Ghana has secured a strategic seat at the helm of global climate leadership.
At the inaugural Climate Vulnerable Forum–V20 (CVF-V20) Board Meeting in Washington, DC, Seidu Issifu, Minister of State for Climate Change and Sustainability, was appointed to the CVF-V20 Board, a milestone that crowns Ghana’s accelerating role as a convener and catalyst for climate resilience and prosperity across the Global South.
The appointment stands out as one of the major outcomes of the Washington meetings in October 2025, signalling confidence in Ghana’s policy vision, negotiating depth, and delivery focus.
Why this matters
The CVF-V20—a powerhouse platform of the world’s most climate-vulnerable economies drives a shared prosperity agenda rooted in adaptation, risk management, and climate-smart growth. Its architecture brings together:
• CVF Leaders, setting political direction at top-tier fora such as the UN General Assembly;
• CVF Ministers of Foreign Affairs & Environment, aligning diplomacy with UNFCCC processes;
• V20 Finance Ministers, translating ambition into fiscal reforms and investment;
• CVF Global Parliamentary Group, embedding climate prosperity into legislation; and
• V20 Central Bank Governors Working Group, integrating climate risk into macroeconomic analysis.
Ghana’s elevation to the Board ensures West Africa’s perspectives are baked into decisions on loss and damage arrangements, pre-arranged financing, health resilience, water security, energy sovereignty, and food systems, while strengthening South-South coalitions that center technology, youth potential, and local enterprise.
Ghana’s climate leadership on display
Representing President John Dramani Mahama, under whose vision Ghana created the Office of the Minister of State for Climate Change and Sustainability, Seidu Issifu, used the Washington platform to underscore Ghana’s priorities:
• Scaling clean energy with an emphasis on financing 500 MW of new solar capacity;
• Advancing outcomes from recent trade and cooperation engagements in Beijing to crowd in investment;
• Updating Ghana’s Climate Prosperity Plan (CPP) to reflect current macro-fiscal realities and unlock bankable, resilient growth.
By aligning domestic delivery with regional diplomacy, Ghana is positioning itself as a bridge‐builder: turning technical readiness and institutional reforms into investable pipelines that benefit communities first.
A principled call for continuity: Ghana proposes a permanent Board seat
In a forward-looking intervention, Seidu Issifu proposed that Ghana be accorded permanent seat status on the CVF-V20 Board—reflecting international practice where host countries of permanent secretariats often retain a standing governance role.
The Board agreed in principle, recommending that the proposal be put before the broader CVF-V20 membership for endorsement to uphold transparency and equity.
Should this be adopted, Ghana would provide continuity in stewardship, institutional memory, and a stable platform for sustained reforms across finance, policy, and implementation.
A gathering of global champions
The Washington meeting brought together high-level figures shaping the global climate agenda, including:
• Mohamed Nasheed, former President of the Maldives and Secretary-General of the CVF & V20;
• The Most Honourable Elizabeth Thompson, Ambassador Extraordinary & Plenipotentiary for Climate Change, SIDS & Law of the Sea, Barbados, and Sherpa to Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley, Chair of the CVF-V20 (2025–2030);
• Seidu Issifu, Minister of State for Climate Change and Sustainability, CVF-V20 Board Member (2025–2028), with the request for a permanent seat entered for community consideration;
• AKM Sohel, Chair, International Climate Finance Cell & Wing Chief (United Nations Wing), Economic Relations Division, Ministry of Finance, Bangladesh (2025–2026).
Their engagement reaffirmed a shared objective: translate diplomatic momentum into measurable resilience, with credible finance, robust market integrity, and community-first outcomes.
From ambition to results: what comes next
With Board representation secured, Ghana will prioritize a results-oriented docket within the CVF-V20 agenda:
• Adaptation at scale: city-level resilience, early warning systems, heat-health action, and nature-based solutions;
• Loss & Damage: practical access to funding windows, pre-arranged instruments, and rapid-response facilities;
• Finance reform: debt-for-climate swaps, catalytic blended finance, and fairer access to concessional flows;
• High-integrity markets: rigorous MRV and social safeguards to ensure carbon finance benefits communities and strengthens national systems.
Ghana’s Board role also amplifies Africa’s push for energy sovereignty and food security, leveraging young demographics and technology to build climate-smart, job-creating value chains—turning risk into opportunity.
A mandate to lead
Seidu Issifu’s appointment is not merely symbolic; it is a mandate to lead. It equips Ghana to help steer CVF-V20 priorities toward bankable pipelines, country ownership, and transparent delivery.
Anchored by Ghana’s hosting of the CVF headquarters, the Board’s role consolidates Accra’s standing as a continental hub for climate policy, finance, and implementation.
In Washington, Ghana did more than take a seat at the table; it shaped the table’s future.
The Board appointment, coupled with the principled bid for a permanent seat, sends a clear message ahead of COP30: climate-vulnerable nations can—and will—drive a prosperity agenda built on resilience, fairness, and results.