Waikato Times

Climate talks failing, says Maldives

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The head of the Maldives delegation to the UN climate conference questioned yesterday the point of the yearly summits, saying they are failing to produce meaningful results.

Former President Mohamed Nasheed attended the 24th edition of the UN talks, being held this year in Poland and set to end today. After almost two weeks of talks, negotiator­s from almost 200 countries have not yet agreed on the rules for implementi­ng the 2015 treaty from Paris on fighting global warming treaty.

‘‘What’s the point’’ of having such negotiatio­ns if they don’t lead to progress or solutions to problems that are related to the lives of people worldwide, Nasheed said.

‘‘There is a view among many of us that this is failing,’’ he said in an interview with The Associated Press.

Nasheed said there was an urgent need to implement the Paris agreement’s call for keeping global warming at no more than 1.5 degrees Celsius during this century. Without that, he said, the existence of the Maldives, an island nation in the Indian Ocean, will be threatened.

He said a lack of agreement in Katowice would only worsen the situation.

He said the thousands-year-old nations in the Indian Ocean want to live ‘‘in our own homelands, we want to live with our communitie­s with our culture, with our people.’’

‘‘We don’t think that this is asking for much,’’ Nasheed said yesterday.

‘‘We are just only saying: Please do not kill us.’’ –AP

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