The city of Antalya will host the COP31 summit in 2014, bringing an end to a longstanding conflict between Turkiye and Australia regarding the location of the biggest UN climate meeting.
As Turkiye takes over the presidency of the official meeting, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced on Thursday morning that Australia and Turkiye had reached an agreement to hold negotiations in the lead-up to the UN climate meeting in 2026.
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According to Albanese, “What we’ve come up with is a big win for both Australia and [Turkiye],” Albanese told ABC Radio Perth, an Australian public broadcaster.
The COP30 climate summit in Belem, Brazil, is set to conclude on Friday, according to the announcement.
Low-lying South Pacific nations, which are increasingly threatened by rising sea levels and climate-driven disasters, had been pushing for COP31 to be held as a “Pacific COP” next year.
Turkiye’s bid to host the summit was rejected despite Australia’s efforts.
At its summit, which would have a more global focus than a regional focus, Turkiye had stated that as an emerging economy, it would encourage solidarity between rich and poor nations.
Due to the unusually lengthy process of obtaining hosting duties and the absence of appropriate controls for a situation where two nations wanted to host at the same time, Turkiye will now only have one year to organize the meeting at the Antalya Expo Center.
The Conference of the Parties (COP) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change has a tradition of alternating between five geographic areas: Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean, Central and Eastern Europe, and Western Europe, among others.
Western Europe and others also include Australia and Turkiye, so Australia will now have to wait another five years before submitting an application to host the meeting once more.
Fitsum Assefa Adela, the Ethiopian minister for planning and development, announced last week that the country had already secured African negotiators’ support for COP32 in 2027.
Disappointed that this situation has come to an end.
Australia’s rejection of its bid to cohost the COP with its Pacific island neighbors quickly sparked a furor in Papua New Guinea (PNG).
Justin Tkatchenko, the foreign minister of PNG, told the AFP news agency, “We are all not happy and disappointed it’s ended this.”
What has COP accomplished over time? Nothing, according to Tkatchenko. It’s just a talk show and doesn’t hold the major polluters accountable, it says.
Australian senator Steph Hodgins-May of the Australian Greens party claimed Australia’s decision to host the meeting was in line with the Labor government’s “continued coal and gas approvals” as Australia continues to increase its fossil fuel exports.
This is incredibly disappointing, but it demonstrates how much the world acknowledges Australia’s significant contribution to the dangerous deterioration of climate change, according to May.
Both Australia and Turkiye rely heavily on coal, oil, and gas for energy, but both nations have made progress in renewable energy, according to the International Energy Agency.
The conference was being held in Adelaide, the state’s capital, to promote renewable energy progress in the state of South Australia.
The city’s struggle to deal with a significant toxic algal bloom that has been occurring offshore for eight months made the proposal more difficult.
One of the many issues brought on by warming oceans, an issue that climate scientists and other experts believe can be addressed, is the problem of algae blooms, which they claim can only be resolved quickly by reducing our dependence on fossil fuels.





