
-
Trump flirts with Ukraine security, with narrow margins
-
US sends three warships near Venezuela coast
-
Celtic held by Kairat Almaty in Champions League play-off
-
North Carolina braces for flooding from 'Enormous' Erin
-
Arsenal could hijack Spurs' bid for Palace star Eze - reports
-
Namibian Shalulile equals South African scoring record
-
PlayStation prices rise as US tariffs bite
-
Games publisher kepler on cloud nine after smash hits
-
Thirteen arrested over murders of Mexico City officials
-
Seville storms past Lyles for Lausanne 100m win
-
Google unveils latest Pixel phones packed with AI
-
Brazil records 65 percent drop in Amazon area burned by fire
-
Threat from massive western Canada wildfire eases
-
England women's rugby coach Mitchell says World Cup favourites' tag 'irrelevant'
-
US ramps up attack on international court over Israel
-
Palace transfer targets Eze and Guehi to start in European tie
-
North Carolina coasts prepare for flooding as Erin churns offshore
-
India test-fires ballistic missile ahead of US tariff hike
-
Antarctic climate shifts threaten 'catastrophic' impacts globally
-
Tall ships sail into Amsterdam for giant maritime festival
-
Trump raises pressure on central bank, calls for Fed governor to resign
-
Woods to head PGA Tour committee to overhaul golf
-
Google packs new Pixel phones with AI
-
How Europe tried to speak Trump
-
Ombudsman gives Gosden another International, Derby hero Lambourn loses
-
Eurovision returns to Vienna, 11 years after Conchita Wurst triumph
-
England expects at Women's Rugby World Cup as hosts name strong side for opener
-
Marseille's Rabiot, Rowe up for sale after 'extremely violent' bust-up: club president
-
French champagne harvest begins with 'promising' outlook
-
England unchanged for Women's Rugby World Cup opener against the USA
-
Stock markets diverge as traders eye US rate signals
-
Russia says must be part of Ukraine security guarantees talks
-
Historic Swedish church arrives at new home after two-day journey
-
Winds complicate wildfire battle in Spain
-
Nestle unveils method to boost cocoa yields as climate change hits
-
UK set for more legal challenges over migrant hotels
-
Russia says discussing Ukraine security guarantees without Moscow 'road to nowhere'
-
Torrential Pakistan monsoon rains kill more than 20
-
Record number of mosquito-borne disease outbreaks in Europe: health agency
-
Stock markets diverge after Wall Street tech sell-off
-
Chinese troops swelter through rehearsal for major military parade
-
Defence begins closing arguments in Hong Kong trial of Jimmy Lai
-
World champions Springboks to play Japan at Wembley
-
Kneecap rapper in court on terrorism charge over Hezbollah flag
-
Israel approves plan to conquer Gaza City, calls up reservists
-
Oasis star Noel Gallagher piles praise on 'amazing' brother Liam
-
German minister says China's 'assertiveness' threatens European interests
-
Afghanistan bus crash death toll rises to 78
-
Historic Swedish church inches closer to new home
-
Israel defence minister approves plan to conquer Gaza City

'We felt it first': Climate-threatened islands battle fossil fuels at COP28
Despite being among the least to blame for global warming, small islands have been some of the first to witness the catastrophic impacts of climate change.
"Everybody feels it now with the fires and the droughts and the hurricanes," Tina Stege, the Marshall Islands climate envoy told AFP, "but we felt it first and the effects will hit us fastest."
At the COP28 UN climate talks in Dubai, small island states have been key in the drive for the most ambitious temperature targets and a fossil fuel phase-out, as they battle devastating storms and rising sea levels.
The Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS), a group of 39 small islands in the Pacific, Caribbean and elsewhere, have been at the forefront of the battle to keep the world on a path towards limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels -- a key commitment of the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement.
With global temperature rise threatening to soar past that threshold, the small islands are among the most determined to "keep 1.5 alive".
There is "no alternative", said AOSIS chair Cedric Schuster, during a COP28 address on Monday.
"For our small island developing states, everything centres on keeping global warming below the 1.5C limit," he added.
- Rising threat -
In a stark reminder of the high stakes, Australia last month agreed to a landmark deal with Tuvalu to offer sanctuary to the island nation's 11,000 residents should their home be engulfed by rising seas, as expected this century.
Two of Tuvalu's nine coral islands have already largely disappeared under the waves, and climate scientists fear the entire archipelago will be uninhabitable within the next 80 years.
And on Tuesday, the Marshall Islands announced a national adaptation "survival plan" for navigating their home's uncertain future in the face of climate impacts.
It outlined measures against rising seas, population relocation within its borders and suggested exile only as a last resort.
"In some islands, when you drive, you'll see there is ocean on one side, lagoon on [the other] side," Fiji's chief negotiator at COP28, Amenatave Yauvoli, told AFP between negotiations.
"So what happens when there is a high tide?" he asked.
Negotiations in Dubai are focused on the future of fossil fuels, with several nations aiming for a commitment to phase out oil, gas and coal.
AOSIS nations are proponents of such action -- both publicly and in private meetings.
"They are part of the very active groups on these issues," along with the Latin American and Caribbean nations aligned under the AILAC bloc and the European Union, revealed an observer familiar with the negotiations.
- 'Extreme vulnerability' -
That does not mean the economies of these vulnerable islands are immune from fossil fuel use.
Some countries in the AOSIS group rely on hydrocarbons, including Trinidad and Tobago and Papua New Guinea, which is riding a global wave of liquified natural gas (LNG).
But the islands want wealthy producing nations, such as the United States and Saudi Arabia, to divest first.
Resource-rich countries "need to lead the way and those who are able to must lead by example," said Stege, the Marshall Islands envoy, "and the rest of us need to quickly follow."
Some nations are pushing for a less ambitious reduction in fossil fuels, with suggestions of using technologies like carbon capture and storage that promise to trap emissions before they go into the atmosphere.
But critics point out that this is a more expensive solution that is untested at scale.
It has also been seen as a way to avoid an agreement to phase out fossil fuels.
"I think for high level ambition, we have to look at phasing out because otherwise this world cannot survive," said Yauvoli.
Stege added that small islands' understanding of "our extreme vulnerability" as a planet helped lay the foundation for their role in fighting the climate crisis.
"When you understand that your neighbours, your family and your aunt are at risk," she added, "you have to take action."
R.Braegger--VB