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Cop30: calls for new urgency to talks as studies show global warming may reach 2.5C – latest updates

As the summit goes into its second week, complex issues remain with anxiety growing over conference outcomes

Cop30: calls for new urgency to talks as studies show global warming may reach 2.5C – latest updates

5.00pm GMT Let’s kick off with a reminder of why any of this matters. As political leaders debate whether now is finally the right time to take decisive action on fossil fuels, extreme weather supercharged by the burning of oil, gas and coal is causing death and destruction in communities across the world. In Gaza, heavy rain is compounding the humanitarian disaster for displaced Palestinians seeking refuge in tents and other woefully inadequate makeshift shelter, according to the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA). Rainfall inundated sprawling encampments across Gaza on Saturday, converting dirt roads into contaminated waterways, and soaking freezing families sheltering in tents with their belongings. Israel has destroyed or damaged more than 80% of all buildings and homes since launching its full scale assault in October 2023, as well as razing farmland, gardens and other vegetation that helps absorb rainwater and control flooding. Israel has killed dozens of Palestinians since the supposed ceasefire deal last month, while continuing to block entry of tents and mobile homes into the enclave. Refugees and other forcibly displaced people are among the most vulnerable to climate disasters, according to a report by the UN refugee agency last week. The number of countries reporting both conflict and disaster-related displacement has tripled since 2009. In Europe, heavy rains and high winds from Storm Claudia left at least three people dead in Portugal and dozens injured in Spain and Portugal, as well as causing major damage in parts of the UK. People in the town of Monmouth in Wales were submerged under water over the weekend after the River Monnow burst its banks. This comes after flash floods killed at least 237 people in Valencia in late October, making it one of the deadliest weather-related disasters to ever hit Spain. Meanwhile, the climate crisis is causing a different sort of disaster in Iran. Only 1mm of rain has fallen in the capital Tehran this year, a place where the average annual rainfall between 1991 and 2000 was 350mm, and signals the sixth straight year of drought. As my colleague Patrick Wintour in Tehran reports, authorities have rationed supplies, launched cloud seeding operations and are weighing up evacuating parts of the capital. Prayers for rain are being held across the country. Seven weeks into the start of Iran’s rainy season and more than 20 provinces have not yet had a drop, and the number of dams with less than 5% of their reservoir capacity has risen from eight to 32. Snow cover has decreased by 99% nationwide compared with the same time last year, and in Tehran the temperature has been a balmy 20C in what is the cold season. Rather than talk about fossil fuels and the climate crisis, some religious leaders have suggested that drought is a message from God. Iran has the world’s third-largest proven oil reserves and second-largest natural gas reserves. Its per capita CO2 emissions were 9.6 metric tons in 2024, compared to 5.6 tCO2e in the EU27 and 13.6 tCO2e in the US. 4.37pm GMT Hello, this is Nina Lakhani the Guardian’s climate justice reporter in NYC, taking over from my lovely colleague Ajit Niranjan in Berlin. 4.27pm GMT Saudi ArabiaHere’s an in-depth look at why Saudi Arabia is the biggest obstructor of climate action at UN Cop summits, by Guardian environment editor, Damian Carrington. Related: $170,000 a minute: why Saudi Arabia is the biggest blocker of climate action Can you imagine someone giving you $170,000? What would you buy? Can you imagine getting another $170,000 one minute later? And the handouts then continuing every minute for years? If so, you have a feel for the colossal cash machine that is Saudi Arabia’s state oil company Aramco, the world’s biggest producer of oil and gas last year. That tidal wave of cash keeps the authoritarian kingdom afloat, as it lavishes money on fossil fuel subsidies for its citizens, soft power projects like the football World Cup and mind-boggling construction projects. But it is also why the drive for accelerating climate action, principally getting the world off fossil fuels, is seen as an existential threat to Saudi Arabia: its economy and even its ruling royal family. For decades, Saudi Arabia has fought harder than any other country to block and delay international climate action – a diplomatic “wrecking ball” saying that abandoning fossil fuels is a fantasy. Yet the country is now also making a whirlwind switch to renewable power at home. In another