Renew Economy

Climate threatened island nation to host pre-COP leaders meeting

Brief

Tuvalu will host the leaders' component of a pre-COP31 meeting while the main pre-COP consultations are slated for Fiji in October; Tuvalu faces an estimated 90% loss of land by 2100. Turkey will host COP31, with Australia leading negotiation text‑drafting under Climate Minister Chris Bowen, and Palau hosting a special climate event at the 55th PIF in September.

Why it matters

Tuvalu will host the 'leaders' component of a pre-COP31 event while main consultations are scheduled in Fiji in October; Tuvalu is projected to lose about 90% of its land to the ocean by the end of the century.

Key details

  • Turkey won the right to host COP31 after a three-year contest with Australia and Pacific nations; Australia is leading multilateral negotiations and text-drafting for COP31, with Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen tasked to run the negotiations.
  • Palau will host a 'special climate event' during the 55th Pacific Islands Forum leaders meeting in September; the previous COP in Brazil failed to make meaningful progress on deforestation roadmaps and fossil-fuel phase-outs.
Cleaned source text

title: "Climate threatened island nation to host pre-COP leaders meeting"

author: "Poppy Johnston"

source_url: "https://reneweconomy.com.au/climate-threatened-island-nation-to-host-pre-cop-event/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=climate-threatened-island-nation-to-host-pre-cop-event"

word_count: 298

One of the nations most vulnerable to sea level rise will host leaders as part of the Pacific’s international climate conference duties.

The main consultations for the pre-COP31 event will take place in Fiji in October and a “leaders’ component” will be held in Tuvalu, a low-lying island state expected to lose 90 per cent of its land to the ocean by the end of the century.

While Turkey ultimately emerged the victor from a three-year stand-off with Australia and Pacific nations to host the annual summit, the rival bidders did negotiate some COP-related responsibilities.

Australia is now leading multilateral negotiations and text drafting, while the Pacific secured a leaders pre-COP event.

Solomon Islands prime minister Jeremiah Manele, chair of the Pacific Islands Forum, said the region would have a strong presence at the climate conference.

“Pre-COP is a chance to show that when it comes to climate change, the most vulnerable nations can lead, and the world’s most powerful nations can listen,” he said.

Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen, who has been tasked with running negotiations, said the Pacific region was at the frontline of the climate crisis.

“Leading the COP31 negotiations in partnership with the Pacific will strengthen our ties with our closest neighbours” he said.

Also as part of the COP31 arrangements, Palau will host a “special climate event” during ​the ​55th PIF leaders meeting in September.

The main purpose of the annual United Nations climate summit is to make progress towards the Paris Agreement – the global pact that aims to limit global warming to 1.5C.

While the last summit in Brazil failed to make meaningful progress on roadmaps to end deforestation and phase-out fossil fuels, climate experts are hopeful Australia can use its negotiating role to advance the big-ticket agenda items.

Source: AAP