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Climate Change06 July 2026 – 13:51

by Juliet Akoth

MESHA Chief Executive Officer Aghan

Millions of Africans could be missing out on critical climate information because it is not being communicated in languages they best understand, according to preliminary findings from an ongoing regional study examining how climate change is reported across the continent

The findings, presented during a recent science media cafe organized by the Media for Environment, Science, Health and Agriculture (MESHA) under the Action Research to Enhance Effective Coverage of Climate Change Issues in Africa project (ARECCCA), suggest that language is emerging as one of the greatest barriers to effective climate communication, particularly among rural and marginalized communities

The findings revealed that while governments, scientists and journalists have intensified climate reporting in recent years, much of the information still fails to resonate with the people most affected because it is delivered in English or national languages that often lack local context

ARECCCA which is a collaborative research initiative led by MESHA with support from International Development Research Center (IDRC) brings together journalists from Kenya, Tanzania, Malawi and Zimbabwe to strengthen climate reporting while simultaneously studying how journalism can better serve vulnerable communities

The project combines newsroom practice with academic research, allowing journalists to test new storytelling approaches as researchers evaluate their impact

Presenting the preliminary findings, lead researcher Dr Osir Otteng said language should not be viewed merely as a translation tool but as the foundation of meaningful climate communication

“There is the issue of real understanding, especially translations from English to other languages,” Otteng said. “When people understand climate change from their own context, they also understand that it goes beyond the weather. They see its effects on biodiversity, farming, fishing and their everyday lives.”

According to Otteng, many rural communities still interpret climate change simply as changing weather patterns because scientific terminology is rarely explained through local experiences

He noted that older residents often observe disappearing bird species, changing fish stocks and declining indigenous plants without necessarily connecting those changes to climate change

“When you tell people that because of climate change, we no longer have certain fish or birds, they begin to understand that it is bigger than weather and so, communication justice leads to climate justice,” noted Dr Otteng

The findings reinforce growing international evidence that local language communication strengthens climate action

UNESCO has consistently argued that multilingual communication promotes greater public participation in development and environmental programmes, while a 2024 study by the Clear Global organisation emphasises that locally relevant communication is essential for successful adaptation of climate resilience programmes

The discussion resonated with journalists participating in the fellowship. MESHA Chief Executive Officer Aghan said the findings had exposed an important but often overlooked weakness in climate reporting

“I think the issue of language could be an opportunity
for us to actually look at the issue of language,” Aghan posed. “Is
it that our languages are also inadequate in a way? And that inadequacy, how
then does it impact our reporting on climate change?”

He added that journalists should also ask whether
communities genuinely understand what climate change means instead of assuming
that repeated exposure to the term automatically translates into public
understanding

One participant and cohort one fellow of the ARECCCA project,
broadcast journalist Laura Otieno, noted that the presentation mirrored
challenges she encountered while reporting on water scarcity among elderly
women in western Kenya

“The audience can only engage as much as they feel
connected to the story that has been told,” Otieno said

She further disclosed that the women she interviewed could
not express themselves in any other language other than Dholuo, a local language.
This issue left her sceptical about what impact the story would have on the
community

“Looking back, I’m thinking perhaps they are not even able
to interact with the story as much because I produced it in a separate language
altogether,” Otieno said

Although language dominated the discussion, the study
identified several other gaps in African climate journalism

According to
Otteng, reporting remains largely event-based, with journalists focusing on
conferences, official meetings and disasters rather than spending time in
communities experiencing climate impacts firsthand

As a result, stories often
rely heavily on government officials and advocacy organisations, while ordinary
citizens rarely become primary

The researchers also found that women, young people and
persons with disabilities continue to be portrayed mainly as victims of climate
change instead of agents of resilience, despite evidence that many are leading
adaptation initiatives within their communities

Limited newsroom ren among journalists,
scientists and policymakers were also identified as challenges affecting the quality
of climate coverage

Aghan challenged journalists involved in the fellowship to
move beyond routine reporting and produce stories that hold institutions
accountable

“It is not a matter of submitting a story,” said
the CEO. “It is a matter of how deep one can go.”

The ARECCCA findings remain preliminary and will continue to
evolve as a second cohort of journalists joins the project before the final
report is published in 2028

Yet the message emerging from the research is
already clear. If climate information is to inspire action, adaptation and
accountability, it must first speak the language of the communities it seeks to
serve

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