Pacific island states demand fossil fuel nonproliferation treaty

Édité par Ed Newman
2024-10-25 23:48:49

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King Charles has refused calls by African and Caribbean nations to pay reparations and make amends for Britain’s role in the transatlantic slave trade. 

Apia, October 26 (RHC)-- King Charles has joined leaders of 56 nations — most of them former British colonies — for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, which opened Friday in Samoa’s capital Apia. 

Two dozen of the Commonwealth’s nations are small island states, making the threat of rising seas and worsening tropical storms a priority at this year’s summit. 

A new report finds the Commonwealth’s three wealthiest members — Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom — are responsible for 60% of its greenhouse gas emissions, even though they comprise just 6% of the Commonwealth’s population. 

Ahead of the talks, Tuvalu’s Prime Minister Feleti Teo called on nations to back a fossil fuel nonproliferation treaty.  Feleti Teo: “To put it plainly, it is a death sentence — not phrases that I use lightly — for us, Tuvalu, if larger nations continue to increase their emission levels. … A fossil fuel treaty will be a global mechanism essential for managing a just transition away from coal, oil and gas.”

In related news, King Charles has refused calls by African and Caribbean nations to pay reparations and make amends for Britain’s role in the transatlantic slave trade. 

In remarks opening the Commonwealth summit, Charles stopped short of an apology; he instead acknowledged “painful aspects” of Britain’s past.


Topics:Climate Crisis Fossil Fuel Divestment



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