G7 environment ministers deem Paris talks success despite sidelining climate change for U.S.

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.

G7 environment ministers wrapped up their two-day meeting in Paris, focusing on nature protection and common challenges while avoiding direct discussion of global warming to appease the United States under President Donald Trump.

France's ecology minister Monique Barbut told reporters, "Climate change, as I said quite frankly, was not directly among these priorities. That is why we chose not to address this fundamental issue, because if we had, we would have risked some partners leaving the negotiating table."

She highlighted the adoption of seven declarations by France, Italy, Japan, Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, and the United States as "exceptional" results amid challenges to environmental multilateralism. Japan's Environment Minister Hirotaka Ishihara said Washington's representative engaged fully, with no pressure felt. The U.S. sent Usha-Maria Turner, an EPA assistant administrator, who declined to comment when approached.

Canada's Minister Julie Dabrusin noted that protecting nature and climate "went hand in hand." Italy's Gilberto Pichetto Fratin reported total convergence on "forever chemicals" in water. The declarations covered ocean conservation, environmental security, natural disasters, and water health.

Ministers took initial steps toward a new alliance for biodiversity funding. France plans to announce a €600 million ($701 million) fund in June for conservation in over 100 African national parks, mostly from philanthropic donors.

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Donald Trump arriving at G7 summit in France, stepping off his plane with flags in background.
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Trump arrives in France for G7 summit as leaders focus on U.S.-Iran deal and Ukraine

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President Donald Trump arrived Monday in Évian-les-Bains, France, for the three-day Group of Seven summit, where leaders are expected to discuss a newly announced U.S.-Iran memorandum and the war in Ukraine alongside broader economic and security issues.

President Trump is preparing to depart for a G7 summit in France where the U.S.-led war in Iran is expected to overshadow the agenda. The meeting was originally planned around economic and security topics but has shifted due to rising energy costs and geopolitical tensions.

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European heads of state and government have welcomed an agreement between the US and Iran to end the Iran war. At the G7 summit in Évian, they highlighted opportunities for stability but called for further negotiations.

In the latest development of the Strait of Hormuz crisis, representatives from 49 states at the Hormuz Conference in Paris agreed on a defensive military mission to secure the strait. France and the UK will lead, with Germany and Italy focusing on mine clearance. Iran has conditionally lifted its blockade pending the Lebanon ceasefire.

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