The Latest on COP27, this year's annual UN summit on climate change.
SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â French President Emmanuel Macron said he discussed human rights with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi and hoped to soon get âresultsâ in the form of a release of political prisoners, on the sidelines of COP27.
Macron said he wouldnât disclose details of the discussion because in his experience, that's âmore efficientâ for obtaining the release of activists imprisoned in some authoritarian countries.
Speaking in a news conference, Macron said he specifically discussed the case of one of the countryâs leading rights activists, jailed dissident Alaa Abdel-Fattah, who is also a U.K. citizen. Abdel-Fattah escalated his hunger strike this week, refusing even water, to coincide with the first day of the COP27, according to his family. Amnesty International said he could die in prison if Egyptian authorities do not release him within days.
Macron said that al-Sissi committed to ensure that âhis health be preserved.â
âIâm telling it with much caution, I hope that the coming weeks and months will bring results. I wonât speak more publicly, but the issue has been very precisely discussed,â he added. Abdel-Fattah hails from a family of well-known Egyptian activists and rose to prominence with the 2011 pro-democracy uprisings that swept the Middle East and in Egypt toppled longtime President Hosni Mubarak. The 40-year old activist spent most of the past decade behind bars and his detention has become a symbol of Egyptâs return to autocratic rule.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â Italyâs new far-right leader says her new government will stick to the countryâs existing climate goal of reaching net zero greenhouse gas emissions by mid-century.
Georgia Meloni said Monday at the U.N. climate meeting in Egypt that âdespite a very complex international scenario already affected by the pandemic and further disrupted by the Russian aggression against Ukraine, Italy remains strongly committedâ to its climate goals.
Meloni, who took power last month, took a swipe at major polluters she suggested were freeloading on more ambitious countries.
Countries that are most committed to cutting emissions ârisk paying the price to the advantage of those that today are mostly responsible for carbon dioxide emissions on the planet,â she said, without naming specific countries.
While China is now the worldâs biggest emitter, the United States has pumped significantly more CO2 into the atmosphere since industrial times and Europeâs emissions per capita are still higher than Chinaâs.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â United Kingdom Prime Minister Rishi Sunak expressed his governmentâs âdeep concernâ about the case of a jailed Egyptian-British activist.
Sunak raised the case of Alaa Abdel-Fattah in his meeting Monday with President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi on the sidelines of the U.N. climate summit in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.
According to a Downing Street statement, the British premier said he would continue to âpress for progressâ in the case of Abdel-Fattah.
Earlier Monday, Sunak avoided journalistsâ questions about Abdel-Fattah after he addressed the COP27 high-level summit.
The jailed activist escalated his hunger strike this week, refusing also water, to coincide with the first day of the summit according to his family.
His family is now concerned that he could die from hunger, urging the British government to pressure for his release.
Alaa Abdel-Fattah hails from a family of well-known Egyptian activists and rose to prominence with the 2011 pro-democracy uprisings that swept the Middle East and in Egypt toppled long-time President Hosni Mubarak.
He spent most of the past decade behind bars and his detention has become a symbol of Egyptâs return to autocratic rule.
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KEY DEVELOPMENTS:
â World leaders gather to talk climate amid
â Loss and damage: Fight over human harm,
â Amnesty: Egypt has days to save
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â German Chancellor Olaf Scholz says Russiaâs attack on Ukraine has made the shift from fossil fuels to renewable energy a âsecurity policy imperative.â
In a speech Monday to the U.N. climate conference in Egypt, Scholz acknowledged that Germany was reactivating coal-fired power plants âas a matter of necessity, for a short timeâ because of the drop in energy supplies from Russia.
But he insisted that Europeâs biggest economy remains committed to phasing out coal, telling fellow leaders that âthere must not be a global renaissance of fossil fuels.â
Scholz said his government believes the future belongs to wind power, solar and âgreenâ hydrogen, and is willing to assist other countries in rolling out renewable energy too.
Germany is also prepared to give more financial support to poor countries to tackle climate change, last year providing 5.3 billion euros, he said.
It is also putting 170 million euros into a âglobal shieldâ program that will offer a kind of insurance scheme for poor nations hit by climate-related disasters.
