inauguration. City officials emphasize this addresses practical challenges like transport emissions and urban air quality rather than following international trends. Namibia is simultaneously mobilizing $1.7 billion for green hydrogen projects, moving from planning to implementation phase.

Key Points: Windhoek Launches Zero Emissions Week 2025 for Sustainable Mobility

  • Weeklong event features electric vehicle exhibition and environmental awareness competitions
  • City inaugurates first EV charging station to normalize electric mobility
  • Transport contributes 25% of global CO2 emissions with vehicles at 70%
  • Namibia mobilizing $1.7 billion for green hydrogen projects nationwide
2 min read

Namibia's capital launches Zero Emissions Week

Namibia's capital launches Zero Emissions Week 2025 with EV exhibitions, car-free day, and new charging stations to combat transport emissions and promote green mobility.

"Namibia has now gone beyond the realms of dreaming, and it's now beginning to construct, beginning to produce, and beginning to implement. - James Mnyupe"

Windhoek, Sep 16

Namibia's capital city, Windhoek, has officially launched Zero Emissions Week 2025 to raise awareness about climate change, sustainable mobility, and the benefits of reducing emissions.

The weeklong event features various activities, including an electric vehicle exhibition, an environmental video awareness competition, cycling gear giveaways, a corporate trivia challenge, and a city-wide Car-Free Day.

With these initiatives, Windhoek is seeking to lead by example, making sustainable mobility and clean energy a reality for its residents.

In his welcoming remarks, Pierre van Rensburg, strategic executive for urban and transport planning at the City of Windhoek, emphasised that Zero Emissions Week is not about following international trends but about addressing practical challenges facing the city, including transport-related emissions, congestion, and urban air quality.

Transport contributes a significant 25 per cent of global carbon dioxide emissions, with vehicles accounting for 70 per cent, according to van Rensburg, Xinhua news agency reported. He encouraged residents to envision a future with sustainable transport and adopt greener alternatives like public transport, cycling, and walking.

As part of the initiative, the municipality also inaugurated its first electric vehicle charging station, which would help normalize electric mobility and expand EV infrastructure across the city.

Ndeshihafela Larandja, Mayor of Windhoek, said this milestone reflects the city's commitment to climate-resilient development, sustainable mobility, and reducing its carbon footprint.

Last week, Namibia announced plans to mobilise about 1.7 billion US dollars for green hydrogen projects, as the Global African Hydrogen Summit wrapped up Thursday in the capital, Windhoek, after drawing more than 1,500 participants from over 75 countries.

"We are trying to mobilise Namibia's share of about 1.7 billion dollars that we now want to bring home and start deploying into our projects," Namibia's Green Hydrogen Commissioner James Mnyupe told delegates. "Namibia has now gone beyond the realms of dreaming, and it's now beginning to construct, beginning to produce, and beginning to implement."

The three-day summit, held under the theme 'Ambition in Action: Fuelling Africa's Green Industrial Revolution', gathered over 25 ministers, 125 experts, financiers, project developers, and youth representatives to discuss financing, infrastructure, community benefits, and over 50 bankable hydrogen projects across Africa.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great initiative! But I wonder how practical this is for developing nations. Electric vehicles are still too expensive for average citizens in countries like ours. Need affordable solutions first.
A
Arjun K
Namibia investing $1.7 billion in green hydrogen is impressive! India should also focus more on hydrogen technology alongside electric vehicles. Different solutions for different needs.
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Meera T
The car-free day concept is brilliant! Indian cities should try this on weekends. Our markets and shopping areas would be so much more pleasant without traffic chaos. 🚶‍♀️
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David E
While I appreciate the sentiment, these initiatives often overlook the reality of developing economies. Public transport infrastructure needs massive improvement before we can realistically reduce private vehicle usage.
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Siddharth J
Good to see African nations taking climate leadership! India and African countries should collaborate more on sustainable technology transfer. We face similar challenges and can learn from each other.

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