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Thursday, 27 October 2022 15:40

New British PM Sunak will not attend COP27 climate summit

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British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak will not attend the COP27 climate summit which begins in Egypt next month, his office said on Thursday, with other senior ministers going instead to allow him to focus on domestic issues and a major fiscal statement.

Sunak became prime minister on Monday, and has delayed an autumn fiscal statement to Nov. 17 as he looks to tackle a cost-of-living crisis and restore international economic credibility damaged in the short tenure of his predecessor Liz Truss.

Truss had been expected to attend, but on Thursday Sunak's Downing Street office said the new prime minister was not planning to go to the summit.

"The Prime Minister is not expected to attend the summit in Egypt due to other pressing domestic commitments, including preparations for the autumn statement," a Downing Street spokesperson said.

The spokesperson said that Britain remained "absolutely committed to supporting COP27 and leading international action to tackle climate change and protect nature," having hosted the COP26 summit in Glasgow last year.

Just under a year ago Britain trumpeted the agreement of the Glasgow Climate Pact, finalised in dramatic circumstances after month of arduous negotiations that ran until the final minutes. The deal was meant to ensure the world still has a chance to avert the worst impacts of global warming.

"The UK will be fully represented by other senior ministers, as well as COP President Alok Sharma," the spokesperson said.

"They will be working to ensure that countries continue to make progress on the ground-breaking commitments made at COP26 in Glasgow."

Sunak has told world leaders he has spoken to in his first week in charge that he does intend to go to the leaders summit of G20 in Indonesia, which occurs a few days before the autumn statement.

The autumn statement will detail spending cuts and medium term fiscal forecasts as the finance ministry seeks to plug a medium term budget shortfall of as much as 40 billion pounds ($46.28 billion). (Reuters)

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