1202 Pres. Moon calls on G20 nations to help tackle climate change
  • 5 years ago
South Korean President Moon Jae-in met the U.S. President and other world leaders at the G20 Summit in Argentina this weekend... to gain their support on the climate change issue.
He's now left South America... and is on his way to New Zealand for a summit there.
Travelling with the president, Shin Se-min reports.

President Moon Jae-in has asked for the support of the world’s biggest economies in dealing with a major challenge facing the globe: climate change.
In a speech to the leaders on the last day of the G20, President Moon shared his administration’s ambitious goal of cutting the country's reliance on coal and nuclear power and increasing the proportion of electricity it gets from renewable sources,… something he’s promised to raise to 20 percent by the year 2030.
He said the G20 nations, which emit 80 percent of the world's greenhouse gases,… should be leading efforts to control pollution,… for one thing by supporting progress in that direction by developing nations.
The president said... securing funds to support developing nations is important,... and he urged the G20 countries to get the private sector in particular more involved .
And that,... he said, can be done through global climate organizations like the Green Climate Fund and the Global Green Growth Institute,... and he welcomed the adoption of the "Buenos Aires Update",... part of the G20 nations’ efforts to achieve sustainable development.
Also, working on his North Korea diplomacy,... the president met with the leaders of the Netherlands and South Afirca.
Both countries are non-permanent members of the UN Security Council,... and the Netherlands also sits on the North Korea Sanctions committee.


"After handshakes and photo-ops with other world leaders,… President Moon now sets off on the last leg of his week-long trip. New Zealand for a state visit.
The South Korean leader will continue his economic diplomacy by seeking harmony between his New Southern Policy and Wellington's Pacific Reset.
Shin Se-min, Arirang News."
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