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G7 to agree on climate and conservation targets as summit ends

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G7 leaders were on Sunday urged to take urgent action to secure the future of the planet, as they finalized new conservation and emissions targets to curb climate change, and wrapped up a three-day summit where revived Western unity has been on show.

Veteran environmentalist and broadcaster David Attenborough told the gathering of the worldтАЩs richest nations the natural world was тАЬgreatly diminishedтАЭ and inequality was widespread.

тАЬThe question science forces us to address specifically in 2021 is whether as a result of these intertwined facts we are on the verge of destabilizing the entire planet?тАЭ he said.

тАЬIf that is so, then the decisions we make this decade тАФ in particular the decisions made by the most economically advanced nations тАФ are the most important in human history.тАЭ

The leaders, holding their first in-person gathering in nearly two years due to the coronavirus pandemic, will agree to protect at least 30 percent of both land and ocean globally by the end of the decade.

The тАЬNature CompactтАЭ struck to try to halt and reverse biodiversity loss is also set to see them commit to nearly halve their carbon emissions by 2030, relative to 2010.

It includes mandating the use of тАЬunabated coalтАЭ тАФ fuel whose emissions have not gone through any filtering тАФ тАЬas soon as possible,тАЭ ending most government support for the fossil fuel sector overseas, and phasing out petrol and diesel cars.

Hailing the pact, host Boris Johnson said the G7 wanted to тАЬdrive a global Green Industrial Revolution to transform the way we live.тАЭ

тАЬThere is a direct relationship between reducing emissions, restoring nature, creating jobs and ensuring long-term economic growth,тАЭ the British prime minister added.

Climate change was a key G7 priority for Britain at the summit in Carbis Bay, southwest England, as it tries to lay the groundwork for hosting the U.N. COP26 environment summit in November.

But before the pledges had even been formally adopted, environmental campaigners blasted them as lacking enforcement and the necessary scope.

тАЬDespite the green soundbites, Boris Johnson has simply reheated old promises and peppered his plan with hypocrisy, rather than taking real action to tackle the climate and nature emergency,тАЭ said Greenpeace U.K.тАЩs executive director John Sauven.

He also noted wealthy nations had a тАЬdismal track recordтАЭ over the last decade honoring international climate finance commitments.

Ties renewed

The G7 тАФ Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and United States тАФ were eager to renew ties after the discord of Donald TrumpтАЩs four years in power.

Joe Biden has sought to turn the page on his predecessorтАЩs international isolationism, seeking to open a new chapter in the Western alliance after Trump alienated and exasperated it at every turn.

The U.K. government turned to its royals to add a dash of grandeur to the G7 detente, with Queen Elizabeth II and her son Prince Charles hosting a Friday night reception with G7 leaders and European Union chiefs also attending.

Joined Saturday by counterparts from Australia, South Africa and South Korea тАФ with India also taking part remotely тАФ they then enjoyed an evening beach barbecue around fire pits, featuring a sea shanty band and toasted marshmallows.

Overall, the summit was largely consumed with the tough task of forging a more comprehensive response to the pandemic.

Leaders agreed to a declaration to help prevent future pandemics and are expected to commit to donate 1 billion COVID-19 vaccine doses to poor countries.

However, there they also faced pushback, with critics arguing it provides just a fraction of what is needed to inoculate the world against the virus, which has claimed nearly four million lives globally and is still spawning new variants.

BritainтАЩs former prime minister Gordon Brown called the summit тАЬa missed opportunityтАЭ and an тАЬunforgivable moral failure.тАЭ

тАЬWe needed 11 billion vaccines, weтАЩve only got offered a plan for one billion. We needed $50 billion allocated to the vaccination of the world, and (have) only $5 billion,тАЭ he told Sky News Sunday.

тАЬMillions of people will go unvaccinated and thousands of people, IтАЩm afraid, will die.тАЭ

Tea with the queen

The allies also unveiled U.S.-led plans to counter China in infrastructure funding for poorer nations, promising to тАЬcollectively catalyzeтАЭ hundreds of billions of investment.

The тАЬBuild Back Better WorldтАЭ (B3W) project is aimed squarely at competing with BeijingтАЩs trillion-dollar Belt and Road infrastructure initiative, which has been widely criticized for saddling small countries with unmanageable debt.

The leaders will publish further details on the B3W in the traditional end-of-summit communique, alongside issuing the Carbis Bay Declaration on health policy.

On other shared foreign policy challenges, on promoting тАЬopen societies,тАЭ Washington is pushing for a stronger stance on ChinaтАЩs alleged forced labor practices against its Muslim Uyghur minority.

Current tense relations with Moscow, in particular over its cyberactivity, are also expected to feature.

Most of those present will reconvene Monday in Brussels for a NATO meeting before Biden heads on to his first summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Geneva, vowing to deliver a blunt message about Russian behavior.

Before that, the U.S. president will visit the queen at Windsor Castle late Sunday, where he and first lady Jill Biden will take tea with the queen.

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