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Fiji and Tuvalu to host pre-COP31 climate meetings

By Thomson Reuters Feb 25, 2026 | 7:22 PM

SYDNEY, Feb 26 (Reuters) – Fiji and Tuvalu will host key meetings in the lead-up to the COP31 climate summit in 2026, the Pacific Islands Forum said on Thursday.

The ​bloc said Fiji will host the pre-COP31 meeting and ‌Tuvalu will host a special leaders’ component, under an agreement negotiated between Australia and Turkey.

The low-lying Pacific islands are on the front line of global climate change, facing rising sea levels and related crises that have forced ‌some ​residents to move to higher ground.

Australia and ⁠Turkey had been locked ⁠in a long-running tussle to host the U.N. conference, the world’s main forum for driving climate action, before reaching a split-hosting deal in November.

The agreement gave Turkey the hosting rights ​of the main COP31 event with Australia leading talks and the Pacific hosting pre-summit meetings.

“I am pleased to announce that ⁠following a political consultative process, the ⁠COP31 pre-COP meeting will be convened in Fiji in ​October 2026, with a special Leaders component to be held in ​Tuvalu,” Jeremiah Manele, PIF chair and Solomon Islands prime minister, ‌said in a statement on social media.

“Pre-COP is a chance to show that when it comes to climate change, the most vulnerable nations can lead, and the world’s most powerful nations can ⁠listen.”

The statement added Palau would also host a “special climate event” as part of the 55th PIF leaders meeting in the country in September.

Australia ⁠said the pre-COP ‌meetings would be an “unprecedented opportunity to bring the ⁠world to the Pacific, to experience climate impacts ​and ‌solutions firsthand”.

“Pacific countries have long been leaders on ​climate action, ⁠and their voices are central to shaping the global response,” Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said in a statement.

“Hosting these COP meetings is an opportunity for the global community to hear directly from the people of the Pacific.”

(Reporting by Christine Chen in Sydney; Editing ​by Kevin Buckland)