Sunday, 23 November 2025

G20 defies Donald Trump, with leaders jointly signing statement endorsing Paris agreement.

Extract from ABC News

G20 Summit Johannesburg

G20 members signed a joint statement in South Africa, strengthening their commitment to the Paris climate agreement.  (Reuters: Yves Herman)

In short:

Leaders of the world's top economies have signed a joint statement at the G20 summit in South Africa, strengthening their commitment to the Paris Agreement.

The only G20 member not present was US President Donald Trump, who urged world leaders not to sign the joint declaration.

On the sidelines of the summit, Anthony Albanese met European Union leaders to progress talks on a free trade deal, hoping to see it settled in early 2026. 

G20 leaders meeting in South Africa

It also highlighted the stark challenges, and costs, countries are facing meeting their emissions reduction targets, also known as "nationally determined contributions".

"We highlight that the needs of developing countries to implement their nationally determined contributions are estimated at $US5.8-5.9 trillion for the pre-2030 period," the statement reads.

Fossil fuel phase-out

As Mr Albanese was preparing to sign the G20 Leaders' Declaration, his Energy Minister Chris Bowen was endorsing a separate climate agreement at the COP30 conference in Brazil.

The "Belém Declaration on the Transition Away from Fossil Fuels" contains "the strongest language on phasing out fossil fuels that Australia has ever supported", according to Michael Poland from the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Initiative.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa shakes Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's hand.

Cyril Ramaphosa welcomed Anthony Albanese at the G20 summit.  (ABC: Luke Stephenson)

"We support the call to advance a road map for the transition away from fossil fuels to scale-up collective action and implementation," the Belem Declaration reads.

"Fossil fuels are the main drivers of global greenhouse gas emissions and that the projected CO₂ emissions from continued fossil fuel production, licensing, and subsidies are incompatible with limiting the temperature rise to 1.5°C."

G20 sign South Africa

The G20 summit is being held at the Nasrec Expo centre, in Johannesburg, South Africa. (Reuters: Esa Alexander)

A spokesperson for Mr Bowen said Australia was "instrumental in delivering the landmark agreement by all countries at COP28 to transition away from fossil fuels" and supports the Belém declaration "including its call for a road map to give effect to that commitment".

Coal and gas are two of Australia's biggest and most lucrative exports and domestically, the Albanese government acknowledges gas will be required in Australia's energy mix "through to 2050 and beyond".

Asked whether that was compatible with the Belém statement, Mr Albanese answered "yes".

"[Gas] is needed, it's part of the transition which is occurring. What you need to back up renewables is firming capacity," he said.

"Our position is the same today as it was yesterday."

Albanese says no change in policy

The prime minister made it clear he wouldn't be altering any existing policies to align with the ambition stated in the declaration.

On the sidelines of the G20 summit, Mr Albanese held talks with Germany's chancellor and European Union leaders to progress talks on a free trade deal, expressing his desire to see the agreement settled in the first quarter of 2026.

He also met Türkiye's President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who invited him to attend next year's Anzac Day commemoration in Gallipoli.

Australia last week handed the hosting rights for next year's COP31 climate conference to Türkiye — resolving a years-long impasse — with Mr Bowen to take on the summit's presidency.

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