contradiction, slowing climate action worsens the impacts on a desert kingdom that is extremely vulnerable to global heating and where its 36 million people already contend with conditions “at the verge of livability”. How can these contradictions be understood, and can countries desperate to fight a climate crisis that is already killing a person a minute outflank Saudi obstruction? “The Saudis are not crazy.” says Karim Elgendy, an expert on climate and energy in the Middle East. “But they don’t want to be a failed state.” Saudi obstruction has continued at Cop30, for example in discussions on Saturday about the Global Stocktake – the work that the chasm between the cuts in carbon emissions needed and those being pledged. A group of nations including the UK, EU and small island states proposed highlighting important elements from previous reports in a new text, including the urgency of keeping 1.5C within reach and addressing the emissions gap. The Arab group, of which Saudi Arabia is the dominant member, and the African group opposed the inclusion of any such elements. Former US vice president Al Gore called out Saudi blocking tactics at Cop30: “I hope that the rest of the world will stand up to this obscene greed and recklessness on the part of the kingdom.” 4.10pm GMT The push for a “just transition” to a clean economy has been gaining momentum, with growing support from civil society and developing countries for the creation of a “Belem Action Mechanism” as a formal body under the UN’s climate change framework. My colleague Damien Gayle spoke to one activist about what that means in practice. What is Bam, a key civil society ask at #cop30 in Belém? Ayshka Najib, a young activist, explains it in words even a journalist can understand pic.twitter.com/4oLHOD5gEh— Damien Gayle (@damiengayle) November 17, 2025 3.29pm GMT Sometimes it is easy to forget what diplomats spewing acronyms at climate negotiations are doing it for. This is Neha Singh’s story, as told to journalist Anuradha Nagaraj. Every morning, I am up by 5.30am-6am because I have to cook, get ready, and leave on time for our shift, which begins at 8.30am. But this summer – May, June, July and August – the temperature always stayed around 46C, sometimes even hitting 50C (122F). My routine changed. I live in a rented room with a friend on the top floor of a two-storey building. We had frequent power cuts in our rural neighbourhood those days, with lights often going off at 3am. We would not get a good night’s sleep but would still get up by 6am to try to have a bath early before the water in our tank on the roof would become very hot. We would not feel like cooking because our top-floor room was so hot. I would have a cold drink instead of a cup of tea. The company is around 3km from where I stay and getting an auto [autorickshaw] is difficult. So, I walk to work. The streets would be deserted, with shops closed and everyone inside their homes. Our 30-minute walk has no shaded area, no place to sit and rest. We just walk and walk, the sun directly on us, till we reach the company drenched in sweat. Inside, there is some cooling. There was a difference of almost 10C. And I would drink the cold water available here since at home we did not have a filter and drank the tank water, which was very hot. Then I did my shift. Read the full story here. Related: ‘I couldn’t speak. I couldn’t breathe’ – This is climate breakdown 3.16pm GMT There’s an intriguing line in the update note put out by the Brazilian Presidency of Cop30 on Sunday evening – my colleague Fiona covered the key points here. The line is: “Expectation that the Paris Agreement will once again achieve near universal membership and coverage of global emissions.” That is a veiled reference to the US, the world’s second biggest polluter, and which under Donald Trump has pulled out of the Paris Agreement and failed to send anyone to Belém. It says consensus of views from the nations actually at Cop30 is that the US will rejoin after the Trump era ends. 2.54pm GMT 'This process has been undermined, because it’s controlled by fossil fuel companies' - Vanuatu climate minister Colombia will host a first international conference on the phase out of fossil fuels in April next year, according to advocates of more ambitious action to eliminate the main source of the gases that are heating the planet. The South American country, which has demonstrated strong climate leadership in recent years, is among a group of 17 nations that have joined the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Initiative which held a press conference on its plans at Cop30 on Monday. Colombia is expected to formally unveil its plans on 20th November, but high-level representatives from several of its partner countries explained why they wanted to move faster than the United Nations process. Many were from small island