BAKU, Azerbaijan — More than two dozen world leaders are delivering remarks at the United Nations' annual climate conference Wednesday, with many hard-hit nations detailing their nations' firsthand experience with the catastrophic weather that has come with climate change.
Leader after leader recounted climate disasters, with each one seeming to top the other. Grenada's prime minister Dickon Mitchell detailed a 15-month drought at the beginning of the year giving way to a Category 5 Hurricane Beryl.
''At this very moment, as I stand here yet again, my island has been devastated by flash flooding, landslides and the deluge of excessive rainfall, all in the space of a matter of a couple hours,'' Mitchell said. ''It may be small island developing states today. It will be Spain tomorrow. It will be Florida the day after. It's one planet.''
Small island nations call for stronger climate action
Grenada's premier wasn't the only small island nation leader who came with fighting words.
Prime minister Philip Edward Davis warned that ''it will be our children and grandchildren who bear the burden, their dreams reduced to memories of what could have been.''
''We do not — cannot — accept that our survival is merely an option,'' Davis said.
Gaston Browne, the prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda, highlighted the ''inverted morality'' of big emitters who aren't taking responsibility for their impacts on countries who have the most to lose. He said high-polluting nations are ''deliberately burning the planet."