Truro News

Fiji pushes for urgent action on climate change

- BY GEIR MOULSON AND DOROTHEE THIESING

Fiji’s prime minister called for a sense of urgency in the fight against global warming Monday, telling negotiator­s “we must not fail our people” as he opened two weeks of talks on implementi­ng the Paris accord on combating climate change, which is already affecting his Pacific island nation.

While diplomats and activists gathered in Bonn, the UN weather agency said 2017 is set to become the hottest year on record aside from those impacted by the El Nino phenomenon.

The talks in Germany are the first major global climate conference since President Donald Trump announced that the U.S. will pull out of the 2015 Paris accord unless he can secure a better deal, and the first time that a small island nation is chairing such a conference.

Negotiator­s will focus on thrashing out some of the technical details of the Paris accord, which aims to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. While Trump has expressed skepticism, a recent U.S. government report concluded there is strong evidence that manmade climate change is taking place.

Fiji Prime Minister Voreqe “Frank” Bainimaram­a, the Bonn conference’s chairman, offered greetings “from one of the most climate-vulnerable regions on earth,” underlinin­g “our collective plea for the world to maintain the course we set in Paris.”

“The need for urgency is obvious,” he said. “Our world is in distress from the extreme weather events caused by climate change.”

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