states, which are existentially threatened by rising sea levels and stronger storms. Ralph Regenvanu, Minister of Climate Change of Vanuatu, said: “We are trying to bring ambition back into this process because this process has been undermined, because it’s controlled by the fossil fuel companies.” He pointed out that Vanuatu is already pushing ahead. The island nation was at the forefront of the legal challenge that led to the International Court of Justice’s ruling earlier this year that countries have an obligation to align their policies with the Paris Agreement target to limit emissions to 1.5C. He said Vanuatu was on course for remove fossil fuels completely from its electricity supply by 2032 and was now working with other partners in the region to create a fossil-fuel-free Pacific. But he said this would come to nothing if the big emitters did not follow: “We need the whole world to do with us,” he said. “We need some sort of multilateral mechanism to solve this. This proposal (for a fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty) is really putting the leaves on the trees.” The initiative aims to bring nations, indigenous communities, civil society actors and others together to draft a treaty. Speakers spelled out how signatories to the initiative would help one another on trade and financing to reward those willing to move ahead and demonstrate alignment to the goals of the treaty Tzeporah Berman, Chair and Founder of the Fossil Fuel Treaty Initiative, reminded attendees that 86% of the carbon pollution heating the planet comes from oil, gas and coal, yet – despite a rising toll from climate disasters – the producers of these fuels continue to expand production. “The climate crisis is a fossil fuel crisis,” she said. “It’s not a transition if we continue to grow the problem. That’s why we’re so very thrilled to have the leadership of these countries who are building the fossil fuel. I hope that through the policy and legal work just presented you can all begin to build a picture of what a successful treaty will look like, and how we can incentivise other countries to join.” 2.35pm GMT Indigenous groups are among those to have criticised the Tropical Forests Forever Facility (TFFF), one of Brazil’s headline proposals for Cop30, as a “false solution” that perpetuates a harmful capitalist logic that cannot benefit the environment. In a letter handed to Cop30 president André Corrêa do Lago on Sunday, civil society groups, including indigenous groups that have travelled to Belém from across the Amazon region, condemned capitalism as “the main cause of the growing climate crisis”. The document is the culmination of two years of preparation, and a week-long parallel “people’s summit” in the Amazonian city that brought together 23,000 registered participants from more than 65 countries. “The energy transition is being implemented under capitalist logic,” it asserts. “We are against any false solution to the climate crisis that perpetuates harmful practices, creates unpredictable risks, and diverts attention from transformative solutions based on climate justice and the peoples, in all biomes and ecosystems,” the letter said, specifically naming the TFFF. “Finally, we affirm that the privatisation, commodification, and financialisation of common goods and public services directly contradict popular interests.” The document, handed to do Lago on Sunday at a closing ceremony for the people’s summit, is intended to outline the demands of civil society ahead of week two of the Cop30 summit, where high-level negotiations take place. It calls on the summit to recognise air, forests, water, land, minerals, and energy sources as “common goods of the people”, and demands “the demarcation and protection of indigenous lands and territories … since they are the ones who guarantee the living forest”. Calling for a complete end to deforestation, it adds: “We demand the implementation of popular agrarian reform and the promotion of agroecology” as well as a “fight against environmental racism and the construction of just cities and vibrant peripheries through the implementation of environmental policies and solutions … “We also demand that those guilty of economic and socio-environmental crimes be tried and punished.” Civil society participation in the summit is now expected to wind down as the Cop30 negotiations move in to their second week. However, there appear to be plenty of activists remaining around the city, and there will no doubt be more pressure applied to the presidency and key countries’ negotiating teams as the summit progresses. 