Arab Times

Groups expect protest

Climate Fijian leader calls on Australia to do more on climate change

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CANBERRA, Australia, Sept 16, (AP): Fiji’s prime minister used a state visit on Monday to urge Australia to take more ambitious actions to slash greenhouse gas emissions, a month after difference­s on climate change policy created anger and frustratio­n at a forum of Pacific island leaders.

Voreqe Bainimaram­a, who was Fijian Military Forces commander when he seized power in a 2006 coup, said in a speech at the Australian Defense College that he hoped Fiji and Australia could “find more common ground” on climate change.

“The steady deteriorat­ion in the state of the only planet we have means that we all need to be far more ambitious in reducing the greenhouse gas emissions that are causing global warming,” Bainimaram­a said.

He said both countries are already suffering the effects of climate change. Dozens of wildfires are razing Australia’s drought-parched east coast in an extraordin­arily early and destructiv­e start to the annual fire danger season. In Fiji, 44 people died and thousands of homes were destroyed in 2016 when Cyclone Winston became the strongest storm to ever make landfall in the

Morrison

southern hemisphere.

Bainimaram­a’s visit comes as Australia’s centerleft opposition mulls abandoning its policy, rejected at May elections, of reducing Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions by 45% below 2005 levels by 2030.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s conservati­ve coalition won a surprise third term with a commitment to reduce emissions by a more modest 26% to 28% in the same time frame.

Bainimaram­a met Morrison at Parliament House on Monday for the first time since the Fijian rebuked Morrison for his behavior at the Pacific Islands Forum at Tuvalu last month.

Bainimaram­a told The Guardian Australia that Morrison’s approach had been “very insulting and condescend­ing” at the forum, where he toned down the language of the leaders’ communique calling for action on climate change.

Bainimaram­a, a vocal advocate for global action on climate change, told the newspaper that Morrison’s attitude would drive South Pacific leaders to China, which is competing against Australia for influence in the region.

Bainimaram­a said after an initial meeting with Morrison on Monday that they had discussed “pressing issues,” but did not describe them.

He said the two government­s need to do more to achieve a “vuvale” partnershi­p, a Fijian word for family.

“The vuvale connection demands a level of understand­ing unpreceden­ted in the relations between our government­s, but which has been long evident in the general affinity shared by the Fijian and the Australian people,” Bainimaram­a told reporters.

Leaders at the Tuvalu forum of 18 island nations, some of which risk being covered by rising oceans, wanted to call for a ban on new coal mines in the communique.

But Australia, the largest nation in the forum and the world’s largest exporter of coal, resisted. The final statement called on major economies to “rapidly implement their commitment to phase out inefficien­t fossil fuel subsidies.”

Morrison said on Monday the relationsh­ip between the two countries would always endure.

“Whatever other complexiti­es there are in the world today, one certainty is the relationsh­ip that exists between the people of Australia and the people of Fiji,” Morrison said.

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