- Foreign Secretary will meet G7 partners in Karuizawa, Japan
this week.
- Discussions will focus on accelerating support for Ukraine,
ensuring a free and open Pacific region and promoting the
Government’s priority of increasing economic growth.
- Visiting the Pacific islands, Cleverly will listen to and
offer support for regional priorities, in particular climate
change
Foreign Secretary, , arrives in Japan today
(Sunday 16 April) for the G7 Foreign Ministers’ meeting ahead of
a four-day visit to the Pacific Islands and New Zealand. The
combined visit will focus on promoting a free and open
Indo-Pacific - as the region becomes the centre of growing
geopolitical competition.
At the three-day G7 conference (16-18 April) in Karuizawa,
Cleverly will meet G7 Foreign Ministers, including the Japanese
Minister for Foreign Affairs Yoshimasa Hayashi, to discuss
closerties around security and defence. He will also discuss
opportunities presented by the UK’s recent accession to the CPTPP
trade agreement, which strengthens the UK’s global trading
relationship with its partners in the region and will help drive
growth across the country in line with the Government’s five
priorities.
Cleverly will also announce that the UK will join the US, Japan
and Australia as a member of the Blue Dot Network which will give
a quality mark to infrastructure projects, promoting higher
standards. It will operate globally, including in emerging
markets, as a recognised symbol of quality and therefore will
attract private sector investment and public support.
The gap between infrastructure needs and finance has been growing
and is forecast to reach US$15 trillion by 2040. This initiative
aims to start narrowing that gap, promoting quality investment in
projects across the world that are in desperate need of funding –
from transport improvements to upgrading hospitals, schools and
expanding access to reliable electricity.
Cleverly will then travel to Papua New Guinea and the Solomon
Islands, before joining the New Zealand Foreign Minister Nanaia
Mahuta for a joint programme in Samoa. They will then travel on
to Wellington together for engagements on Saturday.
During his visit to the Pacific islands, Cleverly will announce
financial support and the deployment of UK expertise to the
region, chiefly for regional priorities such as climate change.
This includes£4.5m of new funding to connect communities in Papua
New Guinea and across the Pacific to clean energy sources –
providing an alternative to common but expensive and polluting
generators.
Foreign Secretary said:
“With increasing competition in the region, it is more
important than ever that we promote a free and open Indo-Pacific.
It is critical to the UK, to our economy, our security and our
values. Throughout my visit, I will build on commitments to
our friends across the Pacific nations in their bid to promote
peace and prosperity in the region”.
At the G7, the Foreign Ministers will also discuss the need to
maintain collective support for Ukraine and how international
support from the UK and other G7 partners can be used most
strategically to help Ukrainian forces continue their progress on
the battlefield and secure a lasting peace.
The visit comes following the announcement that the UK will join
the regional trading bloc - CPTPP (Comprehensive and Progressive
Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership) - as its first European
member. The bloc is one of the largest free trade areas in the
world, home to more 500 million people and will be worth 15% of
global GDP once the UK joins. It is estimated that joining will
boost the UK economy by £1.8 billion in the long run.
Joining CPTPP will also support further jobs and create
opportunities for companies by giving British businesses improved
access to the countries that will be gateway to the wider
Indo-Pacific region, which is projected to make up the majority
of global growth in the future.
The Integrated Review Refresh published in March 2023 set out how
the UK will prioritise the Indo-Pacific through a long-term
strategic footing, making the region a permanent pillar of the
UK’s international policy.