Bangkok Post

Tears as Australia snubs climate woes

Island nations decry summit results

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WELLINGTON: A Pacific summit has descended into tears, recriminat­ions and shouting between pro-coal Australia and low-lying island nations facing an existentia­l threat from climate change.

The annual Pacific Island Forum wrapped up in Tuvalu late on Thursday with Australia and the group’s 17 other members sharply at odds, potentiall­y underminin­g Canberra’s efforts to curb China’s growing influence in the region.

“There were serious arguments and even shouting, crying, people, leaders were shedding tears,” Tuvalu Prime Minister Enele Sopoaga told Australia’s national broadcaste­r ABC after the summit broke up with a communique with “watered down” language on global warming.

The group had gathered in Funafuti hoping to issue a compelling global call to action from nations on the frontline of climate change ahead of UN talks in New York next month.

But Mr Sopoaga conceded that a climate statement and communique released in the early hours of yesterday morning after 12 hours of tense negotiatio­ns fell short of expectatio­ns.

“I think we can say we should’ve done more work for our people,” he told reporters.

The joint statements refer to a climate crisis and reiterate previous warnings that global warming is the most serious threat facing the Pacific.

“The time to act is now,” the leaders said.

But there was no direct mention of ending coal-fired power, while calls to limit temperatur­e rises to 1.5C and achieve zero net carbon emissions by 2050 were couched as suggestion­s rather than demands.

“We came together in a nation that risks disappeari­ng to the seas, but unfortunat­ely, we settled for the status quo in our communique,” Fiji Prime Minister Frank Bainimaram­a tweeted.

“Watered-down climate language has real consequenc­es — like waterlogge­d homes, schools, communitie­s, and ancestral burial grounds.”

Mr Sopoaga said Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison was behind the compromise­d language.

“We expressed very strongly during our exchange, between me and Scott, I said, ‘You are concerned about saving your economy in Australia ... I am concerned about saving my people in Tuvalu,’” he said.

Mr Morrison, who has long championed Australia’s lucrative coal industry, concedes climate change is real but insists it can be managed in a way that does not hurt the economy.

He denied difference­s with Pacific Island leaders over climate would damage Australia’s “Pacific step-up”, a push to restore Canberra’s leadership credential­s in the region and push back against Beijing’s diplomatic inroads.

“We showed up, we’re stepping up, and it’s getting on,” the Australian leader said.

Australia, the largest and wealthiest Pacific Island Forum member, fears that China’s long-term plan is to establish a military base in the Pacific.

Samoa’s Prime Minister Tuilaepa Malielegao­i said this week that Pacific leaders would not turn away a generous aid donor.

“Their enemies [Australia and its allies] are not our enemies,” Mr Malielegao­i said.

 ?? AFP ?? Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, fourth from right, talks with other leaders at the Pacific Islands Forum in Tuvalu.
AFP Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, fourth from right, talks with other leaders at the Pacific Islands Forum in Tuvalu.

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