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Biden will attend COP27 climate summit: White House
by AFP Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 28, 2022

US President Joe Biden will attend next month's COP27 United Nations climate summit in Egypt, the White House said Friday, vowing he would "highlight the need for the world to act."

The COP27 conference will once more seek to boost global efforts to slow the climate crisis that is intensifying natural disasters, from wildfires to severe storms.

Biden will "advance the global climate fight and help the most vulnerable build resilience to climate impacts, and he will highlight the need for the world to act in this decisive decade," the White House said in a statement.

Egypt is to host the 27th Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, in the Red Sea resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh.

Biden will be at the summit on November 11, before heading to Cambodia for the annual US-ASEAN summit and then on to Indonesia for a G20 summit.

"He will work with G20 partners to address key challenges such as climate change, the global impact of (President Vladimir) Putin's war on Ukraine, including on energy and food security and affordability, and a range of other priorities," the White House said.

US officials have said Biden has no intention to meet Putin at the G20 summit, even if Putin attends.

Biden has also no plans to meet with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman at the G20, with US-Saudi relations under new strain over Riyadh's recent support for oil production cuts.

COP26 last year ended with a pledge to keep global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels -- a goal the world is set to miss on current emission trends.

Sunak defends decision not to attend COP27 climate summit
London (AFP) Oct 28, 2022 - UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Friday defended his heavily criticised decision not to attend next month's COP27 climate change summit, saying he had to focus on "pressing" economic problems.

In an interview with Sky News a day after Downing Street announced he was skipping the summit, the prime minister stressed he was "very personally committed" to environmental issues.

"I just think at the moment it's right that I'm also focusing on the pressing domestic challenges we have with the economy, and I think that's what people watching would reasonably expect me to be doing as well," Sunak said.

The COP27 UN climate change conference takes place in Egypt on November 7-8, two weeks after Sunak became prime minister.

Opposition Labour party leader Keir Starmer attacked the Tory leader's decision to "shun" the event, while Green Party leader Caroline Lucas said that Sunak's absence was a "shameful way to end the UK's COP Presidency".

The UK hosted the previous summit, COP26, in Glasgow in Scotland in 2021, with British politician Alok Sharma serving as president.

Sunak said the UK should be "really proud of how we're doing" as "one of the countries that has decarbonised the fastest".

Downing Street confirmed Friday that King Charles III, who has long taken a keen interest in environmental issues, will not be going to the summit either.

A spokeswoman said the royals had sought government advice earlier and officials had unanimously agreed it was not the "right occasion" for the monarch to go in person. She said she was not aware of any changes.

Charles and his son Prince William spoke at the 2021 event.

Former health minister and now environment minister Therese Coffey told Sky News on Friday morning that "it's up to him (Charles)" whether to go to the summit.

The minister downplayed the significance of the Egypt event, saying: "The big push happened last year in Glasgow".


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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Climate plans would allow up to 2.6C of global warming: UN
Paris (AFP) Oct 27, 2022
Country climate pledges leave the world on track to heat by as much as 2.6 degrees Celsius this century, the United Nations said on Wednesday, warning that emissions must fall 45 percent this decade to limit disastrous global warming. The United Nations Environment Programme, in its annual Emissions Gap report, found that updated national promises since last year's COP26 summit in Glasgow would only shave less than one percent off global greenhouse gas emissions by 2030. The world has warmed nea ... read more

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