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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Pacific summit to issue climate message to world
By Bernadette Carreon
Port Moresby (AFP) Sept 6, 2015


Ministers talk finance, seek to bolster climate pact
Paris (AFP) Sept 6, 2015 - Ministers and diplomats from 57 countries gathered in Paris Sunday to discuss the make-or-break issue of finance in a climate rescue deal to be sealed in the French capital in December.

The two-day huddle of foreign and environment ministers and senior officials is not part of official negotiations for the highly-anticipated agreement, but is meant to inject political momentum into the fraught UN process.

"We have less than three months before the Paris meeting," French Foreign Affairs Minister Laurent Fabius, who will preside over the year-end conference, told colleagues as he opened Sunday's meeting.

"We should take full advantage of each time that we meet... The success of Paris will be built ahead of time. We cannot expect some sort of miraculous solution to appear during the final hours of the Paris conference."

On Friday, a five-day round of official text-drafting talks closed in Bonn with negotiators expressing frustration at their own lagging progress.

They turned to the joint chairmen of the UN forum for help, asking them to edit the unwieldy blueprint for an agreement into a more manageable format before the next, and final, pre-Paris negotiating round in Bonn from October 19 to 23.

The pact will be the first to commit all the world's nations to cutting climate-altering greenhouse gases in a bid to limit average warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels.

But there are fundamental disagreements on how to share out emissions cuts between rich nations, which have polluted longer, and emerging giants such as China and India now powering fast-growing economies and populations.

Poor nations seek developed-country commitments of financial and technological aid for their shift to greener energy and adapting to a new, climate-altered world.

- Trying to find compromise -

They also want a mechanism that will pay for unavoidable climate change-induced losses and damages.

Finance, technology transfers, money for climate adaptation and "loss and damage" are all on the agenda for the informal two-day Paris meeting.

"Our goal is to look at topics that will enable us to facilitate the negotiations," said Fabius, while stressing the ministerial meeting was not mean to replace the formal process but "support" it.

"We're trying to put our finger on those compromises that will form the basis of the formal document."

Observers and participants in the pact-drafting exercise are hopeful that a string of climate-themed meetings in the coming weeks and months will boost the bureaucratic UN process, which has bogged down in fights over procedure and ideology.

Ministers met in a similar informal round in Paris in July; their finance colleagues are to gather for a joint International Monetary Fund-World Bank meeting in Lima in October; and heads of state and government will talk climate on the sidelines of a UN General Assembly in New York later this month.

"We should bring to the table, to the discussion, a very strong political signal around climate finance," said Peruvian Environment Minister Manuel Pulgar Vidal, who presided over last year's climate conference -- referring to the $100 billion (90 billion euros) per year that rich nations had committed in 2009 to make available from 2020.

"We should assure a very clear and credible trajectory of the climate finance."

Vulnerable Pacific island nations will this week send the world an urgent plea for action on climate change at crunch talks in Paris later this year.

Some Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) countries lie barely a metre (three feet) above sea level and fear they will disappear beneath the waves without drastic intervention from major polluters.

The 15-nation regional grouping, meeting in Port Moresby from Monday, has long complained of bearing the brunt of climate change, even though its members make a miniscule contribution to global carbon emissions.

For more than a decade, the annual PIF summit has heard details of eroding coastlines, increasingly destructive storms and crops ruined by encroaching seawater.

Villagers in the Marshall Islands have seen graveyards swamped, while tiny Kiribati has purchased a large block of land in Fiji in case its entire population needs to relocate.

Palau President Tommy Remengesau said the Pacific's plight should prick the conscience of delegates from 195 nations who will meet in Paris in December seeking a breakthrough climate deal.

"What is happening is non-uniform, rapid, extreme and destructive in impact and consequences," said Remengesau, who is also the PIF president.

"There is immediate danger for all small island countries. Climate change is causing serious damage now, it is not an event of the future," he told AFP.

The so-called COP21 talks in Paris will seek a binding deal to take effect in 2020 that will commit all nations to emissions cuts.

The goal is to limit average global warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels.

- 'Unviable very soon' -

Former New Zealand prime minister Geoffrey Palmer said the Paris talks could determine the future of Pacific territories such as Kiribati, Tuvalu and Tokelau.

"If you get a metre of inundation by the tides then some of those countries are going to become unviable very soon," he told a climate discussion in Wellington organised by the French embassy.

"You're looking there at the destruction of a culture. This is terrible and we're not doing anything about it."

Australia and New Zealand, the two largest PIF members, have been accused of dragging their feet on climate change, but Kiribati President Anote Tong said small island nations would not allow them to water down the PIF's call for action.

"I don't know what problems these countries have... but we'll have a very big problem if we don't have strong language," he said. "We need action as soon as possible."

Another issue set for discussion at the PIF meeting is a clampdown on civil rights in Nauru which prompted New Zealand on Wednesday to suspend foreign aid to the country's justice sector.

The UN and United States have called for restoration of basic freedoms in Nauru, saying they are fundamental to democracy, and New Zealand has said it will air its concerns in Port Moresby.

The Pacific's multi-billion dollar tuna industry will also be under scrutiny. It is an economic lifeline for some nations but vulnerable to poaching and overfishing.

The talks are also set to touch on regional integration, potentially allowing French Polynesia in as a full member, and curbing an obesity epidemic in the Pacific.


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