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Erdogan praises a'meaningful deal' with Australia regarding hosting the COP31 Summit

The Turkish president Tayyip Erdoan praised the deal that was reached on Saturday with Australia to host the U.N. Climate Summit next year, calling it a significant achievement for multilateralism.

After a long standoff, both countries have agreed that Turkey will be the host of the COP31 Summit in 2026 and Australia will lead the negotiations. Ankara, Canberra and both had bid to host the conference in 2022 and refused to back down since.

Erdogan said at an event on Saturday night in Johannesburg, "Considering that multilateralism in recent years has lost ground, I consider this agreement we reached with Australia as meaningful."

Anthony Albanese, the Australian Prime Minister, said on Sunday that Australia would be the "exclusive authority" in the negotiations and decision-making during the summit.

Albanese, in a press release, said that the Pacific region will host a pre-COP special meeting to "draw attention to the existential threats climate change poses for the region".

Australia was supported by a group of 18 Pacific Island countries, including many that are at risk due to rising sea levels.

"Hundreds of bilateral meeting, climate-related visits to tens countries, days diplomatic negotiations." "And finally Turkey is COP31 president and host!," Turkey's Minister of Environment, Urbanisation and Climate Change, Murat Kurum posted late Saturday on X.

"As Turkey we guarantee to organize a fair, balanced conference of parties, focusing on not only our region, but also fragile regions like the Pacific and Africa connecting the north and south," he said later in a statement made at the COP30 in Brazil.

The annual COP Conference is the primary global forum to drive action on climate changes.

(source: Reuters)