SYDNEY, Nov 20 (AFP): Australia framed its ceding of next year's COP to Turkey as a "big win", but the loss sparked disappointment on Thursday in the Pacific islands, which had been slated to co-host the climate meet.
Canberra pulled the plug on its long-touted bid after Turkey, the other prospective host, refused to back down.
A deal proposed Wednesday to end the protracted battle over who would stage COP31 will see the summit take place in Turkey, with Australia instead presiding over negotiations in the run-up to the event.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese framed the outcome as a "big win".
He said there would be a pre-COP meeting focused on climate financing in the Pacific that would help raise awareness of the challenges facing the region.
"That will enable us to prioritise the issues that are confronting the Pacific," he said, including "the very existence of countries like Tuvalu and Kiribati, the issue of our oceans, the issue of other impacts".
Papua New Guinea's top diplomat, however, told AFP he was "disappointed".
"We are all not happy," Foreign Minister Justin Tkatchenko told AFP, lashing the entire COP summit process as a waste of time. "What has COP achieved over the years? Nothing," the top diplomat said. "It's just a talk fest and doesn't hold the big polluters accountable."
It would have been the first time the region had hosted the UN's premier climate summit.
Pacific Island leaders have long criticised COP summits for marginalising their voices or offering limited practical solutions as they battle the mounting costs of climate change.
They hoped that co-hosting duties could change that and raise awareness.
But winning the COP hosting would also have drawn extensive scrutiny on Australia's green record.