Scholz urged countries to agree new steps for cutting greenhouse gas emissions during the talks in Egypt, and reiterated his invitation to join a âclimate clubâ for raising climate ambition he launched during Germanyâs presidency of the Group of Seven leading economies this year.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â The vice-president of the Maldives, Faisal Naseem, said climate change is remaking the oceans that his island nation depends on.
Naseem told leaders at this yearâs U.N. climate talks on Monday that fishermen in the Maldives have to travel further each year to find fish, while monsoon patterns have shifted and become more violent.
This is causing âstorm surges and flooding that have had irreparable damage to property and livelihoods,â he said.
Coral reefs â a big draw for tourists from around the world â are âon life support,â while all freshwater supplies have been lost, Naseem said.
âClimate change is remaking the world,â he said, urging fellow leaders to do more to tackle the threat of global warming and adapt to its impacts. âItâs our responsibility, and why we have gathered here, to ensure that the remade world is equitable, just and allows all of us to live well.â
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â Spainâs Prime Minister Pedro SĂĄnchez has pledged 5 million euros ($5 million) to finance the launch of an International Drought Resilience Alliance, a joint initiative presented together with Senegal.
Over thirty countries, including the U.S., China and France, have already joined the new alliance that aims to speed up actions against water shortages and help countries prepare better for future droughts.
âIt is essential that we awake from the lethargy and act with the determination that young people around the world are demandingâ, said the Spanish leader.
Spain, SĂĄnchez recalled, is one of the countries suffering firsthand the consequences of drought and heatwaves.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â The head of the United Nations food agency called on world leaders to mobilize resources and funds to save millions of people who âare in serious troubleâ because of climate-related disasters and market-related shocks.
David Beasley, executive director of the U.N. World Food Program, said on Monday that there are at least 345 million people at risk of starvation because of conflicts and climatic shocks.
âWe are in a time of turbulence,â he declared, adding that solutions and funds are urgently needed to avoid mass migration and limit damage to countries vulnerable to climate change.
He said the Russia-Ukraine war has aggravated the humanitarian crisis since both countries are considered the worldâs breadbasket, producing much of the worldâs grain and fertilizers. The war has created a food pricing problem across the globe, he said.
âI donât care whether you love or hate Russia, you need these grains and fertilizers to move. Otherwise, people all over the world are going to starve to death,â he said.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â The United States and Germany welcomed the recent victory of Luiz InĂĄcio Lula da Silva in Brazilâs presidential election as a boost for international efforts to prevent global deforestation.
Da Silva, who is often referred to as Lula, has pledged to halt the destruction of the Amazon rainforest in Brazil seen under his far-right predecessor President Jair Bolsonaro.
âClearly the election in Brazil now offers a major opportunity,â U.S. climate envoy John Kerry said Monday.
âWe know what President Lula did when he was there before,â he said on the sidelines of the U.N. climate talks in Egypt. âWe know what I think he is prepared to build on.â
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz echoed that sentiment.
âIt is good that our Brazilian friends are part of our joint efforts again,â he told delegates.
âThe clear commitment we heard from president-elect Lula right after his election are very encouraging,â Scholz said, adding that Germany was open to the idea of reactivating an Amazon protection fund his country froze due to differences with the Bolsonaro government.
Scholz also announced that Germany will be doubling its five-year contribution to a global fund against deforestation to 2 billion euros (dollars), pending parliamentary approval.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â United Kingdom Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who initially decided not to come to the climate summit, bragged over the United Kingdomâs efforts to decarbonize its economy and its spending of 11.6 billion pounds to help poorer nations deal with global warming.
Sunak struck a much more optimistic tone than other leaders.
âWe can turn our struggle against climate change into a global mission for new jobs and new growth and we can bequeath our children a greener planet,â Sunak said. âThere really is room for hope. Let us fulfill it.â
Seconds after Sunak addressed the summit he was swarmed by a dozen journalists, pressing him continuously about the fate of Alaa Abdel Fattah, the British national and rights activist detained in an Egyptian prison. He said nothing but continued walking, avoiding questions.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â Kenyaâs new president sought to hurry delegates along Monday, describing the wildlife carcasses that litter drought-hit parks back home and saying the climate gatheringâs âstalling, delaying tactics and procrastination that have hampered implementation and delivery is simply cruel and unjust.â
President William Ruto, also speaking on behalf of the African group, reminded the gathering that over 90% of his countryâs energy grid is based on green energy in spite of its âtremendous hydrocarbon and coal deposits which would go a long way in fueling the engines of development.â
It was a reminder of the choices many African nations face as they seek to grow their economies but see the consequences of richer countriesâ actions. Time for those countries to step up and help, Ruto said.
