COP30 in Brazil adopts climate deal that omits calls to phase out fossil fuels
- On Saturday, COP30 President Andre Correa do Lago gavelled a deal among nearly 200 countries in Belém, Brazil, omitting any commitment to phase out fossil fuels after overnight negotiations.
- Facing resistance from the Arab Group of nations and key exporters, negotiators overran talks by more than 24 hours as oil-producing nations including Saudi Arabia and Russia resisted fossil-fuel language, prompting the presidency to seek consensus amid procedural clashes.
- The deal prioritised finance, so it calls for rich nations to at least triple adaptation funding by 2035 and launches voluntary initiatives backed by roughly 90 countries.
- Following the gavel, several delegations including the European Union, Switzerland, Colombia and Panama criticised the final text as falling short while plenary discussions were suspended amid accusations of ignoring requests to speak as many delegates prepared to leave.
- Brazil pledged to produce two voluntary roadmaps over the next year and co-host a fossil-fuel transition summit in Colombia in April, while scientists warn current policies cut emissions by just 12% versus the 60% needed to meet the 1.5C temperature goal.
187 Articles
187 Articles
The dream has burst: At the World Climate Conference, Europe wanted to push for an exit from fossil energies – and failed. Federal Environment Minister Schneider wonders about lack of support. But outside the continent, Europe's behavior is increasingly being watched with suspicion.
COP30 seals $1.3 trillion climate finance plan, but no fossil-fuel exit deal
COP30 ended with an agreement to mobilize at least $1.3 trillion annually by 2035 for climate action, including tripling adaptation finance and operationalizing the loss and damage fund adopted at COP28.
Nearly 200 countries reached a modest agreement on Saturday at the UN climate summit COP30, hosted by the host country Brazil in the Amazon region, which excluded a plan to phase out fossil fuels.
The countries at the UN climate summit COP30 in Brazil agreed on an agreement on Saturday. Cautiously positive reactions are mixed with harsh criticism in the aftermath. “The agreement is far from what the science requires,” says Mary Robinson, the UN's former envoy for climate issues.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 42% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium































