-
England set for World Cup warm-up friendlies in Florida heat
-
Sabalenka pulls out of Stuttgart Open with injury
-
BTS kick off world tour with spectacular South Korea show
-
UK animal charity rescues over 250 dogs from single home
-
Barton Snow has a lot to crow about in Foxhunters Chase
-
Reigning champion Nick Rockett out of Grand National
-
'Free' McIlroy launches his Masters repeat bid
-
US envoy warns EU won't win AI race 'bringing others down'
-
Trump, Vance not 'meddling' in Hungary vote, says US envoy to EU
-
Jihadists kill 18 Nigerian troops including senior brigadier general
-
Mideast war threatens Africa's supply of humanitarian medicine
-
Seven World Cup winners start for England in Women's Six Nations opener
-
China FM vows deeper ties with North Korea on trip to Pyongyang
-
Sinner survives energy dip, end of streak to see off Machac
-
IMF expects to provide vulnerable economies hit by Iran war up to $50 bn
-
Oil prices jump back toward $100 on Mideast ceasefire doubts
-
Player tells Tiger to 'get a chauffeur'
-
Believers rejoice as Jerusalem's holy sites re-open
-
EU lawmakers want to tax Big Tech to fund budget
-
Croke Park boss eager to stage Fury-Joshua heavyweight clash in Dublin
-
Cannes Festival promises escapism in Hollywood-lite edition
-
Stabbed for saying no: Is online misogyny fueling violence in Brazil?
-
Russia's Nobel Prize-winning rights group Memorial branded 'extremist'
-
McIlroy ready for early start as 90th Masters begins
-
Fonseca eases into Monte Carlo last eight meeting with Zverev
-
Verstappen set for fresh F1 angst as engineer nears Red Bull exit - reports
-
Farhadi, Almodovar, Zvyagintsev to vie for top Cannes Festival prize
-
Ambitious Como's Champions League bid tested by Serie A leaders Inter
-
Emperor penguins listed as endangered species: IUCN
-
Six new caps for France for women's Six Nations opener
-
Calls for US-Iran truce to extend to Lebanon after Israeli strikes
-
Nepal ex-PM Oli gives defiant message after release from custody
-
Despite Middle East truce, airlines fear long-term disruptions
-
Memorial: Russia's Nobel Prize winning rights group facing 'extremism' ban
-
Artemis crew's families enthralled by messages from space
-
Champions Cup 'heartbreak' driving Toulouse revenge mission
-
Shallow Indonesian quake damages houses, injures residents
-
Nepal ex-PM Oli released from custody after 12 days: police
-
'Chills': Artemis astronauts say lunar flyby still washing over them
-
Ukraine lets firms deploy air defences against Russian attacks
-
Mountain-made: Balkan sheepdog eyes future beyond the hills
-
Escaped wolf forces school closure in South Korea
-
Three ways Orban gives himself an edge in Hungary's vote
-
Trump says US military to stay deployed near Iran until 'real agreement' reached
-
Gender-row boxer Lin targets Asian Games after bronze on comeback
-
US-Iran truce shows cracks as war flares in Lebanon
-
In Romania, many Hungarians root for Orban in vote
-
Home where young Bowie dreamt of 'fame' to open to public
-
Crude rises, stocks fall on fears over nascent Iran ceasefire
-
Waiting for DeepSeek: new model to test China's AI ambitions
Papua New Guinea to boycott 'waste of time' UN climate summit
Papua New Guinea on Thursday declared a boycott of next month's UN climate summit, branding the global warming negotiations a "waste of time" full of empty promises from big polluters.
While plenty have criticised the annual COP summit in the past, it is rare for any government to so totally dismiss the UN's premier climate talks.
"There's no point going if we are falling asleep because of jet lag because we're not getting anything done," Foreign Minister Justin Tkatchenko told AFP ahead of November's COP29 summit in Azerbaijan.
"All the big polluters of the world promise and commit millions to assist in climate relief and support. And I can tell you now it's all going to consultants."
The island of New Guinea is home to the third-largest expanse of rainforest on the planet, according to the World Wildlife Fund, and has long been celebrated as one of the "lungs of the earth".
Impoverished, flanked by ocean, and already prone to natural disasters, Papua New Guinea is also considered to be highly vulnerable to the unfolding perils of climate change.
"COP is a total waste of time," Tkatchenko said.
"We are sick of the rhetoric as well as the merry-go-round of getting absolutely nothing done over the last three years.
"We are the third-biggest rainforest nation in the world. We are sucking up the pollutants of these major countries. And they are getting away with it scot-free."
- 'Talk fest' -
The COP summit in 2015 hammered out the landmark Paris Agreement, under which almost every country in the world has agreed to slash emissions to limit soaring global temperatures.
But subsequent gatherings have been dogged by growing criticism, stoked by a perception that big polluters are using their sway to limit further climate action.
Meanwhile, adaptation funds set up through COP to help developing nations have been accused of sluggish bureaucracy that fails to grasp the urgency of the crisis.
Civil society groups banded together last year to urge a boycott of the COP summit hosted by the United Arab Emirates, claiming the meeting would "greenwash" the petrostate's poor climate credentials.
Underwhelmed by proposed emissions cuts, dozens of African nations led a temporary walkout of developing nations during the 2009 COP talks in Copenhagen.
And Ukraine has pressed its allies to avoid this year's summit if Russian leader Vladimir Putin shows face.
But Papua New Guinea is among the first nations to have voiced such a full-throated call to boycott the COP summit altogether.
"Why are we spending all this money going to the other side of the world going to these talkfests," said Tkatchenko.
- 'No traction' -
Papua New Guinea is one of five Pacific nations involved in a pivotal International Court of Justice case that will soon test whether polluters can be sued for neglecting their climate obligations.
Low-lying Pacific nations such as Tuvalu could be almost entirely swallowed by rising oceans within the next 30 years.
Tkatchenko said the decision to pull out of COP talks had been applauded by others within the Pacific bloc.
"I'm speaking up on behalf of the smaller island states that are worse off than Papua New Guinea. They were getting no traction and acknowledgement at all."
Papua New Guinea would instead seek to strike its own climate deals through bilateral channels, said Tkatchenko, flagging that negotiations were already under way with Singapore.
"With like-minded countries like Singapore, we can do 100 times more than COP.
"They have a big carbon footprint, and we would like to think about how they can work with Papua New Guinea to fix that up."
A key meeting ahead of COP29 ended in frustration earlier this month, with countries making little progress on how to fund a new finance deal for poorer nations.
COP -- or conference of parties -- is the top United Nations climate change conference, an annual summit in which nations look to determine legally binding climate commitments.
G.Stevens--AMWN