President Donald Trump is withdrawing the United States from the world’s
overarching treaty on climate change in a move that escalates his attempts to
reverse years of global negotiations toward addressing rising temperatures.
The announcement to sever ties with the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate
Change came as Trump quit dozens of international organizations that the White
House says no longer serve U.S. interests by promoting radical climate policies
and other issues. It was outlined in a memo by the White House. Trump has called
on other countries to abandon their carbon-cutting measures, and the move
appears to be his latest attempt to destabilize global climate cooperation.
The 1992 UNFCCC serves as the international structure for efforts by 198
countries to slow the rate of rising climate pollution. It has universal
participation. The U.S. was the first industrialized nation to join the treaty
following its ratification under former President George H.W. Bush — and it will
be the only nation ever to leave it. The move also marks Trump’s intensifying
efforts to topple climate efforts compared to his first term, when he decided
against quitting the treaty.
“Many of these bodies promote radical climate policies, global governance, and
ideological programs that conflict with U.S. sovereignty and economic strength,”
stated a White House fact sheet.
The move comes as Trump tears down U.S. climate policies amid the hottest decade
ever recorded and threatens other nations for pursuing measures to address
global warming, which Trump has called a hoax and a “con job.” The U.S. did not
send a delegation to Brazil for the climate talks, known as COP30, late last
year. Instead, Trump officials have been working to strike fossil fuels deals
with other nations. Trump captured Venezuela’s strongman president, Nicolás
Maduro, in an assault using U.S. commandos on Saturday and said he would control
the country’s vast oil resources.
The plan to leave the UNFCCC stems from Trump’s order last February requiring
Secretary of State Marco Rubio to identify treaties and international
organizations that “are contrary to the interests of the United States” and
recommend withdrawing from them.
Trump has also pulled the U.S. out of the Paris Agreement, the landmark 2015
pact that’s underpinned by the UNFCCC.
“This is a shortsighted, embarrassing, and foolish decision,” Gina McCarthy, a
former EPA administrator under former President Barack Obama, said in a
statement. “As the only country in the world not a part of the UNFCCC treaty,
the Trump administration is throwing away decades of U.S. climate change
leadership and global collaboration.”
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Brussels was jolted this week by dawn raids and an alleged fraud probe involving
current and former senior EU diplomats.
Host Sarah Wheaton speaks with Zoya Sheftalovich — a longtime Brussels Playbook
editor who has just returned from Australia to begin her new role as POLITICO’s
chief EU correspondent — and with Max Griera, our European Parliament reporter,
to unpack what we know so far, what’s at stake for Ursula von der Leyen, and
where the investigation may head next.
Then, with Zoya staying in the studio, we’re joined by Senior Climate
Correspondent Karl Mathiesen, Trade and Competition Editor Doug Busvine and
Defense Editor Jan Cienski to take stock of the Commission’s first year — marked
by this very bumpy week. We look at competitiveness, climate, defense and the
fast-shifting global landscape — and our panel delivers its score for von der
Leyen’s team.
BRUSSELS — The European Union will “think twice” before considering backing weak
agreements at COP climate summits in the future, a Polish negotiator has warned.
At this year’s COP30 climate conference in Brazil, the EU struggled to find
allies to push for more ambitious climate action, and at one point threatened to
walk away without signing a deal.
The United States, its historical partner, was notably absent from the meeting.
That’s a lesson learned, according to Katarzyna Wrona, Poland’s negotiator in
the talks, who was also part of the EU’s delegation at the summit.
“This COP happened in a very difficult geopolitical situation … We felt a very
strong pressure from emerging economies but also from other parties, on
financing, on trade,” she said at POLITICO’s Sustainable Future Summit. And “we
had to really think very carefully whether we were in a position to support [the
final deal], and we did, for the sake of multilateralism,” she added.
“But I’m not sure … that the EU will be ready to take [this position] in the
future,” Wrona warned. “Because something has changed, and we will surely think
twice before we evaluate a deal that does not really bring much in terms of
following up on the commitments that were undertaken,” she said.
Also speaking on the panel, Elif Gökçe Öz, environmental counsellor at the
permanent delegation of Turkey to the EU, said it would “be important for the EU
… to forge alternative alliances in the COP negotiation process,” as global
power dynamics shift.
Wrona replied that the EU is “ready to work” with those that show ambition to
reduce their emissions. “But it has to be very clearly … that the support is not
limitless and it’s not unconditional,” she added.
EU climate chief Wopke Hoekstra thinks reports of the death of Europe’s green
agenda have been greatly exaggerated.
“There’s always a lot of talk about backlash,” Hoekstra told POLITICO’s
Sustainable Future Summit Tuesday. “That is, I think, one of the big
misconceptions.”
The EU’s new climate goal for 2040, agreed by ministers last month, “is actually
an acceleration, rather than a downgrade, of what we are having today,” he said.
The EU’s approach to its environmental and climate rules has been placed under
extreme pressure from a combined pushback from far right parties, heavy industry
and some leading members of Hoekstra’s own center right European People’s Party.
That has led to the scrapping or weakening of some existing standards and made
setting the 2040 target a brutal political fight.
But Hoekstra said the realignment of some green policies was not about resiling
from Europe’s environmental ambitions.
“We’ll need to find a recipe — and I’ve been saying that over and over again —
where we really make sure that climate, competitiveness and independence are
being brought together. That in the end, is the winning formula,” he said.
Hoekstra also pushed back on criticism by countries whose exports will be hit by
the EU’s carbon border tax. This was a major feature of the recent COP30 climate
negotiations, with large emerging economies like South Africa, India and China
expressing concern about a measure they believe unfairly disadvantages their
industries.
Hoekstra dismissed that griping as a way to gain advantage in the course of the
COP30 talks.
“It is a tool that is being used, as quite often is the case in diplomacy,” he
said.
What he had heard “behind-closed-doors,” he said, was a completely different
story.