âLoss and damage is not an abstract topic of endless dialogue: It is our daily experience and the living nightmare of millions of Kenyans and hundreds of millions of Africans,â he said.
He also announced an ambitious plan to increase Kenyaâs tree cover from the current 12.13% to 30% over the next decade, at an estimated cost of $5 billion.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â Egypt said it aims to bridge the gap between ânorth and southâ on the negotiating table at the United Nations climate summit currently underway in the Egyptian seaside resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.
Veteran diplomat Wael Aboulmagd, who heads the Egyptian delegation, told The Associated Press Monday that his government aims to âmake progressâ on multiple fronts in the negotiations at the climate summit, COP27.
âWe donât have the luxury of prioritizing one area over the other,â he said.
The Egyptian diplomat said they should also address the climate change-related challenges developing countries have been facing, including finance for climate harms, known as loss and damage.
âWe need to address the fundamentals of the climate finance landscape. It needs to be more equitable,â he said.
Aboulmagd declined to address criticism his government have faced over the past weeks over its human rights record, particularly the case of a jailed prominent activist, Alaa Abdel Fattah, who went on hunger strike for months before he stopped drinking water to coincide with the start of COP27.
âI canât speak to those particular specific issues,â he said.
He said the world leaders are gathering for two weeks to address âan existential threat to humanity,â and âthis is the priority of the presidency.â
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â Saudi Arabiaâs Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has pledged $2.5 billion to fund regional efforts to combat climate change that his country is spearheading, in an event on COP27âs sidelines.
The crown prince said the money would support initial projects and the budget for the Middle East Green Initiative, which Saudi Arabia launched a year ago.
Salman also said the kingdomâs Public Investment Fund would target net zero carbon emissions by 2050, through a circular carbon economy approach.
The kingdomâs circular carbon strategy has been unpopular with climate change activists, who say it focuses on unreliable carbon capture and storage technologies rather than phasing out fossil fuels.
At the same event, Pakistan Prime Minister Muhammad Sharif said, âThe earth has been calling for action but we, it seems, have decided to learn the hard way.â Pakistan was hit by devastating floods this summer that covered half the country, displacing millions and causing tens of billions of dollars in damage.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â U.N. chief Antonio Guterres said Monday that the international community âhas a duty to massively support Pakistanâ in coping with the effects of devastating floods which hit the country in recent months.
The U.N. Secretary-General said the floods should considered as an example of the kind of disaster that deserves financial aid from funds being discussed for the effects of climate change.
âThere is loss and there is damage,â Guterres said, adding that this should be recognized at the current U.N. climate talks in Egypt.
Speaking on the sidelines of the meeting, Guterres said one of the ways to help Pakistan would be to change existing rules and allow it to invest money which the country would otherwise spend on debt repayments for recovery and reconstruction from a natural disaster such as the floods. ___
SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â French President Emmanuel Macron has stressed the need to support developing nations to transition away from dirty fuels and provide funding for current and future climate-related damage on Monday.
âWe must transition our economies away from coal. We must also help emerging countries to do so as quickly as possible,â Macron told leaders at the U.N. climate summit in Egypt, adding that more partnerships need to be made with developing nations to help them transition to cleaner energy.
âWe need a huge shock on concessional financing,â Macron said, voicing his support for funding for countries that can âno longer do business as usualâ as they are too impacted by climate-related damage.
Macron also addressed the impact of the Russia-Ukraine war on climate commitments. He said: âWe will not be sacrificing our climate commitments to Russiaâs energy threat.â
The war in Ukraine prompted energy and food insecurity across the world, especially in Africa and in the Mediterranean region, he said.
