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UN Confirms Madrid as New Location for Climate Summit 


FILE - Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, pictured during a parliamentary session in September 2019, said Nov. 1 that U.N. confirmation that a climate summit would be held in his country in December was "excellent news."
FILE - Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, pictured during a parliamentary session in September 2019, said Nov. 1 that U.N. confirmation that a climate summit would be held in his country in December was "excellent news."

The United Nations global climate meeting next month will take place in Madrid rather than Chile, which had to bow out as host on short notice, officials said Friday.

U.N. climate chief Patricia Espinosa said representatives of the body that organizes the annual conference had accepted Spain's offer to host it in the country's capital Dec. 2-13.

Chilean President Sebastian Pinera announced Wednesday that he was canceling plans to host the meeting, as well as a summit of Asia-Pacific leaders, to focus on restoring security in his country following weeks of protests in which at least a dozen people have died.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's office offered Thursday to step in, sending delegates from around the world scrambling to change their travel plans.

Sanchez, who is facing a national election Nov. 10, celebrated Friday's decision.

``Excellent news: Madrid will host the global climate meeting from Dec. 2-13. Spain is already at work to guarantee its staging of COP25. Our government firmly keeps its commitment to lasting progress and a just ecological transition,'' Sanchez wrote on Twitter.

FILE - Environmental activist Greta Thunberg of Sweden addresses the Climate Action Summit in the U.N. General Assembly, at U.N. headquarters, Sept. 23, 2019.
FILE - Environmental activist Greta Thunberg of Sweden addresses the Climate Action Summit in the U.N. General Assembly, at U.N. headquarters, Sept. 23, 2019.

Among those who were planning to attend the conference in Chile was Swedish activist Greta Thunberg, whose climate protests have helped inspire tens of thousands of mostly young people to take to the streets demanding greater efforts from world leaders.

The teenager made a high-profile crossing from England to New York by sailboat earlier this year and planned to travel overland to Santiago to speak at the meeting. Thunberg refuses to fly because of aviation's big carbon footprint.

A little help?

After the move to Madrid was confirmed Friday, Thunberg appealed for help.

``It turns out I've traveled half around the world, the wrong way,'' she tweeted.

``Now I need to find a way to cross the Atlantic in November. … If anyone could help me find transport I would be so grateful,'' she added.

Thunberg voiced regret about not being able to visit Central and South America as planned, saying she had been looking forward to doing so.

``But this is of course not about me, my experiences or where I wish to travel. We're in a climate and ecological emergency,'' she said.

The scale of the Madrid conference wasn’t immediately clear. More than 20,000 people attended last year's climate conference in Katowice, Poland.

The 25th Conference of the Parties, or COP25, is meant to work out some of the remaining unresolved issues on the rules that countries must follow in their efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The meetings have also become a venue for countries to announce new initiatives to respond to global warming.

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