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Pacific leaders gather ahead of COP21

Thursday 26 November 2015 | Published in Regional

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Paris – The French president Francois Hollande has gathered Pacific leaders together in Paris this week for a summit before crucial climate change talks which start on Monday.

Paris says the France-Oceania meeting is a chance for Hollande to speak directly to the Pacific region about climate change.

This is the fourth France-Oceania summit and the second to be held outside the Pacific. The last one was held in the New Caledonian capital Noumea in 2009, reports Radio New Zealand’s Sally Round.

This summit’s aim is to have a common stance going into COP21.

The Overseas Minister George Pau-Langevin told the Tahiti Infos website it was important for the islands to feel included.

“This meeting before COP21 will enable the Head of State to speak directly to the small Pacific island states which sometimes feel a little isolated and victims of climate change,” Pau-Langevin said.

Among the aims of COP21 is the central neede to achieve a legally binding agreement on global temperature rise.

A general goal is to limit warming to two degrees but the Pacific island countries have a much more ambitious target of a 1-point-five degree limit.

While the pre-talks summit shows that France is keen to listen to the concerns of Pacific island countries, Pau-Langevin is cautious about setting temperature limits before the crucial talks.

“If we manage to get a commitment approaching two degrees then damage would be limited,” he is quoted.

The summit comes as countries like the Marshall Islands, Kiribati and Fiji take an increasingly assertive stance over climate change.

Fiji’s Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama says Pacific countries must stand up to bigger nations at COP21.

“I have indicated, I will not go to Paris without putting up the strongest of fights and neither will my fellow island leaders. We are united. We are determined,” Bainimarama is quoted.

Tuvalu’s prime minister Enele Sopoaga says it would be a shame for world leaders to miss a unique opportunity to put the interests of humanity ahead of corporate profits and economic advancement.

“This is the moment that leaders must seize, that cannot lose. We have no option. Failure is not an option for us in Paris.”

So will the France-Oceania Summit be a chance for Pacific islands to get support from an influential industrialised nation in their quest at COP21? asks Radio New Zealand.

RNZI’s French Pacific specialist Walter Zweifel says for France the gathering is a geopolitical manoeuvre.

“The summit is a further step for Paris trying to integrate the French Pacific territories into the region’s architecture.

“Jacques Chirac in 2003 put to the Pacific Islands Forum leaders that they should make French Polynesia and New Caledonia full members. That’s almost achieved and as France intends to stay in the region, it is close to indirectly being on the inside of the Forum.”

- Pacific Beat