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Australia rejects co-hosting the climate summit with Turkey

Australia rejects co-hosting the climate summit with Turkey
Australia rejects co-hosting the climate summit with Turkey

Anthony Albanese, Australia's Prime Minister, announced on Monday that Australia will not co-host COP31 with Turkey due to the ongoing stalemate in relations between the two nations.

Turkish diplomatic sources said on Sunday that Turkey had proposed to jointly lead next year's U.N. Climate Summit with Australia, and that the discussions regarding the hosting standoff remained unresolved.

Albanese told a Melbourne media briefing that co-hosting was not allowed under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

"So, that's not an alternative and people know that it isn't an option. That is why it was ruled out."

Both Australia and Turkey submitted bids to host COP31 in 2022 and neither has withdrawn their bid, resulting in an attention-sucking situation

Impasse

The COP30, which is currently being held in Belem (Brazil), must overcome these challenges.

Conference of the Parties (COP) is the main global forum for climate action. Over the years, it has evolved from diplomatic gatherings to vast trade shows that host countries can use to promote their economic prospects.

The host is important because they set up the agenda and are the ones who lead the diplomatic efforts to achieve global agreements.

This month, Albanese

In an effort to resolve the dispute, Erdogan has spoken to the Turkish president Tayyip Erdoan in order to push for hosting the summit of Pacific Island Nations for the first-time.

The Pacific Islands Forum is a regional diplomatic bloc made up of 18 countries that supports Australia's bid. The rising sea levels are a threat to several Pacific island nations.

(source: Reuters)