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Tuvalu · 2026-06-08

Tuvalu PM voices disappointment over trust fund's fossil fuel holdings ahead of COP31 hosting role

Prime Minister Feleti Teo told AFP he was "personally disappointed" after an investigation revealed that Tuvalu's US$200 million trust fund — managed by advisory firm Mercer since 2022 — had invested in coal mining, gas exploration and the world's largest oil refinery, calling it "not a good look" for a nation renowned for climate advocacy. Tuvalu says it is conducting internal due diligence. Separately, Environment Minister Maina Vakafua Talia called for "transformational change" at the 8th Global Environment Facility Assembly in Samarkand, urging that small island and least-developed states be treated as especially vulnerable. The day's coverage also highlighted Tuvalu's role co-hosting a Pacific Pre-COP and Leaders' Event with Australia and Fiji in October ahead of COP31, while wider reporting flagged the existential threat posed by the potential collapse of Antarctica's Thwaites "Doomsday Glacier."

Why it matters

Tuvalu, a low-lying atoll nation halfway between Australia and Hawaii, is among the world's most climate-exposed states and has built its diplomatic identity around urgent climate action — including pioneering a fossil-fuel non-proliferation treaty. The revelation that its own survival fund is invested in oil and coal exposes a damaging contradiction just as Tuvalu prepares to spotlight Pacific climate vulnerability at COP31, where Australia is positioning itself as a climate leader and President of Negotiations.

🔎 Ground signal

Tsunami advisories were issued for parts of the Pacific after a 7.8 earthquake near the Philippines, a reminder of the region's compounding hazards; Tuvalu also remains a member of the PNA Vessel Day Scheme, the same tuna-rights body that just expelled neighbouring Tokelau and threw its budget into crisis.