Current:Home > NewsBaku to the future: After stalemate, UN climate talks will be in Azerbaijan in 2024 -FinTechWorld
Baku to the future: After stalemate, UN climate talks will be in Azerbaijan in 2024
View
Date:2025-04-16 17:56:47
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — For years, climate change has been a factor — not the only one — in wars and conflicts. Now for the first time, it’s part of a peace deal.
A long-time stand-off that had turned the choice for next year’s United Nations climate talks into a melodrama and mystery resolved as part of a prisoner swap settlement between Azerbaijan and Armenia. It set the stage for the COP29 climate talks in 2024 to be in a city where one of the world’s first oil fields developed 1,200 years ago: Baku, Azerbaijan.
It also means that for back-to-back years an oil powerhouse nation will be hosting climate talks — where the focus is often on eliminating fossil fuels. And it will become three straight years that the U.N. puts its showcase conference, where protests and civil engagement often take center stage, in a nation with restrictions on free speech.
In 2021, the COP was in Glasgow, where the modern steam engine was built and the industrial revolution started.
“It’s very ironic,” said longtime COP analyst Alden Meyer of the European think-tank E3G.
Climate talks historian Jonna Depledge of Cambridge University said, “there’s nothing inherently wrong with that. On the contrary, this is where the change needs to needs to happen.”
“The fact they want to step up and be a climate leader is a positive thing,” said Ani Dasgupta, head of the World Resources Institute and a former Baku resident. “How will they do it? We don’t know yet.”
It’s also about peace. In its announcement about a prisoner exchange, the governments of Armenia and Azerbaijan wrote: “As a sign of good gesture, the Republic of Armenia supports the bid of the Republic of Azerbaijan to host the 29th Session of the Conference of Parties ... by withdrawing its own candidacy.”
Climate change often causes drought, crop failures and other extreme weather that is a factor in wars from sub-Saharan Africa to Syria, Dasgupta said. So it’s nice for climate change to be part of peace for the first time, he said.
This month’s talks in Dubai were planned more than two years in advance, while the Baku decision is coming just 11 months before the negotiations are supposed to start.
The United Nations moves the talks’ location around the world with different regions taking turns. Next year is Eastern Europe’s turn and the decision on where the talks will be held has to be unanimous in the area. Russia vetoed European Union members and initially Azerbaijan and Armenia vetoed each other.
But the peace decision cleared the way for Baku, and all that’s left is the formality of the conference in Dubai to formally accept the choice for 2024, United Nations officials said.
___
Read more of AP’s climate coverage at http://www.apnews.com/climate-and-environment
___
Follow Seth Borenstein on Twitter at @borenbears
___
Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (42)
Related
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Demonstrators stage mass protest against Netanyahu visit and US military aid to Israel
- Psst! Madewell’s Sale Has Cute Summer Staples up to 70% Off, Plus an Extra 40% off With This Secret Code
- Will Phoenix Suns star Kevin Durant play in Olympics amid calf injury?
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Joe Burrow haircut at Bengals training camp prompts hilarious social media reaction
- Mattel introduces two first-of-their-kind inclusive Barbie dolls: See the new additions
- China says longtime rival Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah sign pact to end rift, propose unity government
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- North Dakota judge will decide whether to throw out a challenge to the state’s abortion ban
Ranking
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Keanu Reeves Shares Why He Thinks About Death All the Time
- Elon Musk Says Transgender Daughter Vivian Was Killed by Woke Mind Virus
- Missouri prison ignores court order to free wrongfully convicted inmate for second time in weeks
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Blake Lively Shares Proof Ryan Reynolds Is Most Romantic Person on the Planet
- George Clooney backs Kamala Harris for president
- Meet Leo, the fiery, confident lion of the Zodiac: The sign's personality traits, months
Recommendation
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
Google’s corporate parent still prospering amid shift injecting more AI technology in search
Honolulu prosecutor’s push for a different kind of probation has failed to win over critics — so far
Schumer and Jeffries endorse Kamala Harris for president
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
Hailee Steinfeld and Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen go Instagram official in Paris
Building a Cradle for Financial Talent: SSW Management Institute and Darryl Joel Dorfman's Mission and Vision
Bette Midler and Sheryl Lee Ralph dish on aging, their R-rated movie 'Fabulous Four'