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Li Qiangmin (right), Chinese special envoy to the China-Pacific Islands Forum Dialogue, talks with US Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell before the 25th Post-Forum Dialogue Meeting in Majuro. Photo: Xinhua

US backs Pacific islands on climate change

A new Pacific regional pact calling for aggressive action to combat climate change has achieved a major accomplishment by gaining US support, officials said yesterday.

AFP

A new Pacific regional pact calling for aggressive action to combat climate change has achieved a major accomplishment by gaining US support, officials said yesterday.

The Majuro Declaration, endorsed by the 15-nation Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) at their summit last week, contains specific pledges on cutting greenhouse-gas emissions.

The PIF nations, some of which are barely a metre above sea level and risk being swamped by rising waters, have since received wide support led by the US after presenting the document to more than two dozen countries at a post-forum dialogue.

US Interior Secretary Sally Jewell announced during the session a new climate-change fund for Pacific islands vulnerable to rising sea levels.

"Climate change is the defining challenge of our time," she said in launching the Pacific-American fund.

Separately, the United States was offering US$24 million over five years for projects in "vulnerable coastal communities" in the Pacific, she said.

"It's going to have wide-ranging impacts on every corner of our globe, and that's something that we are already seeing, particularly here, as I flew into the airport and saw the sandbags from the last time the water inundated the runway."

Tony de Brum, a minister in the office of the Marshall Islands president, said the US support was a "major accomplishment".

"It will serve to convince those who are not convinced yet that it is a good thing to sign on to."

The European Union, Britain, France, Indonesia, South Korea, Thailand and Malaysia also expressed support for the pact signed in the Marshall Islands.

"The Majuro declaration is something we very much welcome," British Minister of State Hugo Swire said.

"When you come here and see the highest point on the atoll is the bridge that is about three metres above sea level, that brings it home pretty quickly."

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: US backs declaration on greenhouse gases
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