New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern speaks to journalists in Tuvalu. (Pool) |
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Pacific countries want Australia to take stronger action on climate change domestically, a demand Australia's Prime Minister Scott Morrison has so far rebuffed.
As the leaders meet for the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) in Tuvalu's capital, Funafuti, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern's position will be crucial to determining what the group of leaders can agree upon.
Mr Morrison yesterday announced a $500 million package of funding, redirected from aid spending, to help Pacific countries invest in renewable energy and become more resilient to climate and weather events.
But Tuvalu's Prime Minister, Enele Sopoaga, warned that the climate money should not be used by Australia as an excuse to avoid reducing emissions and phasing out coal-fired power generation.
Today, Ms Ardern has backed calls by the leaders of Tuvalu and Fiji that every country must commit to greater cuts in carbon emissions.
"Like our Pacific Island neighbours, we will continue that international call," she said.
"We will continue to say that New Zealand will do its bit and we have an expectation that everyone else will as well — we have to.
"New Zealand, relative to other nations, has a relatively small emissions profile, however, if we all took the perspective that if you're small it doesn't matter, we wouldn't see change.
"Every single little bit matters."
Ms Ardern would not give a direct answer when pressed on whether Australia's commitment under the Paris Agreement to cut emissions by 26 to 28 per cent was adequate, as other Pacific leaders have said.
"Australia has to answer to the Pacific [and] that's a matter for them," she said.
The 50th Pacific Islands Forum is being held in Tuvalu, a small Pacific country north-east of Australia. (ABC News: Melissa Clarke) |
Australia is pushing back against plans to include in the statement a timeframe for phasing out the use of coal-fired power generation and committing more funding to the UN-backed Green Climate Fund that supports developing countries.
The
Carteret Islands were the first place in the world to require
population relocations due to climate change, with predictions they
would be submerged by 2015. |
"Some of our Pacific neighbours haven't been able to access climate finance," she said.
"That some of the direct funding that we're able to put in around protecting water supply, around costal hazards, that's equally important too.
"So you'll see from some our aid and development support, we've gone directly while also acknowledging the multilateral institutions and funds."
At a function with the leaders of Tuvalu and Nauru, Mr Morrison committed to "talk[ing] about the future of the environment".
"When families come together, they talk about the stuff that matters, what's most important to them," he said.
The 50th Pacific Islands Forum is being held in Tuvalu, a small Pacific country north-east of Australia. (ABC News: Melissa Clarke) |
"To step up, you have to show up and Australia is going to show up," he said."We're going to show up for the hard conversations, the good conversations, the family conversations."
Links
- Why Beijing cares about a tiny nation with the world's smallest GDP
- Tuvalu's PM says Morrison's climate money 'not an excuse' to keep opening mines
- Morrison pledges $500 million to fight climate change across Pacific islands
- Australia's push to 'step up' in the Pacific sobered by climate change pleas
- Pacific leaders plead with Australia to drop plans to carry over emissions credits
- Australia coal use is 'existential threat' to Pacific islands, says Fiji PM
- Australia Must Listen To Its Pacific Neighbours On Climate Crisis
- Australia's push to 'step up' in the Pacific sobered by climate change pleas
- Fact check: Is the Pacific island nation of Tuvalu growing, and not sinking?
- 'Imperial thinking': Tuvalu PM slams Kevin Rudd's proposal to offer Australian citizenship for Pacific resources
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- Pacific Islands Forum: Tuvalu Children Welcome Leaders With A Climate Plea
- Australian Climate Change Policies Face Growing Criticism From Pacific Leaders
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- Australia Must Help Protect Pacific From Climate Change, PNG Prime Minister Says
- Foreign Minister Marise Payne Defends Australia's Climate Change Policies
- DFAT's Climate Change Strategy Stuck On Hold
- Former President Of Kiribati Tells SF To Step Up Fight As Climate Change Threatens To Swallow His Island Country
- Pacific Leadership On Climate Change Is Necessary And Inevitable
- Australia's Standing In Pacific Has Plummeted Because Of Our Climate Change Failure
- Torres Strait Islanders Ask UN To Hold Australia To Account On Climate ‘Human Rights Abuses’
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