Along with trying to address the impacts of climate change, Tuvalu is exploring an innovative way to maintain its sovereignty, culture and economy in the face of physical destruction
Tag: climate change
Addressing Climate Change is Safeguarding Human Rights
The climate crisis is a human rights crisis, writes PM of Vanuatu
World Bank bolsters community participation in Climate-resilient rural projects in Solomon Islands
A new project to boost climate change and disaster risk resilience at provincial and community levels in the Solomon Islands
UN Ocean Conference 2022: Our ocean health sits within our hands
Minimising and addressing ocean acidification, deoxygenation and ocean warming is an Interactive Dialogue during the UN Ocean Conference, writes Director of Climate Change Resilience, SPREP
Vanuatu Climate Justice Campaign to elevate climate ambitions
Vanuatu’s Climate Justice Campaign is not to seek compensation for financial damages but to ensure climate ambitions are elevated, says Vanuatu’s Climate Diplomatic Task Force
Pacific Islands voices dominate in Bonn
Pacific nations reminded the world’s climate negotiations body that a fair, engaged and transparent process is central to the work they do
SPREP advocates for new and innovative financing to address loss and damage in the Pacific
Pacific calls for new and innovative sources of finance to minimise Loss and Damage associated with the adverse impacts of climate change
Climate change a bigger threat than war, Fiji tells security summit
Fiji’s Minister for Defence told security summit that “the single greatest threat to our very existence is climate change.”
Climate change and the future of the United States-Marshall Islands relationship
The U.S should renew its Compact of Free Association with Marshall Islands and do more to tackle climate change if it hopes to atone for historical injustices and counter China’s influence, writes Laura Brewington
‘Degrading to Pacific nations’: The view from Tuvalu on coverage of a crisis
Island states should not be ‘forced to choose a side’ – and national security must begin with climate change, Tuvalu foreign minister tells writer Toby Manhire