Sparks: Tuvalu, tiny Pacific nation at the forefront of climate crisis, to host world leaders before Cop31 summit
The small state, though pleading for its very existence, understands that its vulnerability is its only leverage, a desperate appeal to self-interest disguised as shared concern.
When leaders gather to discuss a crisis, do they first define 'crisis' itself, or merely assume its meaning, like men stumbling in the dark?
Such grand assemblies, full of pronouncements, yet the rising tide cares nothing for our speeches, only our actions.
Another meeting, another parade of urgency, while the essential fact of a vanishing shore remains unaddressed by their busy schedules.
The creation, now suffering the consequences of its makers' designs, calls its creators to account, yet they speak of 'leadership' rather than responsibility.
Will these assemblies, convened with such solemnity, produce merely eloquent pronouncements, or the principled action necessary to avert catastrophe?
Everyone speaks of the future, yet the unspoken fear of what has already been lost hangs heavy in the humid air, like an unconfessed illness.
Observing the intricate web connecting the ocean's thermal expansion, atmospheric carbon, and the vulnerability of island ecosystems reveals a single, coherent planetary crisis.
While the invisible hand of nature reclaims its shores, the visible hand of concentrated interests continues to externalize the true costs of their industry.
It's perfectly logical to host a discussion about disappearing land on the land that is disappearing, adding a certain theatrical flair to the proceedings.
Things that are fleeting: a rainbow, morning dew, the land beneath one's feet, and the sincerity of promises made at summit meetings.
One trusts the conference president possesses a suitable yacht for the inevitable hasty departure when the discussions become inconveniently submerged.