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PM Shehbaz Sharif likely to meet President Donald Trump today

Field Marshal Asim Munir also expected to attend the meeting
Published 25 Sep, 2025 08:59am

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif is expected to meet US President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington today (Thursday).

During the meeting, likely to take place around 4pm (US time) in the Oval Office, a detailed discussion is anticipated between the two leaders on global and regional issues.

Field Marshal Asim Munir is also expected to attend the meeting. Prime Minister Shehbaz will be accompanied by high-ranking officials and senior ministers.

It is worth noting that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and US President Donald Trump had previously met during a session with leaders of Islamic countries in New York.

Commitment to climate finance

Speaking at a climate event in New York on Wednesday, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif called upon the international community to honour its commitment on climate finance, stressing that debt-driven finance cannot address the climate catastrophe confronting vulnerable nations like Pakistan.

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“Loans over loans, [and] adding to loans is not a solution,” the prime minister said at the event convened by UN Secretary-General António Guterres, along with the President of Brazil (COP-30 Host), for member states to present new nationally determined contributions (NDCs) with year 2035 targets.

Shehbaz expressed Pakistan’s commitment to be part of the solution to the climate crisis, hoping that the international community would also honour its commitment for the sake of the country’s future generations.

He reminded delegates that Pakistan was still reeling from the scars of the 2022 floods, which inflicted losses exceeding $30 billion and displaced millions.

“This year, intense monsoon rains, cloudbursts, flash floods and devastating urban flooding have impacted more than five million people, destroyed 4,100 villages, and claimed over 1,000 precious lives,” he added.

Highlighting Pakistan’s minimal contribution to global greenhouse gas emissions, the prime minister said that despite a negligible contribution to global greenhouse gas emissions, “We bear impacts far beyond our share”.

However, he pointed out that our commitment to delivering on our climate agenda, remained steadfast and unwavering.

“In our 2021 nationally determined contribution, Pakistan committed to an unconditional 15% reduction in projected greenhouse gas emissions by 2030.”

As part of the overall target of cutting emissions by 50%, he shared that Pakistan had already delivered on its unconditional pledge of a 15% reduction.

“Renewables are presently providing over 32% of Pakistan’s power mix. Solar energy has grown sevenfold since 2021,” the prime minister added.

Furthermore, he emphasised that 23,000 hectares of mangrove forests had been restored. “However, the implementation of Pakistan’s national adaptation plan is hampered and hampered severely due to inadequate international climate finance,” he regretted.

Shehbaz announced increase in the share of renewables and hydropower to 62% of the country’s energy mix by 2035, expanding nuclear energy capacity by 1,200 megawatt by 2030, shifting 30% of transport to cleaner mobility by 2030, and establishing 3,000 charging stations nationwide, scaling up climate’s smart agriculture, safeguarding water security, and advancing the implantation of 1 billion trees.

Earlier, in his remarks, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said that it was still possible to limit global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees by century’s end.

He told the gathering that clean energy was powering jobs, growth and sustainable development, besides generating the fastest and cheapest electricity and insulating economies from volatile fossil fuel markets.

“The bottom line: clean is competitive, and climate action is imperative,” he remarked.

He said that the Paris Agreement had made a difference in the last 10 years and “now, we need new plans for 2035 that go much further, and much faster.”

The UN chief stressed that “COP30 in Brazil must conclude with a credible global response plan to get us on track and “show a credible path to mobilising the $1.3 trillion annually in climate finance by 2035, as agreed at COP29 in Baku,” including identifying funding sources, making finance accessible, and ensuring accountability.

He also underlined that “developing countries that did least to cause the crisis are suffering most,” and called for “effective debt relief, and scaled-up solutions like debt swaps and disaster pause clauses”.

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antonio guterres

UN CHIEF

Bangladesh

PM Shehbaz Sharif

Washington, D.C.

President Donald Trump

Indian cricket team

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PM Trump meeting

Shehbaz Trump meeting

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