Zürcher Nachrichten - Brazil hopes COP30 in Amazon can unite world for climate action

EUR -
AED 4.359584
AFN 75.379259
ALL 96.445101
AMD 446.47732
ANG 2.124571
AOA 1088.560883
ARS 1661.035027
AUD 1.673136
AWG 2.136761
AZN 1.999312
BAM 1.955701
BBD 2.388479
BDT 145.032633
BGN 1.955904
BHD 0.445277
BIF 3498.32229
BMD 1.18709
BND 1.498924
BOB 8.194584
BRL 6.195899
BSD 1.18584
BTN 107.413544
BWP 15.640205
BYN 3.398627
BYR 23266.958068
BZD 2.384979
CAD 1.616519
CDF 2676.887004
CHF 0.913468
CLF 0.025942
CLP 1024.338094
CNY 8.201187
CNH 8.192124
COP 4345.279265
CRC 575.170782
CUC 1.18709
CUP 31.457877
CVE 110.259399
CZK 24.270034
DJF 211.169273
DKK 7.470948
DOP 73.876247
DZD 153.130221
EGP 55.337189
ERN 17.806345
ETB 184.682818
FJD 2.60394
FKP 0.869528
GBP 0.871546
GEL 3.175473
GGP 0.869528
GHS 13.050337
GIP 0.869528
GMD 87.250457
GNF 10408.471263
GTQ 9.095538
GYD 248.097397
HKD 9.281202
HNL 31.332408
HRK 7.536354
HTG 155.492101
HUF 379.192367
IDR 19982.043458
ILS 3.668974
IMP 0.869528
INR 107.504089
IQD 1553.521083
IRR 50006.153689
ISK 145.026475
JEP 0.869528
JMD 185.590572
JOD 0.841624
JPY 181.262699
KES 152.912232
KGS 103.811334
KHR 4769.757702
KMF 492.64226
KPW 1068.42268
KRW 1710.430133
KWD 0.363974
KYD 0.98825
KZT 586.840189
LAK 25448.707238
LBP 106193.605501
LKR 366.681373
LRD 221.098768
LSL 19.032733
LTL 3.505167
LVL 0.718059
LYD 7.47662
MAD 10.843549
MDL 20.135977
MGA 5187.73647
MKD 61.636869
MMK 2492.160383
MNT 4233.851966
MOP 9.549915
MRU 47.262599
MUR 54.4885
MVR 18.287072
MWK 2056.295543
MXN 20.376151
MYR 4.638551
MZN 75.867004
NAD 19.032733
NGN 1606.609305
NIO 43.637783
NOK 11.284596
NPR 171.86127
NZD 1.973385
OMR 0.454157
PAB 1.18594
PEN 3.978598
PGK 5.090741
PHP 68.671352
PKR 331.668952
PLN 4.211497
PYG 7777.604908
QAR 4.32188
RON 5.09428
RSD 117.414036
RUB 91.625346
RWF 1731.312052
SAR 4.450706
SBD 9.550353
SCR 15.996187
SDG 714.030125
SEK 10.591809
SGD 1.499889
SHP 0.890625
SLE 29.023729
SLL 24892.676638
SOS 677.165601
SRD 44.817413
STD 24570.360011
STN 24.498755
SVC 10.376473
SYP 13128.707415
SZL 19.029033
THB 36.894949
TJS 11.188532
TMT 4.154814
TND 3.419126
TOP 2.858227
TRY 51.767202
TTD 8.049591
TWD 37.255634
TZS 3095.042776
UAH 51.141902
UGX 4197.786758
USD 1.18709
UYU 45.717678
UZS 14574.259646
VES 466.20582
VND 30828.719441
VUV 141.331173
WST 3.219644
XAF 655.92368
XAG 0.015357
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.208169
XCG 2.137191
XDR 0.815759
XOF 655.92368
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.94241
ZAR 18.935149
ZMK 10685.23068
ZMW 21.552905
ZWL 382.242398
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    0.0647

    23.64

    +0.27%

  • BCE

    -0.1200

    25.71

    -0.47%

  • GSK

    0.3900

    58.93

    +0.66%

  • AZN

    1.0300

    205.55

    +0.5%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.75

    +0.21%

  • RELX

    2.2500

    31.06

    +7.24%

  • RIO

    0.1600

    98.07

    +0.16%

  • BTI

    -1.1100

    59.5

    -1.87%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    86.5

    -1.8%

  • NGG

    1.1800

    92.4

    +1.28%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    15.57

    -0.32%

  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    17.1

    +1.35%

  • JRI

    0.2135

    13.24

    +1.61%

  • BP

    0.4700

    37.66

    +1.25%

Brazil hopes COP30 in Amazon can unite world for climate action
Brazil hopes COP30 in Amazon can unite world for climate action / Photo: Thiago Gomes - AFP

Brazil hopes COP30 in Amazon can unite world for climate action

Brazil is betting its much-hyped climate summit in the Amazon next month can deliver something increasingly rare in a fractured world: proof that nations can still unite to confront a global crisis.