“Those who might have expressed their concerns publicly are not only
acknowledging inside of a room that actually the effects are not that large,
they’re actually even saying that it helps them to have a different type of
conversation,” he said.
ORGANISERS IN BRAZIL REFLECT ON THE UN CLIMATE SUMMIT FARCE
~ CCLA Belém ~
Even before it began, as anarchists and libertarians we couldn’t expect much
from a meeting that, over the years, has failed to curb capitalist greed in the
slightest. It has only brought as its sole concrete “solution” to climate
deregulation the commodification of a supposed right to pollute: the so-called
carbon market.
Therefore, we had carefully prepared our cultural centre to welcome the most
varied forms of protest coming from the Brazilian Amazon (starting with Belém
and its metropolis), from South America, and from the rest of the world. Every
day, during that circus of comings and goings of official delegations corrupted
by oil lobbyists, we proposed cultural activities, debates and discussion
groups, solidarity meals, preparation for popular protest marches, etc.
Despite this preparation and planning, we were fortunate to encounter unexpected
moments and meet unfamiliar people, and to connect with others we had previously
only known through the internet: we were able to participate in the occupation
of the COP’s Blue Zone by indigenous peoples, receive visitors from far and wide
and engage in dialogue with them, such as Macko Dràgàn (France), Mário Rui Pinto
(Portugal), and Peter Gelderloos (USA)… and that’s not all: these were beautiful
moments, full of learning in terms of resistance practices, exchanges of
perspectives on crises generated by those at the top, and sharing solutions for
us to overcome these challenges from our peripheral position.
To conclude these anarchist anti-COP30 journeys, we wanted to leave you with our
assessment of this farce that was this COP, the thirtieth lost opportunity to
save our Mother Earth (as Emma Goldman called her) and the populations that
survive on her, trapped in avoidable ills and torments.
We already knew it: the courage to break free from this path of destruction will
only be ours, and when we manage to reverse this desperate situation through our
struggles, we will leave only the elites with the shameful clothes of those who
could have done so but didn’t try, to dress and walk amidst the jeers of
humanity and all creatures on the planet, finally freed from capitalist
exploitation, inequalities, and oppressions.
* * *
From the beginning, we considered the COP a farce in terms of resolving or
mitigating the environmental crisis in which capitalism has placed us. As
expected, this edition of the COP showed us this in several ways. There was a
record accreditation of lobbyists from the fossil fuel industry – almost two
thousand representatives, with the main objective of debating means for the
“energy transition” with more oil extraction and production. Meanwhile, more
than 40 accredited representatives of Indigenous peoples were prevented from
entering the Blue Zone because they did not have passports – yes, entering the
most restricted area of the COP was the same as entering another country.
Throughout the event, the Lula government announced the implementation of the
TFFF (Tropical Forests Forever Fund), yet another rent-seeking mechanism of
financial capitalism that is far from solving environmental problems. This
aligns with the logic of perpetuating the same mechanisms that produced this
environmental crisis. For us, it is more of the same, without significant
changes in the social conditions of those who suffer most from the extreme
events of climate change.
Meanwhile, the forest peoples continue without self-determination over their own
territories. Not surprisingly, the two demonstrations that broke through the
security cordon of the colored areas of the COP were led by Indigenous peoples
of the middle and lower Tapajós. It was a demonstration of dissatisfaction with
the progress of the debates, which did not address crucial issues for these
peoples, such as the guarantee of saying no to carbon credit market companies,
mining and prospecting in their territories, and saying no to the privatization
of the Amazon rivers for the construction of waterways that will only benefit
the large landholdings of agribusiness grain monoculture and mining.
The COP reproduces the capitalist economic rationale of seeing everything that
exists, including the air we breathe, as a bargaining chip. With this vision,
solutions could only be conceived within the logic of the commodity. Ironically,
on November 20, the day of Dandara and Zumbi, a fire broke out in one of the
Blue Zone tents, symbolising an extreme event of climate change, burning down
the COP. On the other hand, the activities of the Anti-COP Anarchist Days
demonstrated that other worlds are possible, through the destruction of
capitalism, the State, patriarchy, racism, and xenophobia. These were two weeks
of activities, from street demonstrations, such as the Periphery March on Black
Awareness Day, to debates with comrades from various parts of Brazil and several
countries who contributed with their analyses, experiences, and struggles on
various fronts of resistance against this system of
domination/control/exploitation, where, in a broader assessment, while
respecting the necessary dimensions in the
These struggles are traversed by the imperialism of the powers of the Global
North along with their colonialism and racism, by environmental devastation
resulting from mining in the countries of the Global South, by the situation of
political and climate refugees, by the invasion of the territories of indigenous
and traditional peoples, by real estate speculation in large population centres,
by human trafficking, especially of women; by speciesism that sustains the logic
of animal abuse for human consumption, by poverty/social
inequality/concentration of wealth; therefore, some of the problems that were
debated, in several languages and with diverse accents. It is worth remembering
that confronting this system of domination requires organisation, activism,
conviction and resistance, but also music, dance and the construction of
happiness. In the words of Emma Goldman, if this revolution doesn’t allow me to
dance, then this isn’t my revolution; thus, we held a Libertarian Art Festival,
another way to energise experiences of struggle and resistance through culture.
We had performances by various musical groups and artistic groups where,
nevertheless, we suffered police repression, typical of the modus operandi of
this sector of the State, subservient to the petty elite who cannot stand to see
the underprivileged in their cultural manifestations.
We understand that this crisis cannot be overcome through the neo-extractivism
of oil and mining, the neo-developmentalist technology that requires the waste
of millions of cubic meters of potable water to cool the data centres of Big
Tech companies, the monopoly of renewable energy companies such as wind and
solar (the latter even requiring and encouraging the mineralogical race for rare
earths), agribusiness, the deprivation of peoples from exercising their rights
to live in peace in their territories, the privatization of water and air, the
maintenance of the privileges of the rich and colonial elites sustained by the
terrible housing conditions, illiteracy, hunger, genocide, sexual exploitation,
and poverty of the majority of populations, especially black or racialised
people. We do not support and fight against initiatives to mitigate the effects
of climate change that do not place the real problem at the centre of the
debate, that is, capitalism and its counterparts.