2.19pm GMT The hours of walking – or running – involved in covering Cop30 are starting to take their toll. Medical teams covering the conference say one of the main complaints they have to treat is blisters. Amanda Dantas, technical consultant for the government health service team, told local reporters that foot ailments are among the top three problems they have seen so far, along with, dehydration, and gastrointestinal problems. “Many people who walk a lot have injured feet… People come in heels, hurting their feet…. But nothing serious,” Dantas told Amazon-based news organisation Sumaúma. Close to 50,000 people are registered at the conference centre, which spans several kilometres. Those arriving by taxi have still further to ground to cover because non-registered vehicles have to stop at an exclusion zone another kilometre outside the gates. Participants with step-calculators on their smartphones or watches say they cover eight to ten kilometres every day between the pavilions, negotiation rooms, and bus, taxi, and ride-sharing pick-up points. The field hospital operated by Brazil’s National Health System (SUS) consists of five doctors, five nurses, and two managers. They have so far treated 120 complaints. Updated at 2.32pm GMT 1.54pm GMT The first global register of how much carbon dioxide is being buried underground has been published – it was 45m tonnes in 2023. In one sense that’s not a large amount – it’s about 0.1% of global CO2 emissions that year. Furthermore, about 90% of it was pumped into oil fields to push out more oil, largely in the US and Brazil. This seems to support criticisms of carbon capture and storage as a niche technology supported by fossil fuel companies aiming simply to continue to sell their products. But the world is now certain to overshoot the 1.5C temperature target set in the Paris agreement. To get back to that relatively safe level, billions of tonnes of carbon dioxide are going to have to be removed from the atmosphere and buried. So Sam Krevor, who led the work and is professor of subsurface carbon storage at Imperial College London, is looking at the positive side. He says the data shows CCS is working at industrial scale, and is growing fast – 9% a year over the last decade – showing a similar acceleration to renewable energy for example. That means that CO2 captured either from fossil-fuel powered industrial sources that are otherwise hard to clean up or captured directly from the air can, at least in principle, be safely buried at scale. He also says newer CCS projects are not linked to oil fields, not least as all the wells drilled into them mean the CO2 could escape. A big issue for CCS is that, unlike wind and solar power, it does not result in a product that can be sold – it’s a waste disposal exercise, Krevor says. So government policy encouraging CCS becomes really important in driving its growth. A policy push made China was the third biggest nation for CCS in 2023. More surprising is that the arrival of climate-sceptic Donald Trump as president of the US in January did not see CCS tax credits axed or weakened like many green policies – in fact, the Trump administration has strengthened the tax credits, Krevor says. CCS is not a get-out-of-jail-free card: replacing fossil fuels with renewables and reversing the destruction of forests remain top priorities. But it’s also likely the world will need significant CCS to reverse the global temperature overshoot. 1.32pm GMT Coal giant South Korea pledges to ditch dirtiest fossil fuel South Korea – the world’s fourth-largest importer of thermal coal importer and home to the seventh-largest coal power fleet – has joined a group of about 60 countries pledging to wean itself off the fossil fuel. Korea and Bahrain have been announced as the latest members of the “powering past coal alliance“, which also counts about 120 sub-national governments, businesses and organisations as members. Bahrain has no coal-fired generators and its membership just means it promises not to build any. But South Korea buys about 8% of thermal coal sold on the global market and gets about 30% of its electricity from burning it. The pledge commits it to retiring 62 coal plants over the next 15 years. Forty already have confirmed closure dates. South Korea’s minister of climate, energy and environment, Kim Sung-hwan, said the pledge demonstrated the country’s commitment to “accelerating a just and clean energy transition”. “The shift from coal to clean power is not only essential for the climate. It will also help both the Republic of Korea and all other countries increase our energy security, boost the competitiveness of our businesses, and create thousands of jobs,” he said. The country has faced criticism for dropping a 100% renewable energy target and not acting faster on coal. The Climate Action Tracker found it should phase out coal power by 2030 and gas power shortly after if its action were to be compatible with the goals of the Paris agreement. South Korea is also a significant importer of metallurgical coal, used in steelmaking. It has substantial nuclear and gas-power fleets, each supplying roughly 30% of its electricity. Updated at 1.35pm GMT 1.09pm GMT Poor and vulnerable countries need reassurance that Cop30 will produce agreement on a just transition, and more support from rich countries for adaptation efforts in the developing world, the Burkina Faso negotiator Princess Abze Djigma has told the Guardian. “We need predictable finance,” said Abze, a descendent of the legendary warrior princess Yennenga, who lived in the 12th century and is considered the forebear of the Mossi people. “We need grant-based finance, because countries like mine, the least developed countries, we are facing a big debt burden. Some countries are paying more to service debts than to build schools or health services.” In an investigation of climate finance, the Guardian has found that a large proportion of climate finance is still being provided in the form of loans rather than grants, though it is hard to establish how much countries are paying in interest or repayments. “It’s taking money out [of poor countries’ budgets] that could go to more schools, more sanitation, more health services, more development,” said Abze. Countries were also still feeling the after-effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, she added. “We still haven’t recovered completely from the slowdown of the economy.” She also called for Cop30 to set more ambitious goals on adaptation finance for poor countries. “We need to find the kind of climate finance that will help country like Burkina Faso to implement its national adaptation plan. We need to be able to store water, to manage water from heavy floods. The technology exists where you can have artificial underground lakes. But we need money for that.” Infrastructure to store water, which both avoids flooding and can be used in dry periods, would improve food security, in a virtuous circle. “That would also create jobs for the youth, to stay in the countryside,” she said. “Nobody likes to migrate. You migrate because you’re forced to, because you don’t see hope.” Abze leads negotiations for Burkina Faso on the just transition, a key issue at Cop30. “I have a mandate, starting from Princess Yennenga. That is the legacy, and I have to respond, to improve the life of the community, and that is that message that we bring into our fellows, to our brothers and sisters.” Updated at 1.10pm GMT 12.49pm GMT There was a brief flurry of noise in the “where on Earth will Cop31 be held” guessing game on the weekend. For those who have not been paying attention: Australia and Turkey have rival bids to host next year’s Cop. They have for years. Australia’s bid is to co-host a “Pacific Cop” with Pacific island nations. Under UN rules, the decision must be resolved by consensus. Australia has had the overwhelming support of the countries in the Western Europe and Others Group, from which next year’s host must be selected – but both countries remain in the race. If the stand-off isn’t resolved, hosting responsibilities fall by default to Germany, which is home to the UN climate headquarters in Bonn. But Germany doesn’t want to host Cop31. The leaders of the two countries, Anthony Albanese and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, have recently exchanged correspondence over a potential deal to sort it out, without success. Reuters reported on Sunday that Turkey had proposed on the sidelines of the UN general assembly in September that the two countries jointly lead the conference. Australia also made proposals, including that Turkey could host other events linked to Cop31. The Guardian reported on these negotiations at the time and since. The latest news story prompted a journalist to ask Albanese about it at a media conference in Melbourne on Monday. He flatly dismissed the idea of a jointly-led Cop, saying: “No, we won’t be co-hosting, because co-hosting isn’t provided for under the rules of the UNFCCC [the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change]. So, that’s not an option, and people are aware that that’s not an option, which is why it’s been ruled out.” So the wait continues. You can read a more on the deadlock in this piece from Friday. Related: From Australia to Turkey and, reluctantly, Germany: the tug-of-war over hosting Cop31 12.29pm GMT Brazil environment minister: 'It is good that we have a map. But the map does not force us to travel' President Lula da Silva of Brazil has called Cop30 the “Cop of truth”. For negotiators, it may become known as the Cop of roadmaps. Many countries are hoping to begin the process here of a roadmap to “transition away from fossil fuels”, the key promise made at Cop28 in 2023 but not followed up since then. Marina Silva, Brazil’s environment minister, in an interview with the Guardian, urged all countries to have the courage to address the issue, saying: “The map is an answer to our scientific knowledge [of the climate crisis]. It is an ethical