Text size:

It faces tough odds, with a hostile United States unlikely to show up, political appetite for climate action at a low ebb, and eye-watering prices for accommodation threatening turnout.

Some 50,000 attendees are expected at the two-week COP30 conference starting November 10 in Belem, a city in one of Brazil's poorer states best known as a gateway to the Amazon rainforest.

On Monday, climate ministers meet in Brasilia ahead of the marathon UN negotiations that bring together nearly every nation for the most important climate talks of the year.

Belem is a symbolic yet fraught setting and a personal choice of Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who wants to spotlight the rainforest's role in absorbing carbon dioxide.

But pressure is mounting on COP30 to provide more than just a scenic backdrop as the world approaches the 1.5C warming target agreed under the Paris climate accord a decade ago.

The last two years were the hottest ever recorded, and major polluters are not cutting emissions fast enough to avoid destructive and potentially irreversible changes to the planet.

Lula -- whose own environmental record is mixed, having slowed Amazon deforestation but approved new oil exploration -- has promised a "COP of truth".

"It will be the moment for world leaders to prove the seriousness of their commitment to the planet," Lula told the United Nations General Assembly on September 23.

A likely candidate for re-election next year, Lula is determined to burnish Brazil's global standing after hosting recent major summits of BRICS and G20 nations.

He has invited dozens of leaders to Belem ahead of the negotiations, but numbers are not yet confirmed.

Prince William will represent Britain's King Charles and the leaders of South Africa and Colombia are expected, but Austria's president has already declined, citing high hotel prices.

Officials in Gambia, Cape Verde and Japan also told AFP they expected to reduce the size of their delegations.

- Tense times -

US President Donald Trump, who declared climate change a "con job" during his own UN address last month, is not expected to attend, nor is anyone else from his administration.

The United States intends to withdraw from the Paris Agreement for a second time as it promotes fossil fuels at home and abroad.

Brazil is adamant that COP30 shows global climate solidarity is alive even as wars, tariffs and populist politics shake the international order.

The US absence has underscored the lack of an obvious climate leader in Belem, particularly as the European Union deals with internal revolt over its green agenda.

COP30 CEO Ana Toni told AFP in an interview in September that it was an "extremely difficult" time to be rallying for climate change.

"COPs are not isolated. They reflect the tensions of geopolitics," she said.

A more pressing problem has been the astronomical cost of accommodation in Belem with schools, cruise ships and even rent-by-the-hour motel rooms enlisted to offer cheaper options.

Lula flatly rejected calls to move COP30, even as delegates from the developing world -- countries Brazil claims to champion -- complained they could not afford to attend.

"I know the problems in Belem," Lula said during an October visit to the city of 1.4 million where more than half the population live in shanty towns.

"We accepted the challenge of organising COP here because we must show the world what the Amazon is."

Far from a presidential suite, the 79-year-old leader vowed to "sleep on a boat, in a hammock" during the event.

- Reckoning -

Forests will be a focus in Belem but "we shouldn't expect headlines or agreements on big, flashy issues" at COP30, Marta Torres-Gunfaus, from sustainable development think tank IDDRI, told AFP.

A showdown over faltering climate action seems unavoidable with India and the EU among dozens of countries months late in submitting their latest 2035 emissions reduction targets.

Many commitments have fallen short of expectations, including from top polluter China.

The Alliance of Small Island States "is very clear that COP30 must deliver a response to this", Ilana Seid, a diplomat from Palau and chair of the climate-vulnerable grouping, told reporters.

Some of the world's poorest countries also want to reopen a tortured debate over the level of finance they receive from the richer countries that are most responsible for the climate crisis.

COP30 must offer clear commitments to boost financial assistance, "not more empty promises", the Least Developed Countries bloc of underdeveloped nations said last month.

burs-np-jmi/rlp

L.Zimmermann--NZN