We see in the practices of indigenous and traditional peoples those who truly
safeguard biodiversity and the world’s forests, who remove tons of carbon
dioxide from the atmosphere, helping to regulate the climate and throwing the
rent-seeking logic of carbon credits into disarray. This, combined with the
struggles and resistance waged by poor populations in the countryside and
cities, scattered from north to south and from east to west of the global map,
even with much humiliation and difficulty in securing bread, tortillas, chapati,
or beiju, reinvent themselves through mutual support and solidarity when they
see their lives being impacted by extreme weather events, produced by the greed
and profit of the rich. The COP has no solution for our problems; on the
contrary, it is an organisation created for the management of the environmental
crisis, established by the same sectors that manage world hunger and poverty.
Thus, our urgent needs do not fit within the COP. The solutions to the
climate-environmental-s
From the humid tropics of the Amazonian lowlands, on the Belém peninsula in
November 2025.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Machine translation. Photo: Peter Gelderloos
The post Letter from the anti-COP30 anarchist days appeared first on Freedom
News.
Donald Trump isn’t at the global climate summit in Brazil. But he was on the
minds of some of his fellow world leaders Thursday, who used their time on stage
to try to isolate the U.S. president and his hard-line opposition to their
agenda.
In speeches meant to highlight their support for efforts to halt rising
temperatures, a few of the heads of state at the COP30 climate talks in the
Amazonian port city of Belém could not resist the chance to admonish the U.S.
president directly.
“Mr. Trump is against humankind,” said Colombian President Gustavo Petro, who
pointed to the American president’s absence from the gathering and called for an
economy free of oil and natural gas.
Gabriel Boric, Chile’s president, took Trump to task for a September speech to
the U.N. General Assembly in which the U.S. leader denounced the notion of
human-caused climate change as a “con job” and a “hoax made up by people with
evil intentions.”
“That is a lie,” Boric said, emphasizing the importance of science and facts.
“We might have legitimate discussions about how to face these things, but we
cannot deny them.”
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, whose country is hosting the
two-week summit, did not name Trump but hit out at “extremist forces that
fabricate fake news on climate for political gain.”
He urged countries gathering at the conference to develop a road map to
“overcome fossil fuels.”
Since returning to office in January, Trump has championed coal, oil and gas and
sought to squash clean energy efforts in the U.S. and abroad. He has removed the
U.S. from the 2015 Paris climate change agreement, for the second time, and has
used the threat of tariffs to try to bolster sales of American fossil fuels.
The speeches from a handful of leaders displayed, at times, the anger and dismay
that countries feel about the U.S. breaking its promises and attempting to
undermine the global effort to tackle global warming. Other leaders tried to
brush off the American absence as simply an act of economic self-harm.
But the tough talk could not hide the ambivalence that many countries beyond the
U.S. have toward this year’s U.N. climate talks.
Just a small number of European leaders turned up, while some other countries
have sent ministerial representatives. Canada’s Mark Carney, a former U.N.
climate representative, stayed home. The European Union’s 27 member countries
could not agree on a climate goal to present at the conference until Wednesday
morning — and only after watering down existing pollution-cutting rules to get a
deal. Also absent is Chinese President Xi Jinping, whose country tops the U.S.
as the world’s No. 1 greenhouse gas polluter.
Even the host Brazil has drawn criticism from green groups for opening new oil
and gas fields of its own in the run-up to hosting the COP30 talks.
The U.S. does not plan to send any high-level representatives to the COP30
conference, according to a White House spokesperson. Whether it intends to try
to swing the talks from afar remains to be seen.
Trump and his Cabinet ministers led a pressure campaign that succeeded last
month in delaying, and possibly killing, a vote on a global carbon tax for
shipping that had seemed on a glide path for approval. The U.S. effort drew in
help from other countries, including some EU members.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer lamented that the global unity that
had landed the Paris deal 10 years ago was being broken, not just by Trump but
by Starmer’s opponents in the U.K.
“Sadly, that consensus is gone,” he declared.
But he said walking away from climate efforts would only raise energy costs for
businesses and households and miss out on building new industries.
“This is not just a problem to be solved, but also an immense opportunity to be
seized,” Starmer said.
The main economic beneficiary of the clean energy transition has, to date, been
China, which has built the world’s largest production line of solar panels,
electric vehicles, batteries, critical minerals and other products essential to
greening the global economy.
“China is a country that honors its commitments,” Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang
said at the podium Thursday.
He didn’t name Trump directly either but did make a case for a “sound
environment” for global trade and cooperation.
“We need to strengthen international collaboration on green technology and
industry, remove trade barriers and ensure the free flow of quality green
products to better meet the needs of global sustainable development,” Ding said
through a translator.
BRUSSELS — On the same day world leaders arrived at the COP30 summit in Brazil
to push for more action on climate change, Greece announced it will start
drilling for fossil fuels in the Mediterranean Sea — with U.S. help.
Under the deal, America’s biggest oil company, ExxonMobil, will explore for
natural gas in waters northwest of the picturesque island of Corfu, alongside
Greece’s Energean and HELLENiQ ENERGY.
It’s the first time in more than four decades that Greece has opened its waters
for gas exploration — and the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump is
claiming it as a victory in its push to derail climate action and boost the
global dominance of the U.S. fossil fuel industry.
It comes three weeks after the U.S. successfully halted a global deal to put a
carbon tax on shipping, with the support of Greece.
“There is no energy transition, there is just energy addition,” said U.S.