answer.” The Baku to Belem roadmap on the $1.3 trillion was published in Belem during the leaders’ summit that preceded the formal opening of Cop30, to much approval from governments. It delivered a menu of options, such as levies on frequent flyers and on fossil fuels, or new taxes on financial transactions, that would raise the $1.3 trillion promised to poor countries each year by 2035. Now it looks like there could be more roadmaps to come. On Sunday night, Cop president Andre Correa do Lago published his promised “note” on the progress of the presidency consultations which have been taking place since last Monday. The presidency consultations were a neat way of avoiding a damaging and delaying fight over what should be on the Cop agenda. While the less contentious items proposed for the Cop agenda were allowed to proceed – and many have already been resolved or are approaching resolution – the four trickiest issues were set aside to be dealt with separately. The four issues are: trade; transparency; finance; and addressing the shortfall between the emissions-cutting pledges countries have made, and the cuts needed to limit global heating to 1.5C. (The transition away from fossil fuels, though probably the most controversial issue at this Cop, was not on the list because it is so explosive it can only be dealt with away from the formal agenda.) In his note, do Lago sets out the possibility of a new roadmap, this time on the 1.5C issue. Ahead of Cop, countries were supposed to submit new national climate plans, called “nationally determined contributions” (NDCs) under the Paris agreement. These set out targets on future emissions, and measures to achieve them. Nearly 120 NDCs have so far been filed, but some key countries are still missing – India, for instance – and the current submissions would result in temperature rises of about 2.5C, way above the 1.5C target. Technically, under the Paris agreement, countries need not assess and respond to the NDCs for another three years, until the next “global stocktake”– a periodic assessment of progress towards the goal of limiting temperature rises to 1.5C. China and some of its allies want to stick to the letter of the Paris agreement and refuse to discuss the NDCs in Belem. But many other countries, and most campaigners, believe that – with temperatures already at 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, and rising – would be grossly inadequate. If Cop30 does not set out some credible response to the shortfall, and a pathway to achieving the 1.5C target, it will be counted a failure by many. One potential compromise listed by do Lago is for a “roadmap”. If this were adopted, it would mean, according to his note: “[Cop30] invites COP Presidencies to develop the XXXX Roadmap to identify opportunities to accelerate the implementation of, and international cooperation and investment in NDCs, to close the gaps; convene a Coalition of Climate Ministers to inform the Roadmap to be published before COP31 and present findings at the annual high-level roundtable on pre-2030 ambition at COP31”. This compromise will be regarded by some as kicking the can down the road, to Cop31 – and no one currently even knows where Cop31 will be held, as Australia and Turkey are still battling it out for the honour. Where does a roadmap lead? Possibly to an action plan. The rest of do Lago’s note sets out some of the potential solutions to the other tricky issues, including an “action plan” on climate finance that would follow the Baku to Belem roadmap, or a “work programme” on similar issues, or in the case of trade, possibly round tables “on the nexus between trade and climate change, in 2026 and 2027”. Roadmaps are an attractive instrument, for negotiations that appear stuck. But setting out a map is one thing. Persuading people to follow it is quite another. As Marina Silva told us: “When we have a terrain or environment that is quite grim, it is good that we have a map. But the map does not force us to travel, or to climb.” Updated at 12.35pm GMT 12.10pm GMT A spectacular demonstration by tens of thousands of climate, nature and land activists in Belém this weekend has set the stage for the second week of COP30 negotiations, when organisers hope the energy from the streets can be channeled into the conference halls. Monday and Tuesday mark the transition to the political phase of the negotiations, when ministers fly in to grapple with the issues that were too thorny for their bureaucrats to handle. The climate conference got off to a flying start last week with a rapid agreement on the agenda, but then quickly became snarled up in dispute over four subjects: trade, transparency, finance, and how to address the shortfall between the emissions cuts planned by countries and those required to limit global heating to the 1.5C target of the Paris agreement. Developing countries