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G20 leaders gather in South Africa to seek agreement despite US boycott

The leaders of the Group of 20 largest economies gathered in South Africa for a summit boycotted by the United States on Saturday. They were seeking a deal over a draft statement drafted without U.S. involvement in a surprising move described by a senior White House Official as "shameful".

G20 envoys agreed on a draft declaration of leaders ahead of the weekend's summit in Johannesburg. Several of the main agenda items will be about climate change. Four sources with knowledge of the matter told us on Friday that this draft was drafted without U.S. consent.

One of these sources confirmed late Friday that the draft contained references to climate changes, despite objections by the U.S. administration of President Donald Trump who questions the scientific consensus on the warming being caused by human activity.

Trump has announced that it will not attend the summit due to allegations that have been widely discredited that the government of the country hosting the summit persecutes the white minority.

The U.S. President has also rejected the agenda of the host nation, which included promoting solidarity, helping developing countries adapt to natural disasters and transitioning to clean energy as well as reducing their excessive debt costs.

Analysts suggest that the boycott could be beneficial if other countries embrace the agenda of this summit and make progress on a substantive statement.

There was no clear indication of what language concessions were needed to bring everyone on board. The United States objected to the mention of renewable energy or climate change in the discussion. Other members were also reticent.

Climate change is a major concern for three out of four South Africa's top agenda items. These include preparing for weather-related disasters caused by climate change, financing the switch to green energy and ensuring that the rush for vital minerals benefits the producers.

The fourth concern is a system of lending that is more equitable for countries in poverty.

Ramaphosa stated that the United States would host the G20 2026. He said he'd have to give the rotating presidency over to a "empty chair". The South African president has refused the White House offer to send a U.S. charge-d'affaires during the G20 handover.

(source: Reuters)