Australia offers climate funding to Pacific islands

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SYDNEY, Aug 13, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Australia on Tuesday announced a Aus$500
million ($340 million) climate change package for Pacific island countries,
which have been increasingly vocal in demanding their powerful neighbour curb
its carbon emissions.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the funding, drawn from Australia’s
existing international aid budget, would help Pacific island nations invest
in renewable energy and climate change resilience.

The climate-sceptic leader made the announcement before travelling to the
Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) in Tuvalu, where island nations threatened by
rising seas have vowed to put global warming at the top of the agenda.

Smaller members of the 18-nation grouping have been sharply critical of
Australia’s climate policies ahead of this year’s summit amid a diplomatic
push from Canberra to counter China’s growing power in the region.

High-level representatives from the likes of Tuvalu, Palau and Vanuatu
have criticised Australia for not doing enough, with Fiji’s Frank Bainimarama
saying Canberra’s reliance on coal poses an “existential threat” to low-lying
islands.

There has also been disquiet in the Pacific that Australia recently
approved the giant Adani coal mine in Queensland state.

Morrison has staunchly defended Australia’s climate record, insisting the
country will meet its 2030 emissions reduction target set under the Paris
Agreement.

“The $500 million we’re investing for the Pacific’s renewable energy and
its climate change and disaster resilience builds on the $300 million for
2016-2020,” he said in a statement.

“This highlights our commitment to not just meeting our emissions
reduction obligations at home but supporting our neighbours and friends.”

Greenpeace said the package was nothing more than a diversion of funds
from Australia’s Pacific aid programme and “a slap in the face to regional
leaders”.

“This $Aus500 million accounting trick will do nothing to address the
cause of the climate crisis that threatens the viability of the entire
Pacific,” Greenpeace’s Pacific head Joseph Moeono-Kolio said in a statement.

The tussle over climate action comes as Australia attempts to reassert its
influence in the Pacific through its “step-up” strategy, which some regional
leaders have warned is likely to fail without meaningful climate action.

The PIF summit officially opens late Tuesday and continues until Thursday.