Interior Secretary and energy czar Doug Burgum, who was present at the signing
ceremony in Athens on Thursday, alongside U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright
and the new U.S. Ambassador to Greece Kimberly Guilfoyle.
“Greece is taking its own natural resources, and we are working all together
toward energy abundance,” Burgum added, describing Greece’s Prime Minister
Kyriakos Mitsotakis as a leader who “bucks the trend.”
Only a few hours later, U.N. secretary-general Antonio Guterrez made an
impassioned plea for countries to stop exploring for coal, oil and gas.
“I’ve consistently advocated against more coal plants and fossil fuel
exploration and expansion,” he said at a COP30 leaders’ summit in Belém, Brazil.
Donald Trump was not among the many world leaders present.
NOT LISTENING
“America is back and drilling in the Ionian Sea,” said Guilfoyle, the U.S.
ambassador, at the Athens ceremony.
Drilling for natural gas — a fossil fuel that is a major contributor to global
warming — is expected to start late next year, or early 2027.
Greece’s Minister of Environment and Energy, Stavros Papastavrou, hailed the
agreement as a “historic signing” that ends a 40-year hiatus in exploration.
Last month, Greece and Cyprus — both major maritime countries — were the only
two EU countries that voted to halt action for a year on a historic effort to
tax climate pollution from shipping. Greece claimed its decision had nothing to
do with U.S. pressure, which several people familiar with the situation said
included threats to negotiators.
Thursday’s ceremony took place on the sidelines of the sixth Partnership for
Transatlantic Energy Cooperation (P-TEC) conference, organized in Athens by the
U.S. and Greek governments, along with the Atlantic Council.
Greece aims to showcase its importance as an entry point for American liquefied
natural gas (LNG), bolstering Europe’s independence from Russian gas. LNG from
Greece’s Revithoussa terminal is set to reach Ukraine this winter through the
newly activated “Vertical Corridor,” an energy route linking Greece, Bulgaria,
Romania and Moldova.
President Donald Trump is no longer content to stand aloof from the global
alliance trying to combat climate change. His new goal is to demolish it — and
replace it with a new coalition reliant on U.S. fossil fuels.
Trump’s increasingly assertive energy diplomacy is one of the biggest challenges
awaiting the world leaders, diplomats and business luminaries gathering for a
United Nations summit in Brazil to try to advance the fight against global
warming. The U.S. president will not be there — unlike the leaders of countries
including France, Germany and the United Kingdom, who will speak before
delegates from nearly 200 nations on Thursday and Friday. But his efforts to
undermine the Paris climate agreement already loom over the talks, as does his
initial success in drawing support from other countries.
“It’s not enough to just withdraw from” the 2015 pact and the broader U.N.
climate framework that governs the annual talks, said Richard Goldberg, who
worked as a top staffer on Trump’s White House National Energy Dominance Council
and is now senior adviser to the think tank Foundation for Defense of
Democracies. “You have to degrade it. You have to deter it. You have to
potentially destroy it.”
Trump’s approach includes striking deals demanding that Japan, Europe and other
trading partners buy more U.S. natural gas and oil, using diplomatic
strong-arming to deter foreign leaders from cutting fossil fuel pollution,
and making the United States inhospitable to clean energy investment.
Unlike during his first term, when Trump pulled out of the Paris Agreement but
sent delegates to the annual U.N. climate talks anyway, he now wants to render
them ineffective and starved of purpose by drawing as many other countries as
possible away from their own clean energy goals, according to Cabinet officials’
public remarks and interviews with 20 administration allies and alumni, foreign
diplomats and veterans of the annual climate negotiations.
Those efforts are at odds with the goals of the climate summits, which included
a Biden administration-backed pledge two years ago for the world to transition
away from fossil fuels. Slowing or reversing that shift could send global
temperatures soaring above the goals set in Paris a decade ago, threatening a
spike in the extreme weather that is already pummeling countries and economies.
The White House says Trump’s campaign to unleash American oil, gas and coal is
for the United States’ benefit — and the world’s.
“The Green New Scam would have killed America if President Trump had not been
elected to implement his commonsense energy agenda — which is focused on
utilizing the liquid gold under our feet to strengthen our grid stability and
drive down costs for American families and businesses,” White House spokesperson
Taylor Rogers said in a statement. “President Trump will not jeopardize our
country’s economic and national security to pursue vague climate goals that are
killing other countries.”
‘WOULD LIKE TO SEE THE PARIS AGREEMENT DIE’
The Trump administration is declining to send any high-level representatives to
the COP30 climate talks, which will formally begin Monday in Belém, Brazil,
according to a White House official who declined to comment on the record about
whether any U.S. government officials would participate.
Trump’s view that the annual negotiations are antithetical to his energy and
economic agenda is also spreading among other Republican officials. Many GOP
leaders, including 17 state attorneys general, argued last month that attending
the summit would only legitimize the proceedings and its expected calls for
ditching fossil fuels more swiftly.
Climate diplomats from other countries say they’ve gotten the message about
where the U.S. stands now — and are prepared to act without Washington.
“We have a large country, a president, and a vice president who would like to
see the Paris Agreement die,” Laurence Tubiana, the former French government
official credited as a key architect of the 2015 climate pact, said of the
United States.
“The U.S. will not play a major role” at the summit, said Jochen Flasbarth,
undersecretary in the German Ministry of Environmental Affairs. “The world is
collectively outraged, and so we will focus — as will everyone else — on
engaging in talks with those who are driving the process forward.”
Trump and his allies have described the stakes in terms of a zero-sum contest
between the United States and its main economic rival, China: Efforts to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions, they say, are a complete win for China, which sells
the bulk of the world’s solar, wind, battery and electric vehicle technology.
That’s a contrast from the approach of former President Joe Biden, who pushed a
massive U.S. investment in green technologies as the only way for America to
outcompete China in developing the energy sources of the future. In the Trump
worldview, stalling that energy transition benefits the United States, the
globe’s top producer of oil and natural gas, along with many of the technologies
and services to produce, transport and burn the stuff.
