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Home»Tech»Circular Carbon Economy: A Case for the Review and Redefining Global Approach to Climate Action Strategies & A Just Energy Transition
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Circular Carbon Economy: A Case for the Review and Redefining Global Approach to Climate Action Strategies & A Just Energy Transition

Daily News HubBy Daily News HubNovember 10, 2025No Comments
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By Adéṣẹ́gun Ọṣìbánjọ́, B.Eng, MBA
President, Adéṣẹ́gun Nexus Foundation

Executive Summary
The global Climate debate is due for a reset — one anchored on pragmatism, equity, and technological realism. The world cannot meet its growing Energy demand solely through renewables, nor can it afford to abandon its existing fossil infrastructure without jeopardising development and Energy security.

This Position Paper by the Adéṣẹ́gun Nexus Foundation, in collaboration with the United Nations, argues for a fundamental “Review and Redefinition of Global Climate Action Strategies” through the adoption of a Circular Carbon Economy (CCE) framework. The CCE model views Carbon as a manageable resource that can be reduced, reused, recycled and responsibly removed — a system that bridges environmental responsibility with human and economic needs.

By integrating Carbon Capture, Utilisation, and Storage (CCUS) technologies across Energy and Industrial systems, and ensuring full compliance with Measurable, Reportable, and Verifiable (MRV) standards, the global community can achieve A Just Energy Transition — one that secures livelihoods while advancing sustainability.

The world does not need an Energy revolution that punishes development. It needs a balanced transition that harmonises energy reliability, economic growth and climate integrity.

Rethinking the Path to Net Zero

Over the past decade, Climate narratives have grown dangerously polarised. Developed nations have advanced aggressive decarbonisation targets while expecting the developing world — particularly Africa — to follow suit, despite glaring disparities in industrial maturity, Infrastructure, and Energy access.

The result has been a double bind for emerging economies: on one hand, pressure to abandon fossil resources; on the other, insufficient investment in scalable renewable infrastructure. This is not transition — it is inequity dressed as virtue.

For Africa, the conversation cannot be about choosing between “Fossil fuels and Renewables.” It must be about how both can work together responsibly. Energy poverty remains one of the greatest inhibitors of economic transformation across the continent. Denying African nations, the right to develop their fossil resources — while industrial economies continue consuming — is a profound moral and strategic contradiction.

Therefore, the Adéṣẹ́gun Nexus Foundation asserts that a Just Energy Transition must prioritise inclusion and practical implementation. Fossil exploration and production must not end, but rather evolve — integrating CCUS and CCE principles within an MRV-based accountability framework that ensures measurable environmental responsibility. This model supports growth while maintaining the integrity of global Climate goals.

The Limits of Renewables and the Myth of Exclusivity

Renewables are indispensable, yet their physical and economic limitations are well documented. Solar and wind depend on weather and geography, and even with vast investments, they remain intermittent sources of power. Energy storage remains costly, land-intensive, and technologically immature for global baseload supply.
Industrialised nations have discovered this truth firsthand. Germany, after spending over €500 billion on its Energiewende, was forced to reopen Coal plants to stabilise its Grid. The United Kingdom faced rolling blackouts during periods of low wind generation. These are cautionary tales — not of failure, but of the danger of ideological absolutism in Energy policy.

In contrast, countries that balance renewables with clean fossil systems integrated with CCUS achieve both stability and sustainability. The future is not “Renewables-only” — it is “Renewables and clean Carbon.” The Energy transition must be built on Engineering logic, not Environmental romanticism.

Understanding the Circular Carbon Economy

The Circular Carbon Economy (CCE) provides the conceptual and operational foundation for a sustainable and reliable global Energy framework. It applies the principles of the circular economy — reduce, reuse, recycle, and remove — directly to carbon management.
“Reduction” entails increasing energy efficiency and reducing emissions from production and consumption. “Reuse” focuses on converting captured CO₂ into feedstock for synthetic fuels, chemicals, or construction materials. “Recycle” involves reprocessing carbon into value-added industrial uses. And “Removal” refers to permanent sequestration of excess CO₂ in deep Geological formations or mineralisation processes.

This integrated model transforms Carbon from a pollutant into an asset within a closed-loop industrial Ecosystem. It encourages innovation, drives local job creation, and turns environmental responsibility into an economic advantage.

The Adéṣẹ́gun Nexus Foundation proposes the creation of regional CCUS Research, Demonstration, and Training Centres in Africa, Asia, and Latin America to localise this innovation. Such centres will adapt CCUS and CCE technologies to local geology, resource structures, and industrial profiles, ensuring developing countries can drive their own transition rather than rely exclusively on imported solutions.

Fossil Exploration, Integration, and Accountability

The fossil sector, long seen as the villain of Climate change, can and must become an active partner in the global solution. The path forward is not to phase out fossil energy abruptly, but to reform its operations.

Henceforth, all fossil exploration, production, and refining activities must be designed to incorporate CCUS integration and align with the Circular Carbon Economy framework, fully compliant with Measurable, Reportable, and Verifiable (MRV) protocols under the Paris Agreement. This approach converts Carbon liability into a verifiable Climate contribution.

Importantly, global Climate financiers, the IMF, and the World Bank must lift blanket restrictions on Fossil investments in Africa, provided those projects meet strict CCE and MRV compliance standards. Africa holds vast Geological formations — including depleted Oil fields, Saline aquifers, and Limestone quarries — capable of long-term CO₂ sequestration. Unlocking these potentials responsibly would catalyse Industrial growth, create jobs, and establish Africa as a Global Hub for Carbon storage.

