Climate-threatened Pacific Islands criticize Australia at Commonwealth meeting

Samoan Prime Minister Afioga Fiam膿 Naomi Mata驶afa, center, is assisted by Assistant Secretary General of the Commonwealth Luis Franceschi, left, at the Foreign Ministers meeting at the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting in Apia, Samoa, Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft/Pool)

APIA, Samoa (AP) 鈥 Several Pacific island nations singled out Australia to do more to phase out fossil fuel exports during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting which opened in Samoa on Thursday.

Tuvalu鈥檚 Prime Minister, Feleti Teo, alongside senior officials from Vanuatu and Fiji, backed a new from the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Initiative, which highlights the significant role Australia, Canada and the U.K. play in global emissions.

The report said that fossil fuels extracted in the three nations were responsible for 60% of emissions generated by such extraction across Commonwealth countries since 1990, even though they represent only 6% of the Commonwealth鈥檚 population.

The report鈥檚 findings also point to a 鈥渟tark imbalance in fossil fuel extraction鈥 and criticize the contradictions between the climate pledges made by these countries and their ongoing efforts to expand fossil fuel production, especially in Australia and Canada.

Pacific leaders have long warned that continued fossil fuel reliance threatens the very existence of their nations, many of which consist of low-lying islands that could be partly or wholly submerged by rising sea levels.

Teo, who earlier this year to strengthen migration and security ties between the two countries as well as climate change mitigation, intensified his calls for Australia to phase out fossil fuel production, warning that current policies by major polluters amount to a 鈥渄eath sentence鈥 for his nation.

鈥淢y view of that commitment is that Australia 鈥 is highly morally obliged to ensure that whatever action it does will not compromise the commitment it has provided in terms of climate impact,鈥 Teo said at a press conference in Apia, the capital of Samoa.

鈥淥n that platform I鈥檓 hoping we鈥檒l be able to leverage Australia鈥檚 support and hopefully that will translate into reducing emission levels."

Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong, who is also in Samoa, said Australia is tackling the 鈥渂ig task鈥 of transitioning its economy to net zero emissions, but cannot be held responsible for emissions from coal and gas exported to other countries.

Wong said that the 鈥渧ast majority鈥 of new coal-fired power plants are being built in China and other developing nations.

鈥淎ustralia has to reduce its emissions, but the whole world 鈥 if we are going to combat sea level rise, temperature rising 鈥 the whole world will have to peak and reduce emissions,鈥 she said on Thursday.

It鈥檚 the first time a Pacific Island has hosted the and climate change is expected to occupy much of the summit鈥檚 agenda. More than half of the Commonwealth鈥檚 members are small countries like Samoa, many of them island nations among the world鈥檚 most imperiled by rising seas.

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