“If [other countries] don’t rely on this technology, then that’s less power to
China,” said Diana Furchtgott-Roth, who served in the U.S. Transportation
Department during Trump’s first term and is now director of the Center for
Energy, Climate and Environment at the conservative think tank the Heritage
Foundation.
TRUMP FINDS ALLIES THIS TIME
Two big developments have shaped the president’s new thinking on how to
counteract the international fight against climate change, said George David
Banks, who was Trump’s international climate adviser during the first
administration.
The first was the Inflation Reduction Act that Democrats passed and Biden signed
in 2022, which promised hundreds of billions of dollars to U.S. clean energy
projects. Banks said the legislation, enacted entirely on partisan lines, made
renewable energy a political target in the minds of Trump and his fossil-fuel
backers.
The second is Trump’s aggressive use of U.S. trading power during his second
term to wring concessions from foreign governments, Banks said. Trump has
required his agencies to identify obstacles for U.S. exports, and the United
Nations’ climate apparatus may be deemed a barrier for sales of oil, gas and
coal.
Trump’s strategy is resonating with some fossil fuel-supporting nations,
potentially testing the climate change comity at COP30. Those include emerging
economies in Africa and Latin America, petrostates such as Saudi Arabia, and
European nations feeling a cost-of-living strain that is feeding a resurgent
right wing.
U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright drew applause in March at a Washington
gathering called the Powering Africa Summit, where he called it “nonsense” for
financiers and Western nations to vilify coal-fired power. He also asserted that
U.S. natural gas exports could supply African and Asian nations with more of
their electricity.
Wright cast the goal of achieving net-zero greenhouse gas pollution by 2050 —
the target dozens of nations have embraced — as “sinister,” contending it
consigns developing nations to poverty and lower living standards.
The U.S. about-face was welcome, Sierra Leone mining and minerals minister
Julius Daniel Mattai said during the conference. Western nations had kneecapped
financing for offshore oil investments and worked to undercut public backing for
fossil fuel projects, Mattai said, criticizing Biden’s administration for only
being interested in renewable energy.
But now Trump has created room for nations to use their own resources, Mattai
said.
“With the new administration having such a massive appetite for all sorts of
energy mixes, including oil and gas, we do believe there’s an opportunity to
explore our offshore oil investments,” he said in an interview.
TURNING UP THE HEAT ON TRADING PARTNERS
Still, Banks acknowledged that Trump probably can’t halt the spread of clean
energy. Fossil fuels may continue to supply energy in emerging economies for
some time, he said, but the private sector remains committed to clean energy to
meet the U.N.’s goals of curbing climate change.
That doesn’t mean Trump won’t try.
The administration’s intent to pressure foreign leaders into a more
fossil-fuel-friendly stance was on full display last month at a London meeting
of the U.N.’s International Maritime Organization where U.S. Cabinet secretaries
and diplomats succeeded in thwarting a proposed carbon emissions tax on global
shipping.
That coup followed a similar push against Beijing a month earlier, when Mexico —
the world’s biggest buyer of Chinese cars — slapped a 50 percent tariff on
automotive imports from China after pressure from the Trump administration.
China accused the U.S. of “coercion.”
Trump’s attempt to flood global markets with ever growing amounts of U.S. fossil
fuels is even more ambitious, though so far incomplete.
The EU and Japan — under threat of tariffs — have promised to spend hundreds of
billions of dollars on U.S. energy products. But so far, new and binding
contracts have not appeared.
Trump has also tried to push China, Japan and South Korea to invest in a $44
billion liquefied natural gas project in Alaska, so far to no avail.
In the face of potential tariffs and other U.S. pressure, European ministers and
diplomats are selling the message that victory at COP30 might simply come in the
form of presenting a united front in favor of climate action. That could mean
joining with other major economies such as China and India, and forming common
cause with smaller, more vulnerable countries, to show that Trump is isolated.
“I’m sure the EU and China will find themselves on opposite sides of many
debates,” said the EU’s lead climate negotiator, Jacob Werksman. “But we have
ways of working with them. … We are both betting heavily on the green
transition.”
Avoiding a faceplant may actually be easier if the Trump administration does
decide to turn up in Brazil, said Li Shuo, the director of China Climate Hub at
the Asia Society Policy Institute in Washington.
“If the U.S. is there and active, I’d expect the rest of the world, including
the EU and China, to rest aside their rhetorical games in front of a larger
challenge,” Li wrote via text.
And for countries attending COP, there is still some hope of a long-term win.
Solar, wind, geothermal and other clean energy investments are continuing apace,
even if Trump and the undercurrents that led to his reelection have hindered
them, said Nigel Purvis, CEO of climate consulting firm Climate Advisers and a
former State Department climate official.
Trump’s attempts to kill the shipping fee, EU methane pollution rules and
Europe’s corporate sustainability framework are one thing, Purvis said. But when
it comes to avoiding Trump’s retribution, there is “safety in numbers” for the
rest of the world that remains in the Paris Agreement, he added. And even if the
progress is slower than originally hoped, those nations have committed to
shifting their energy systems off fossil fuels.
“We’re having slower climate action than otherwise would be the case. But we’re
really talking about whether Trump is going to be able to blow up the regime,”
Purvis said. “And I think the answer is ‘No.’”
Nicolas Camut in Paris, Zia Weise in Brussels and Josh Groeneveld in Berlin
contributed to this report.
At New York Climate Week in September, opinion leaders voiced concern that
high-profile events often gloss over the deep inequalities exposed by climate
change, especially how poorer populations suffer disproportionately and struggle
to access mitigation or adaptation resources. The message was clear: climate
policies should better reflect social justice concerns, ensuring they are
inclusive and do not unintentionally favor those already privileged.