He warned against thinking that âwe have other priorities, climate can waitâ because the âclimate emergency is here.â
âWe only have one obligation: to continue to take action,â he said.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â The Netherlands and Oman have signed a declaration of intent to cooperate on hydrogen as a way of speeding up the sultanateâs energy transition.
The Dutch government says the two nations signed the agreement Monday at the United Nations climate summit in Egypt.
Dutch Climate and Energy Minister Rob Jetten says that developing hydrogen infrastructure and âincreasing the share of clean hydrogen in the energy mix is ââa priority for both the Netherlands and Oman.â
Clean or green hydrogen is so called because it is made without any carbon emissions. Hydrogen is used in the production of fertilizer. Jetten says the agreement means that ultimately âthe Netherlands can start importing green hydrogen from Oman to meet the increasing demand here.â
The Dutch government says the agreement with Oman aims to set up import and export facilities and exchanging knowledge and calls it a âstarting pointâ for collaboration between the Dutch port of Rotterdam and the Omani port of Sohar.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â Some 25 countries led by the U.S. and Ghana launched a partnership on Monday to eliminate deforestation by 2030.
The group of nations are home to more than a third of the worldâs remaining forests. Itâs expected $3.6 billion in private capital will be committed to the pledge during this yearâs climate conference, taking total funds earmarked for forest conservation projects to $23.8 billion.
None of the three most rainforested nations â Brazil, Indonesia and the Democratic Republic of Congo â have signed up, although discussions are said to be underway.
Environmentalists warn its funding is dwarfed by investment in companies accused of destroying rainforests.
In one of his first appearances on the international stage since become British prime minister last month, Rishi Sunak said his country would live up to pledges on protecting the worldâs forests made at the 2021 U.N. climate meeting in Glasgow.
âFor too long the worldâs forests have been undervalued and underestimated,â he said, noting the ecological and economic benefits they provide, from fostering biodiversity to providing flood protection, homes for indigenous people and sources of new medicines.
âWith the loss of our forests accounting for more than 10% of global emissions, protecting them is one of the best ways of getting us back on track to 1.5 degrees,â he said, referring to the 2015 Paris accordâs most ambitious goal on capping global warming.
Sunak announced that Britain would contribute a further 90 million pounds to protecting the Congo basin, on top of 1.5 billion pounds pledged last year in Glasgow.
He called for further billions to be raised from public and private sources, and philanthropies, to help âaddress the economic drivers of deforestation.â
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation pledged $1.4 billion to support agricultural projects across Africa and South Asia that it said will help small farmers adapt to climate change.
The foundationâs CEO Mark Suzman announced the commitment Monday, saying it was in response to calls from African leaders to increase financing for climate adaptation.
Some of the funds will expand initiatives run by the International Fund for Agricultural Development that support women farmers, who Melinda French Gates called the âbackboneâ of African food systems in a a statement. Funds will also go to major agricultural research institutions.
The foundation has one of the largest endowments of any philanthropic foundation. It has supported agricultural research, information systems and the piloting of new kinds of seeds and livestock interventions in Africa since at least 2006.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley warned on Monday that leaders lacked âthe simple political willâ to âmake a definable difference in the lives of the people who we have a responsibility to serveâ as she called for new funding mechanisms that would allow nations to address climate change.
Mottley called for $5 trillion of private sector savings to be unlocked to stop the emissions of planet-warming gases, but added it would ârequire a change in the attitudeâ of developed countries.
She urged that nations should âlook at other innovative ways to expand the lending that is available from billions to trillions.â
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â Former U.S. Vice-President Al Gore made an impassioned call Monday for leaders to âchoose life over deathâ by ending the use of fossil fuels that are stoking climate change.
Gore, a long-time environmental campaigner who was among the first to raise the alarm about climate change, told leaders at this yearâs U.N. climate summit in Egypt that they should turn away from destructive behavior, insisting that âwe have other choicesâ in the form of renewable energy.
âWe need to obey the first law of holes,â he said. âWhen youâre in one, stop digging.â
Gore called for massive amounts of private capital to be unlocked in order to fund the transition to clean energy, saying this would provide the trillions, not billions, needed.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â Egyptian authorities closed off several roads on Monday around the venue where the U.N. climate summit is taking place in the seaside resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh. Nearly 50 heads of states or governments on Monday have taken the stage the first day of âhigh-levelâ international climate talks.
