Deccan Chronicle

Allies to look beyond Covid at G-7 summit

Before pandemic, Boris wanted it to be climate-dominated meet

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London, June 10: There will be roundtable meetings, one-on-one chats and a group photo against a picturesqu­e backdrop. When leaders of some of the world’s richest nations meet Friday at the English seaside for a three-day Group of Seven summit, much of the choreograp­hy will be familiar.

But the world has changed dramatical­ly. Since the G-7 last met two years ago, the Coronaviru­s pandemic has killed more than 3.7 million people and decimated economies with lockdowns and layoffs. So when British Prime Minister Boris Johnson welcomes US President Joe Biden and the leaders of France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Canada to the cliff-ringed Carbis Bay beach resort in southwest England, pandemic recovery — “building back better,” in a phrase both Biden and Johnson like — will top the agenda.

Johnson said the meeting would help move on from “a miserable period of competitio­n and squabbling” that marked the early response to the pandemic. “This is the moment for the world’s greatest and most technologi­cally advanced democracie­s to shoulder their responsibi­lities and to vaccinate the world, because no one can be properly protected until everyone has been protected,” he said in an article published Thursday, a day before the summit’s official start.

Before the pandemic,

Johnson planned this to be a climate-dominated summit. He had wanted to make it a major staging post to November’s internatio­nal COP26 meeting on climate change in Glasgow, eliciting ambitious targets for slashing carbon emissions and expanding green industries.

That’s still on the agenda, but the meeting will be dominated by Covid-19, with discussion­s focusing on physical and economic recovery and building resilience against future pandemics. Lest anyone forget that the virus is still raging, there will be daily

Coronaviru­s tests for attending politician­s, diplomats, staff and journalist­s. Biden made a vaccine pledge before the meeting got underway, announcing that the US will buy 500 million more doses of the Pfizer vaccine to share with poorer countries over the next year.

That upped the pressure on Johnson, who has not yet sent any of Britain’s vaccine doses abroad. Almost four-fifths of adults in the UK have had the first of two shots. Johnson said Thursday that Britain would donate “millions” of doses from surplus stocks — though he didn’t say when. Johnson also noted that the British government helped fund developmen­t at Oxford University of the AstraZenec­a vaccine, which accounts for one in three doses around the world.

France said President Emmanuel Macron wanted to see “results and not just announceme­nts” on vaccines. “We need a specific calendar — how many people worldwide and especially in Africa will be vaccinated” before a meeting of the G-20 in Rome in October.

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