We believe access to food sits at the heart of this call for inclusion, because
everything starts with food: it is a fundamental human right and a foundation
for health, education and opportunity. It is also a lever for climate, economic
and social resilience.
> We believe access to food sits at the heart of this call for inclusion,
> because everything starts with food
This makes the global conversation around food systems transformation more
urgent than ever. Food systems are under unprecedented strain. Without urgent,
coordinated action, billions of people face heightened risks of malnutrition,
displacement and social unrest.
Delivering systemic transformation requires coordinated cross-sector action, not
fragmented solutions. Food systems are deeply interconnected, and isolated
interventions cannot solve systemic problems. The Food and Agriculture
Organization’s recent Transforming Food and Agriculture Through a Systems
Approach report calls for systems thinking and collaboration across the value
chain to address overlapping food, health and environmental challenges.
Now, with COP30 on the horizon, unified and equitable solutions are needed to
benefit entire value chains and communities. This is where a systems approach
becomes essential.
A systems approach to transforming food and agriculture
Food systems transformation must serve both people and planet. We must ensure
everyone has access to safe, nutritious food while protecting human rights and
supporting a just transition.
At Tetra Pak, we support food and beverage companies throughout the journey of
food production, from processing raw ingredients like milk and fruit to
packaging and distribution. This end-to-end perspective gives us a unique view
into the interconnected challenges within the food system, and how an integrated
approach can help manufacturers reduce food loss and waste, improve energy and
water efficiency, and deliver food where it is needed most.
Meaningful reductions to emissions require expanding the use of renewable and
carbon-free energy sources. As outlined in our Food Systems 2040 whitepaper,1
the integration of low-carbon fuels like biofuels and green hydrogen, alongside
electrification supported by advanced energy storage technologies, will be
critical to driving the transition in factories, farms and food production and
processing facilities.
Digitalization also plays a key role. Through advanced automation and
data-driven insights, solutions like Tetra Pak® PlantMaster enable food and
beverage companies to run fully automated plants with a single point of control
for their production, helping them improve operational efficiency, minimize
production downtime and reduce their environmental footprint.
The “hidden middle”: A critical gap in food systems policy
Today, much of the focus on transforming food systems is placed on farming and
on promoting healthy diets. Both are important, but they risk overlooking the
many and varied processes that get food from the farmer to the end consumer. In
2015 Dr Thomas Reardon coined the term the “hidden middle” to describe this
midstream segment of global agricultural value chains.2
This hidden middle includes processing, logistics, storage, packaging and
handling, and it is pivotal. It accounts for approximately 22 percent of
food-based emissions and between 40-60 percent of the total costs and value
added in food systems.3 Yet despite its huge economic value, it receives only
2.5 to 4 percent of climate finance.4
Policymakers need to recognize the full journey from farm to fork as a lynchpin
priority. Strategic enablers such as packaging that protects perishable food and
extends shelf life, along with climate-resilient processing technologies, can
maximize yield and minimize loss and waste across the value chain. In addition,
they demonstrate how sustainability and competitiveness can go hand in hand.
Alongside this, climate and development finance must be redirected to increase
investment in the hidden middle, with a particular focus on small and
medium-sized enterprises, which make up most of the sector.
Collaboration in action
Investment is just the start. Change depends on collaboration between
stakeholders across the value chain: farmers, food manufacturers, brands,
retailers, governments, financiers and civil society.
In practice, a systems approach means joining up actors and incentives at every
stage.5 The dairy sector provides a perfect example of the possibilities of
connecting. We work with our customers and with development partners to
establish dairy hubs in countries around the world. These hubs connect
smallholder farmers with local processors, providing chilling infrastructure,
veterinary support, training and reliable routes to market.6 This helps drive
higher milk quality, more stable incomes and safer nutrition for local
communities.
Our strategic partnership with UNIDO* is a powerful example of this
collaboration in action. Together, we are scaling Dairy Hub projects in Kenya,
building on the success of earlier initiatives with our customer Githunguri
Dairy. UNIDO plays a key role in securing donor funding and aligning
public-private efforts to expand local dairy production and improve livelihoods.
This model demonstrates how collaborations can unlock changes in food systems.
COP30 and beyond
Strategic investment can strengthen local supply chains, extend social
protections and open economic opportunity, particularly in vulnerable regions.
Lasting progress will require a systems approach, with policymakers helping to
mitigate transition costs and backing sustainable business models that build
resilience across global food systems for generations to come.
As COP30 approaches, we urge policymakers to consider food systems as part of
all decision-making, to prevent unintended trade-offs between climate and
nutrition goals. We also recommend that COP30 negotiators ensure the Global Goal
on Adaptation include priorities indicators that enable countries to collect,
monitor and report data on the adoption of climate-resilient technologies and
practices by food processors. This would reinforce the importance of the hidden
middle and help unlock targeted adaptation finance across the food value chain.
When every actor plays their part, from policymakers to producers, and from
farmers to financiers, the whole system moves forward. Only then can food
systems be truly equitable, resilient and sustainable, protecting what matters
most: food, people and the planet.
* UNIDO (United Nations Industrial Development Organization)
Disclaimer
POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
* The sponsor is Tetra Pak
* The ultimate controlling entity is Brands2Life Ltd
* The advertisement is linked to policy advocacy regarding food systems and
climate policy
More information here.
https://www.politico.eu/7449678-2
It’s been a decade since the U.S. and Europe pushed the world to embrace a
historic agreement to stop the planet’s runaway warming.
The deal among nearly 200 nations offered a potential “turning point for the
world,” then-U.S. President Barack Obama said. Eventually, almost every country
on Earth signed the 2015 Paris Agreement, a pact whose success would rest on
peer pressure, rising ambition and the economics of a clean energy revolution.
But 10 years later, the actions needed to fulfill those hopes are falling short.
