Fifty-seven countries launch fossil fuel transition effort

Fifty-seven nations gathered in Santa Marta, Colombia, to advance plans for phasing out coal, oil and gas. The meeting took place without major producers such as the United States, China, India, Russia and Saudi Arabia. It occurred against the backdrop of the Iran war and major oil supply disruptions.

The First Conference on Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels ran from April 24 to 29. Co-hosted by Colombia and the Netherlands, the gathering focused on practical steps rather than formal treaty talks. Ministers and envoys met in small circles with civil society and Indigenous representatives present. Officials described the format as refreshing and groundbreaking compared with traditional United Nations climate meetings.

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a cabinet meeting discussing India's 2047 vision and alternative energy.
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Pm modi stresses 2047 vision and alternative energy in ministers meeting

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi held a four-and-a-half-hour meeting with his council of ministers on Thursday to review reforms and address the impact of the West Asia crisis on energy supplies.

Colombia and the Netherlands hosted a conference in Santa Marta, attended by 57 countries, to develop roadmaps for phasing out fossil fuels. Major emitters like China and the US did not participate. Participants committed to national plans ahead of future meetings.

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Environment ministers from G7 nations declared progress at their two-day Paris meeting, despite excluding climate change from the agenda to avoid friction with the United States. France's ecology minister Monique Barbut said the pragmatic focus on consensus yielded seven declarations.

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The Trump administration has threatened countries supporting a proposed carbon tax on global shipping with visa restrictions, tariffs, and port fees. Despite this pressure, a slim majority of nations backed the original Net-Zero Framework at a recent U.N. meeting.

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