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‘This process has been undermined, because it’s controlled by fossil fuel companies' – Vanuatu climate minister

Jonathan Watts

Colombia will host a first international conference on the phase out of fossil fuels in April next year, according to advocates of more ambitious action to eliminate the main source of the gases that are heating the planet.

The South American country, which has demonstrated strong climate leadership in recent years, is among a group of 17 nations that have joined the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Initiative which held a press conference on its plans at Cop30 on Monday.

Colombia is expected to formally unveil its plans on 20th November, but high-level representatives from several of its partner countries explained why they wanted to move faster than the United Nations process. Many were from small island states, which are existentially threatened by rising sea levels and stronger storms.

Ralph Regenvanu, Minister of Climate Change of Vanuatu, said: “We are trying to bring ambition back into this process because this process has been undermined, because it’s controlled by the fossil fuel companies.”

He pointed out that Vanuatu is already pushing ahead. The island nation was at the forefront of the legal challenge that led to the International Court of Justice’s ruling earlier this year that countries have an obligation to align their policies with the Paris Agreement target to limit emissions to 1.5C. He said Vanuatu was on course for remove fossil fuels completely from its electricity supply by 2032 and was now working with other partners in the region to create a fossil-fuel-free Pacific.

Vanuatu’s Climate minister Ralph Regenvanu ahead of a landmark International Court of Justice (ICJ) session on climate change in July. Photograph: John Thys/AFP/Getty Images

But he said this would come to nothing if the big emitters did not follow: “We need the whole world to do with us,” he said. “We need some sort of multilateral mechanism to solve this. This proposal (for a fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty) is really putting the leaves on the trees.”

The initiative aims to bring nations, indigenous communities, civil society actors and others together to draft a treaty. Speakers spelled out how signatories to the initiative would help one another on trade and financing to reward those willing to move ahead and demonstrate alignment to the goals of the treaty

Tzeporah Berman, Chair and Founder of the Fossil Fuel Treaty Initiative, reminded attendees that 86% of the carbon pollution heating the planet comes from oil, gas and coal, yet – despite a rising toll from climate disasters – the producers of these fuels continue to expand production.

“The climate crisis is a fossil fuel crisis,” she said. “It’s not a transition if we continue to grow the problem. That’s why we’re so very thrilled to have the leadership of these countries who are building the fossil fuel. I hope that through the policy and legal work just presented you can all begin to build a picture of what a successful treaty will look like, and how we can incentivise other countries to join.”

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