The United States has quit the deal — twice. President Donald Trump
is throttling green energy projects at home and finding allies to help
him undermine climate initiatives abroad, while inking trade deals that commit
countries to buying more U.S. fossil fuels.
Europe remains on track to meet its climate commitments, but its resolve is
wavering, as price-weary voters and the rise of far-right parties raise doubts
about how quickly the bloc can deliver its pledge to turn away from fossil
fuels.
Paris has helped ingrain climate change awareness in popular culture and policy,
led countries and companies to pledge to cut their carbon pollution to zero and
helped steer a wave of investments into clean energy. Scientists say it appears
to have lessened the odds of the most catastrophic levels of warming.
On the downside, oil and gas production hasn’t yet peaked, and climate pollution
and temperatures are still rising — with the latter just tenths of a degree from
the tipping point agreed in Paris. But the costs of green energy have fallen so
much that, in most parts of the world, it’s the cheapest form of power and is
being installed at rates unthinkable 10 years ago.
World leaders and diplomats who are in Brazil starting this week for the United
Nations’ annual climate talks will face a test to stand up for Paris in the face
of Trump’s opposition while highlighting that its goals are both necessary and
beneficial.
The summit in the Amazonian port city of Belém was supposed to be the place
where rich and poor countries would celebrate their progress and commit
themselves to ever-sharper cuts in greenhouse gas pollution.
Instead, U.S. contempt for global climate efforts and a muddled message from
Europe are adding headwinds to a moment that is far more turbulent than the one
in which the Paris Agreement was adopted.
Some climate veterans are still optimists — to a point.
“I think that the basic architecture is resistant to Trump’s destruction,” said
John Podesta, chair of the board of the liberal Center for American Progress,
who coordinated climate policy under Obama and former President Joe Biden. But
that resistance could wilt if the U.S. stays outside the agreement, depriving
the climate movement of American leadership and support, he said.
“If all that’s gone, and it’s gone for a long time, I don’t know whether the
structure holds together,” Podesta added.
Other climate diplomats say the cooperative spirit of 2015 would be hard to
recreate now, which is why acting on Paris is so essential.
“If we had to renegotiate Paris today, we’d never get the agreement that we had
10 years ago,” said Rachel Kyte, the United Kingdom’s special climate
representative.
“But we can also look to these extraordinary data points, which show that the
direction of travel is very clear,” she said, referring to growth of clean
energy. “And most people who protect where their money is going to be are
interested in that direction of travel.”
THE PARIS PARADOX
One thing that hasn’t faded is the business case for clean energy. If anything,
the economic drivers behind the investments that Paris helped unleash have
surpassed even what the Paris deal’s authors anticipated.
But the political will to keep countries driving forward has stalled in some
places as the United States — the world’s largest economy, sole military
superpower and historically biggest climate polluter — attacks its very
foundation.
Trump’s attempts to undermine the agreement, summed up by the 2017 White House
slogan “Pittsburgh, not Paris,” has affected European ambitions as well, French
climate diplomat Laurence Tubiana told reporters late last month.
“I have never seen such aggressivity against national climate policy all over
because of the U.S.,” said Tubiana, a key architect of the Paris Agreement. “So
we are really confronted with an ideological battle, a cultural battle, where
climate is in that package the U.S. government wants to defeat.”
The White House said Trump is focused on developing U.S. oil and engaging with
world leaders on energy issues, rather than what it dubs the “green new scam.”
The U.S. will not send high-level representatives to COP30.
“The Green New Scam would have killed America if President Trump had not been
elected to implement his commonsense energy agenda,” said Taylor Rogers, a
spokesperson. “President Trump will not jeopardize our country’s economic and
national security to pursue vague climate goals that are killing other
countries.”
Trump is not the only challenge facing Paris, of course.
Even under Obama, the U.S. insisted that the Paris climate pollution targets had
to be nonbinding, avoiding the need for a Senate ratification vote that would
most likely fail.
But unlike previous climate pacts that the U.S. had declined to join, all
countries — including, most notably, China — would have to submit a
pollution-cutting plan. The accord left it up to the governments themselves to
carry out their own pledges and to push laggards to do better. An unusual
confluence of political winds helped drive the bargaining.
Obama, who was staking part of his legacy on getting a global climate agreement,
had spent the year leading up to Paris negotiating a separate deal with China in
which both countries committed to cutting their world-leading pollution.
France, the host of the Paris talks, was also determined to strike a worldwide
pact.
In the year that followed, more than 160 countries submitted their initial plans
to tackle climate change domestically and began working to finish the rules that
would undergird the agreement.
“The Paris Agreement isn’t a machine that churns out ambition. It basically
reflects back to us the level of ambition that we have agreed to … and suggests
what else is needed to get back on track,” said Kaveh Guilanpour, vice president
for international strategies at the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions and
a negotiator for the United Kingdom during the Paris talks. “Whether countries
do that or not, it’s essentially then a matter for them.”
Catherine McKenna, Canada’s former environment minister and a lead negotiator of
the Paris Agreement’s carbon crediting mechanism, called the deal an “incredible
feat” — but not a self-executing one.
“The problem is now it’s really up to countries as well as cities, regions,
companies and financial institutions to act,” she said. “It’s not a treaty thing
anymore — it’s now, ‘Do the work.’”
WHEN GREEN TURNS GRAY
Signs of discord are not hard to find around the globe.
China is tightening its grip on clean energy manufacturing and exports, ensuring
more countries have access to low-cost renewables, but creating tensions in
places that also want to benefit from jobs and revenue from making those goods
and fear depending too much on one country.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, a former United Nations climate envoy,
eliminated his country’s consumer carbon tax and is planning to tap more natural
gas to toughen economic defenses against the United States.
The European Union spent the past five years developing a vast web of green
regulations and sectoral measures, and the bloc estimates that it’s roughly on
track to meet those goals. But many of the EU’s 27 governments — under pressure
from the rising far right, high energy prices, the decline of traditional
industry and Russia’s war against Ukraine — are now demanding that the EU
reevaluate many of those policies.