insist on much higher levels of climate finance from wealthy industrialised countries to assist with the energy transition and compensate for the loss and damage that is already being suffered as a result of global heating. There have been more fruitful talks on a just transition for those affected by the move to a low-carbon economy, with a big push from the G77 group of countries, China and labour unions to adopt a Belém Action Mechanism on this topic. For the first time, one draft mentions the “critical minerals” that will be needed for the energy transition. Other strong areas of debate were on adaptation and the need to address climate disinformation, which is recognised as a growing threat. A fossil fuel phase out is not part of the official Cop30 agenda, but this fundamental issue has been bubbling away throughout the past week, and at a volume that has rarely been heard before. The Brazilian presidency is seeking a space within the process for talks on a roadmap “to accelerate the transition” with strong support from many global south nations and island states that are worst affected by the climate crisis. In an exclusive interview with The Guardian, Brazil’s environment minister Marina Silva said countries should have the “courage” to address the phase-out of fossil fuels, calling the drawing up of a roadmap for it an “ethical” response. The need for urgency has never been more apparent. Numerous studies, unveiled in Belém, have shown the world has already failed to limit global heating to the Paris Agreement target of 1.5C, continues to put record amounts of warming gases such as methane and carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, and has started to pass dangerous tipping points in the Earth System. Over the past year, previous progress has been put into reverse, largely as a result of US president Donald Trump’s backtracking and trade tariffs that slow the spread of clean technologies. if “stated policies” are implemented as planned, the International Energy Agency revealed last week that it expects global warming to reach 2.5C by the end of this century, a tenth of a degree higher than last year’s forecast. Brazil has yet to conclusively confirm or deny hopes that it will seek a concluding “cover text” to codify any progress achieved at this conference. If parties remain too far apart for that, the host may look for other ways to maintain momentum until next year’s Cop. Where that will take place is on the long list of unresolved issues. Australia and Turkey have been vying for hosting rights since 2022. If they fail to reach an agreement Cop31 could default to Bonn. Wherever it ends up, the host will be working against the clock to get ready with less than a year to go. Belém faced similar doubts this time last year, but despite sky high accommodation costs and last-minute construction work, it has won many visitors over during the past week. The expected traffic chaos has not materialised. And many participants have expressed delight that indigenous groups and other elements of civil society have been given more space to participate and protest than the past three climate summits in authoritarian nations. The “People’s Summit”, a series of civil society discussions that has been running in parallel to Cop30, wrapped up on Sunday with a declaration that capitalism was the root cause of the climate and nature crisis. Its demands, including an end to carbon credits and other market-based solutions, were presented to Brazilian environment minister Marina Silva and Cop30 president André Corrêa do Lago, who promised the statement would be noted in the proceedings of the conference. Nothing remotely as radical is likely to be approved inside the official blue zone of the conference centre this week. But Monday will see several announcements and events related to forests and nature, including a new commitment to support land tenure for indigenous peoples and other traditional communities. This is a significant step forward, particularly given this is the first summit of its type in the Amazon rainforest. But much more will be needed if forests and other natural biomes are to play a central role in restoring climate stability and planetary abundance. While much of the attention this week will be on whether Cop30 can initiate the drawing of a roadmap away from the fossil fuel era, the Amazon ought to be as good a place as any to start thinking beyond wind farms and solar panels to where humanity might go next. Updated at 12.21pm GMT 12.06pm GMT Hello, Ajit Niranjan here from Berlin - I’ll be hosting the liveblog this morning and my colleague Nina Lakhani will take over this afternoon. We’re joined by a team of expert reporters on the ground, who’ll be bringing you the latest as the second week of the 30th UN climate summit kicks off.

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