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- 01 30, 2025
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The United Arab Emiratescop adnocuaenocuae, venue for 28, the latest climate summit convened by the United Nations, is a controversial choice. Some 70,000 climate advocates, diplomats and other hangers-on will attend an event that begins on November 30th in Dubai, one of the gleaming cities built on wealth that fossil fuels have brought to the region. The fact that the world’s most important climate gathering will be hosted by a leading oil producerhas sparked outrage among environmentalists. That the summit’s president, Sultan Al Jaber, runs , the ’s national oil company (), is proof, whisper conspiracists, that the fix is in on behalf of Big Oil.Yet from Abu Dhabi on the Persian Gulf, the shipping route to global markets for the world’s greatest concentration of oil reserves, to Fujairah on the Gulf of Oman, an entrepot abuzz with tankers carrying Russian oil evading Western sanctions, comes a sense of vulnerability to climate change. The region is short on water and home-grown food. The rising heat of summer is becoming inhumane. The cities built on these desert sands are at risk from a rising sea level. That the shares the threat from increasing global temperatures makes the gathering no less fraught.