Still, views within the bloc diverge sharply, with some pushing for small tweaks
and others for rolling back large swaths of legislation.
“Europe must remain a continent of consistency,” French President Emmanuel
Macron said after a meeting of EU leaders in October. “It must step up on
competitiveness, but it must not give up on its [climate] goals.”
Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk, in contrast, said after the same meeting
that he felt vindicated about his country’s long-standing opposition to the EU’s
green agenda: “In most European capitals, people today think differently about
these exaggerated European climate ambitions.”
Worldwide, most countries have not submitted their latest carbon-cutting plans
to the United Nations. While the plans that governments have announced mostly
expand on their previous ones, they still make only modest reductions against
what is needed to limit Earth’s warming since the preindustrial era to 1.5
degrees Celsius.
Exceeding that threshold, scientists say, would lead to more lives lost and
physical and economic damage that would be ever harder to recover from with each
tenth of a degree of additional warming.
The U.N.’s latest report showing the gap between countries’ new pledges and the
Paris targets found that the world is on track for between 2.3 and 2.5 degrees
of warming, a marginal difference from plans submitted in 2020 that is largely
canceled out when the U.S. pledge is omitted. Policies in place now are pointing
toward 2.8 degrees of warming.
“We need unprecedented cuts to greenhouse gas emissions now in an
ever-compressing timeframe and amid a challenging geopolitical context,” said
Inger Andersen, executive director of the U.N. Environment Programme.
But doing so also makes sense, she added. “This where the market is showing that
these kind of investments in smart, clean and green is actually driving jobs and
opportunities. This is where the future lies.”
U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres said in a video message Tuesday that
overshooting the 1.5-degrees target of Paris was now inevitable in the coming
years imploring leaders to rapidly roll out renewables and stop expanding oil,
gas and coal to ensure that overshoot was short-lived.
“We’re in a huge mess,” said Bill Hare, a longtime climate scientist who founded
the policy institute Climate Analytics.
Greenhouse gas pollution hasn’t fallen, and action has flat lined even as
climate-related disasters have increased.
“I think what’s upcoming is a major test for the Paris Agreement,
probably the major test. Can this agreement move forward under the weight of all
of these challenges?” Hare asked. “If it can’t do that, governments are going to
be asking about the benefits of it, frankly.”
That doesn’t mean all is lost.
In 2015, the world was headed for around 4 degrees Celsius of warming, an amount
that researchers say would have been devastating for much of the planet. Today,
that projection is roughly a degree Celsius lower.
“I think a lot of us in Paris were very dubious at the time that we would ever
limit warming to 1.5,” said Elliot Diringer, a former climate official who led
the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions’ international program during the
Paris talks.
“The question is whether we are better off by virtue of the Paris Agreement,” he
said. “I think the answer is yes. Are we where we need to be? Absolutely not.”
GREEN TECHNOLOGY DEFYING EXPECTATIONS
In addition, the adoption of clean energy technology has moved even faster than
projected — sparking what one climate veteran has called a shift in global
climate politics.
“We are no longer in a world in which only climate politics has a leading role
and a substantial role, but increasingly, climate economics,” said Christiana
Figueres, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change in 2015. “Yes, politics is important; no longer as important as
it was 10 years ago.”
Annual solar deployment globally is 15 times greater than the International
Energy Agency predicted in 2015, according to a recent analysis from the Energy
and Climate Intelligence Unit, a U.K. nonprofit.
Renewables now account for more than 90 percent of new power capacity added
globally every year, BloombergNEF reported. China is deploying record amounts of
renewables and lowering costs for countries such as Brazil and Pakistan, which
has seen solar installations skyrocket.
Even in the United States, where Trump repealed many of Biden’s tax breaks and
other incentives, BloombergNEF predicts that power companies will continue to
deploy green sources, in large part because they’re often the fastest source of
new electricity.
Costs for wind and batteries and falling, too. Electric vehicle sales are
soaring in many countries, thanks in large part to the huge number of
inexpensive vehicles being pumped out by China’s BYD, the world’s largest
EV-maker.
Worldwide clean energy investments are now twice as much as fossil fuels
spending, according to the International Energy Agency.
“Today, you can actually talk about deploying clean energy technologies just
because of their cost competitiveness and ability to lower energy system costs,”
said Robbie Orvis, senior director of modeling and analysis at the research
institution Energy Innovation. “You don’t actually even have to say ‘climate’
for a lot of them, and that just wasn’t true 10 years ago.”
The economic trends of the past decade have been striking, said Todd Stern, the
U.S. climate envoy who negotiated the Paris Agreement.
“Paris is something that was seen all over the world, seen by other countries,
seen in boardrooms, as the first time in more than 20 years when you finally got
heads of government saying, ‘Yes, let’s do this,’” he said. “And that’s not the
only reason why there was tremendous technological development, but it sure
didn’t hurt.”
Still, limits exist to how far businesses can take the clean energy transition
on their own.
“You need government intervention of some kind, whether that’s a stick or a
carrot, to push the economy towards a low-carbon trajectory,” said Andrew
Wilson, deputy secretary general of policy at the International Chamber of
Commerce. “If governments press the brakes on climate action or seriously start
to soft pedal, then it does have a limiting effect.”
Brazil, the host of COP30, says it wants to demonstrate that multilateralism
still works and is relevant to peoples’ lives and capable of addressing the
climate impacts communities around the world are facing.
But the goal of this year’s talks might be even more straightforward, said
Guilanpour, the former negotiator.
“If we come out of COP30 demonstrating that the Paris Agreement is alive and
functioning,” he said, “I think in the current context, that is pretty
newsworthy of itself.”
Nicolas Camut in Paris, Zi-Ann Lum in Ottawa, Karl Mathiesen in London and Zia
Weise in Brussels contributed to this report.