Climate justice demands that Africa’s natural resources be part of the solution, not collateral damage of Western Climate politics.

Financing Hard-to-Abate Sectors

The foundation of Civilisation — Steel, Cement, Chemicals, and Power generation — lies in Industries deemed “Hard-to-Abate.” These sectors, responsible for over 30% of Global CO₂ emissions, cannot decarbonise purely through renewables or efficiency upgrades. Yet they are indispensable to the Global economy.

The Adéṣẹ́gun Nexus Foundation therefore calls for the creation of dedicated financing frameworks within international Climate funds — such as the Green Climate Fund (GCF), the Global Environment Facility (GEF), and the IMF’s Resilience and Sustainability Trust — to provide special eligibility funding for CCUS integration in these sectors.

Such financing would prioritise measurable emission reduction outcomes, not ideological compliance. It would also encourage industrial retrofitting, technology transfer, and regional CCUS infrastructure development. Supporting these Industries through targeted Climate finance aligns global emissions mitigation with economic continuity — preventing the shutdowns and job losses that destabilise societies.

Global Leadership and the Role of the United States

The United States remains the world’s largest economy and one of its top Carbon emitters. Its leadership — or absence — shapes the global Climate trajectory. The decision by the Trump administration to withdraw from the Paris Agreement was regrettable, but its Policy emphasis on Energy reliability and pragmatic innovation was not without merit. It underscored a truth often lost in global dialogue: without reliable Energy, sustainability collapses.

That policy orientation, coupled with America’s unmatched innovation ecosystem, presents an opportunity. The U.S. can reclaim its moral and technological leadership by spearheading a “Redefined Climate Agenda” centred on CCUS, MRV, and the Circular Carbon Economy.

Rather than walk away from multilateralism, the U.S. should return to the Paris framework — not to conform, but to lead. By championing the next phase of Carbon innovation, the U.S. can bridge the divide between environmental ambition and energy pragmatism.

A global Energy order driven by American ingenuity and UN-backed inclusiveness can succeed where idealism has stalled. America must therefore re-engage not as a signatory seeking compliance, but as a Partner offering leadership, innovation, and technological direction to the world.

Reframing Article 6: Carbon Markets and Cooperation

Article 6 of the Paris Agreement provides the mechanism for International cooperation through carbon markets — enabling nations to trade emission reductions and invest in global decarbonisation efforts. Yet, its implementation remains sluggish and overly bureaucratic.
By integrating CCE and CCUS within Article 6 mechanisms, participating nations can generate verifiable carbon credits from Geological storage, industrial reuse, and process efficiency — creating a global market for responsible Carbon management. This will transform Climate action from an obligation into an opportunity.

Properly designed, such mechanisms can channel billions of dollars into developing regions, rewarding verified emission reductions rather than abstract pledges.

Conclusion

The world stands at the threshold of an Energy reckoning. Climate ambition must now yield to climate realism — a realism that recognises both the urgency of decarbonisation and the necessity of development.

The Circular Carbon Economy, supported by CCUS integration, MRV frameworks, and equitable finance, offers a holistic pathway to achieving net zero without destabilising societies. It is the middle path between the ideal and the possible — a system where technology reconciles growth with responsibility.

The Adéṣẹ́gun Nexus Foundation calls upon the United Nations, the United States, and all member nations to adopt this pragmatic doctrine — one that sees Carbon not as an enemy, but as a manageable resource within the cycle of sustainable progress.

The time has come to review and redefine global Climate action strategies. The goal is not just to meet targets, but to empower nations. Climate justice cannot exist without Energy justice, and energy justice cannot exist without technological inclusion.

Let the new era of global Climate leadership be defined not by withdrawal or blame, but by collaboration, balance, and courage.

References and Acknowledgments

This Position Paper builds upon the frameworks established by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Paris Agreement (2015), with specific reference to Article 6, which governs cooperative approaches and international carbon market mechanisms.

Scientific and technical validation are supported by reports and position papers from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the International Energy Agency (IEA), and the Global CCS Institute, which all identify Carbon Capture, Utilisation, and Storage (CCUS) as a critical pathway for achieving global net-zero objectives.

Empirical data on geological CO₂ sequestration and carbon storage in sedimentary basins and limestone formations are referenced from the British Geological Survey (BGS) and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), whose demonstration projects have provided robust insights into long-term storage security and monitoring frameworks under the Measurable, Reportable, and Verifiable (MRV) model.
Supplementary policy reflections are drawn from analyses published by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) and ENTSO-E, particularly on the intermittency and grid reliability challenges of renewable energy in Europe. Case studies from Germany’s Energiewende and the United Kingdom’s wind dependency highlight the critical need for balancing renewable systems with CCUS-integrated fossil reliability.

The policy direction of the Trump administration — notably its focus on energy reliability and technological pragmatism — inspired this call for a redefined global climate strategy, while Secretary Chris Wright’s advocacy for innovation-driven energy independence underscores the ideological alignment of this Paper’s core arguments.

The Adéṣẹ́gun Nexus Foundation extends gratitude to its research collaborators, energy consultants, and global partners committed to advancing sustainable industrial innovation across Africa and the developing world. Special acknowledgment is given to the author’s earlier publication, “Climate Action in Nigeria and Africa: Reconciling Economic Growth with Environmental Sustainability,” which provided foundational insight for this broader global synthesis.

This Paper is dedicated to all nations striving to harmonise human development, economic growth, and environmental responsibility in pursuit of a just, inclusive, and sustainable future.

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