As the leaders headed to the conference, police closed off some roads and redirected some routes. Delegates and journalists arrived late to their events.
Michael Bloomberg, U.N. Special Envoy on Climate Ambition and Solutions, arrived late at Bloomberg/Sustainable Energy for All event which was held at a luxury hotel in Sharm.
âI apologize for being late,â he told the event participants. âThey closed all the roads and youâve never seen as many empty roads in your life.â
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â Environmental campaigners warned Monday that the fossil fuel industry has been âemboldenedâ by the current global energy crunch and efforts by some countries to invest in new gas projects, particularly in Africa.
Tasneem Essop of the Climate Action Network claimed fossil fuel companies were attending the current U.N. climate talks in Egypt âin numbersâ to influence negotiations.
She urged the United Nations to put in place policies that prevent those companies from taking part in the annual meeting in future, alleging that they are engaged in âa massive greenwashing exercise.â
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â Nigeriaâs Environment Minister Mohammed Abdullahi called for wealthy nations to show âpositive and affirmativeâ commitments to help those developing countries that are the hardest hit by climate change.
He said Monday that even though nations are âstrongly divided,â there must be âurgent and decisive action from the countries most responsible for the emissions and, of course, climate change,â he said.
âThe blame game should stop,â he said, adding that the country would be âaggressiveâ during negotiations about financing and reparations for vulnerable countries.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â The head of the United Nations warned Monday that the world is on a âhighway to climate hell with our foot on the acceleratorâ unless drastic action is taken to curb global warming.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told world leaders gathered for this yearâs climate summit in Egypt said humanity must âcooperate or perish,â saying rich industrial nations must lead the way.
But Guterres said emerging economies must also do their bit to bend the global emissions curve, calling out the worldâs two biggest emitters, the United States and China, have a particular responsibility.
The U.N. urged countries to forge a âclimate solidarity pactâ that includes giving poor countries sufficient financial support to cope with the effects of global warming, and reiterated his call for a tax on the windfall profits of fossil fuel companies.
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi warned that âthe planet has become a world of sufferingâ in his opening remarks to leaders at the summit.
âClimate change will never stop without our intervention ... Our time here is limited and we must use every second that we have,â he said. El-Sissi also called for an end to the Russia-Ukraine war.
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â Ghanaâs President Nana Akufo-Addo called for wealthy nations who are more responsible for climate change to pay and compensate African nations that are among the hardest hit by the impacts of climate change.
âThe damage is obvious,â he told The Associated Press on Monday. âThose who are responsible should be very, very much aware of the need to compensate others.â
He said his government needs around $561 billion to implement the countryâs transition plan to clean energy, and at the same time avoid job losses in the oil and gas sector.
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GENEVA â The World Trade Organization chief is acknowledging that trade contributes to carbon emissions but says a new WTO report estimates that lifting tariffs and other barriers to trade in environmentally friendly energy products could both boost exports and reduce emissions.
WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala says the Geneva-based trade bodyâs latest World Trade Report, whose release was timed for Mondayâs opening of the U.N. climate conference, found that trade has helped prices of solar electricity to plunge 97 percent since 1990.
However, trade, like most economic activities, emits greenhouse gases â and CO2 emissions linked to international goods and services exports accounted for 30% of global carbon emissions as of 2018, the report said.
The WTO chief acknowledged the perception that trade contributes to global emissions.
âThatâs exactly what we want to tackle here: That trade is seen as contributing to the carbon emissions. And this is true,â she told reporters at the conference in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. âBut on the other hand, you couldnât solve the climate crisis without trade. And thatâs the part of the equation that has not been looked at.â
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt â More than 100 world leaders are preparing to discuss a worsening problem that scientistsâ call Earthâs biggest challenge â greenhouse gas emissions, which leads to global warming. However, observers say it will be hard to make progress given all the other things happening in the world. Dozens of heads of states or governments Monday take the stage in the first day of âhigh-levelâ international climate talks in Egypt with more to come in following days. Much of the focus will be on national leaders telling their stories of being devastated by climate disasters.
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