New York Daily News

Kerry talks in S. Korea on climate

- BY KIM TONG-HYUNG

SEOUL, South Korea — U.S. climate envoy John Kerry met with South Korea’s foreign minister in Seoul on Saturday for talks ahead of a virtual climate summit of world leaders called by President Biden for this week.

Kerry arrived in South Korea after a four-day visit to China where he held closed-door meetings with senior Chinese officials.

While Kerry’s discussion­s with South Korea’s Foreign Minister Chung Eui-yong were focused on Biden’s climate meeting and another video summit on environmen­tal issues that South Korea will host in May, Chung also conveyed Seoul’s “serious concerns” over Japanese government plans to start releasing treated radioactiv­e water from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea in two years.

Chung also requested U.S. help for South Korea’s efforts to secure more coronaviru­s vaccines as it wrestles with a slow vaccine rollout and a steady rise in infections, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said. The ministry didn’t release any specific comments made by Kerry during the meeting.

Chung and Kerry agreed that the countries should cooperate to create “mutual synergy” between the virtual summits hosed by each country in the coming weeks, which would help set up the U.N. Climate Change Conference scheduled to be held in Scotland in November, the ministry said in a statement.

Arriving for a dinner meeting at Chung’s official residence in Seoul, Kerry wrote in a guestbook saying: “Thank you so much for Korea’s leadership on the climate crisis.”

Kerry and Chung had spoken over the phone twice last month to discuss the countries’ cooperatio­n on climate change and to exchange views on the U.N. Climate Change Conference, according to Chung’s ministry.

Kerry’s visit to South Korea comes when the Biden administra­tion is also stepping up efforts to coordinate action with South Korea and Japan to cope with China’s growing influence and North Korea’s nuclear threat.

Three-way cooperatio­n between Washington, Seoul and Tokyo had declined during the Trump administra­tion, as the Asian U.S. allies feuded over wartime history, trade and military issues that sank relations to post-war lows.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in said last month he was eager to repair relations with Tokyo to build “future-oriented ties,” but there are now fresh tensions over Japan’s approving the release of radioactiv­e water from Fukushima.

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