PM set for debate about Australia's approach to climate change at Pacific forum

Scott Morrison will arrive in Tuvalu on Wednesday for the Pacific Islands Forum, where he enters a political storm around Australia's climate policies.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison will meet with Pacific leaders on climate change Wednesday.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks to the media and staff following a tour of the Downer Recycling Processing Facility in Sydney, Tuesday. Source: AAP (Dean Lewins)

Prime Minister Scott Morrison is due to arrive at the Pacific Islands Forum where he will come face to face with leaders ready to debate his government's approach to climate change.

The prime minister will touchdown in Tuvalu's capital of Funafuti on Wednesday afternoon, joining Minister for the Pacific Alex Hawke.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison meets with stakeholders and participants of the NDIS during a roundtable meeting at the NDIS in Penrith, Sydney.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison meets with stakeholders and participants of the NDIS during a roundtable meeting at the NDIS in Penrith, Sydney. Source: AAP
Mr Morrison is expected to have bilateral discussions with Vanuatu's leader Charlot Salwai, New Zealand's prime minister Jacinda Ardern, Cook Islands head Henry Puna and Tuvalu's Enele Sopoaga.

To coincide with his arrival the prime minister has announced $1.5 million for another 150 technical and vocational scholarships to help Pacific islanders looking for work.

Mr Morrison will also launch an online platform that provides an interactive labour market and skills data to help industries across the Pacific.

Australia's approach to reducing emissions and reliance on coal has been under the spotlight at the leaders' forum, with the smaller islands reiterating the existential threat they face from climate change.

The smaller islands want Australia to abandon its decision to use carryover credits towards the Paris agreement emissions reduction goal, but the federal government has stood firm against such calls.
An aerial view of Funafuti, Tuvalu, Tuesday, August 13, 2019. (AAP Image/Mick Tsikas) NO ARCHIVING
An aerial view of Funafuti, Tuvalu, Tuesday, August 13, 2019. Source: AAP Image/Mick Tsikas
But it will be up to Mr Morrison to explain his commitment to the carryover credits when he holds bilateral talks with Pacific leaders, particularly with the prime minister of host nation Tuvalu, Mr Sopoaga.

Although the Tuvaluan welcomed an Australian commitment of $500 million over five years for climate resilience projects in the Pacific, he said it didn't give Mr Morrison a free pass on other issues.

"No matter how much money you put on the table, it doesn't give you the excuse not to do the right thing, which is cutting down your emissions, including not opening your coal mines," he told reporters on Tuesday.
The new analysis by left-leaning The Australia Institute has found that by using carryover credits, the federal government will save itself from reducing emissions by the equivalent of seven years of fossil fuels of its Pacific neighbours.

Australia intends to use 367Mt of carbon credits towards the Paris goal, while the Pacific island nations use about 45Mt each year.
In this Nov. 5, 2015 file photo, workers build a sea wall on Majuro Atoll  in the Marshall Islands.
In this Nov. 5, 2015 file photo, workers build a sea wall on Majuro Atoll in the Marshall Islands. Source: AP
Mr Morrison will no doubt use bilateral talks to raise concerns over China's increasing presence in the region, notably if he speaks with US Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt.

Nauru President Baron Waqa on Tuesday heaped glowing praise on his ally Taiwan, highlighting a hurdle for China in its attempts to increase its presence in the Pacific.

A handful of Pacific island nations -including Tuvalu and Nauru - are diplomatic allies to Taiwan rather than China.


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Published 14 August 2019 7:16am
Updated 14 August 2019 7:18am


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