'That is a death sentence for many': UN secretary-general on climate action plans

Damian Carrington
“How much more must we suffer?” asked António Guterres at Cop30. He said frontline communities bearing the brunt of the climate crisis had heard enough excuses and were demanding results.
The UN secretary-general is in Belém to urge the world’s nations to find compromises in the final hours of Cop30 and deliver a deal to accelerate climate action: “We are down to the wire and the world is watching.”
The stakes could not be higher. He said the emissions cuts pledged to date by countries – nationally determined contributions in UN jargon – would lead to a global temperature rise of more than 2C: “That is a death sentence for many… we must move much faster, with a drastic cut in emissions.”
Guterres said that overshooting the 1.5C target is now inevitable: “We know what that means, more heat and hunger, more disasters and displacement, and the higher risk of crossing climate tipping points and irreversible damage, including here in the Amazon.”
But he said temperatures could be returned to 1.5C by end of the century with action: “I strongly appeal to global nations to show willingness and flexibility to deliver results that protect people and keep 1.5C alive,”
Agreeing a roadmap to phase out fossil fuels is a difficult issue at Cops, despite the burning of coal, oil and gas being the root cause of the climate crisis. That is because petrostates can easily obstruct and delay a process that works by consensus decision making.
But Guterres said: “The world must pursue a just, orderly and equitable transition away from fossil fuels.” Asked if Cop30 would be a failure without a roadmap to transition away from fossil fuels, he was diplomatic, saying this is not the moment to talk about possible failure, but the moment to stop failure happening.
He was notably firm on wanting finance for adaptation tripled – the current target is a doubling of the money from rich nations to pay to protect people around the world from extreme weather, which is being turbocharged by the climate crisis.
“For millions, adaptation is not an abstract goal,” he said. “It is the difference between rebuilding and being swept away, between replanting and starving, between staying on ancestral land or losing it forever.’ He also supported a just transition, to ensure those working in the fossil fuel industry are supported into new livelihoods.
“None of this can happen without finance that is predictable, accessible and guaranteed,” Guterres said. Climate finance – the provision of money from the rich nations that caused the climate crisis to the poorer nations who are impacted the most – is the basis of trust between the nations. But rows continue about the delivery of the $1.3tn a year by 2035 pledged at last year’s Cop.
Guterres was asked for his message to Donald Trump, who recently called the climate crisis a “con job”. “We are waiting for you,” he said. Asked if he thought Trump and the US would engage positively on climate at some point, he said: “Hope is the last thing to die.”
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Damian Carrington
Talks are still on pause but earlier today, my colleague Damian Carrington wrote about how conservative nations - from the Vatican to Iran – are pushing to narrow the definition of gender at Cop30:
The move is aimed at excluding trans and non-binary people and threatens to increase the difficulty of already tortuous negotiations, AFP reports.
The effort uses footnotes in key texts to attach country-specific interpretations. Paraguay, Argentina, Iran, Indonesia, Malaysia as well as the Vatican have so far entered footnotes into the draft Gender Action Plan (GAP) meant to guide work for the next decade.
Similar footnotes have also appeared in a text related to the “just transition” – the framework to shift to environmentally sustainable economies without leaving workers and communities behind.
The Vatican, for example, says it understands gender as “grounded on the biological sexual identity that is male and female.”
“We do not agree at all with what some countries are putting in the agenda footnotes,” Alicia Barcena, Mexico’s secretary of environment, told AFP. “We feel we are going backwards – we should never go backwards.”
“If every Party could footnote core terms like finance, ambition or equity, we would have no negotiation left – only fragmentation. Gender equality is an agreed principle under this Convention – it needs no qualification,” said Bridget Burns, executive director of the Women’s Environment and Development Organization.
The issue has become so sensitive that Cop30’s Brazilian presidency has elevated it from technical negotiations to a higher political level, where ministers are now trying to hash out a compromise.
You can read more on the issue in Chloe Farand’s story for the Guardian.
After dozens of firefighters battled the Cop30 blaze it has been contained, according to Brazil’s tourism minister, Celso Sabino, speaking to a local news channel.
Forensic teams will try to establish how the fire started but he said he doubts it was criminal.
“You’d have to be a really awful person to set fire to a Cop,” he tells reporters.
Officials are also reporting that there were no injuries from the fire and that everyone was safely evacuated. The building has taken some damage, however, and it will be several hours before attendees will be allowed back in.
The fire has added even more urgency to deliberations as time ticks down to come to agreement – but it has also brought the issues themselves into sharper focus.
“The tragic fire at COP30, which has derailed UN Climate Conference, the People’s Plenary, and obstructed the negotiations is unfortunately a potent metaphor,” US-based activist Jes Vesconte said, speaking with my colleague Dharna Noor.
“As capitalist fossil fuel companies, imperialist countries, and militarist powers block the talks here (or in abstentia in the case of the US) — they are putting profits over planet and people, profiteering off ecocide, genocide and countless deaths, at the expense of all life on Earth, and pouring fuel on the fire of the burning planet.”

Oliver Milman
While we wait for more information about the status of the fire – and the negotiations it disrupted – my colleague Oliver Milman has an update on just how absent the US is from the summit:
Some negotiators at Cop30 have feared a late intervention from Donald Trump, even though the US hasn’t sent a delegation to Belem – a first for America in this era of annual climate summits.
Instead, the Trump administration has sought to studiously ignore Cop30 and during the conference has pushed ahead with its pro-fossil fuel agenda in the US, tearing down limits placed upon drilling and mining in Alaska and weakening endangered species and clean water rules that industry finds irksome.
Asked by the Guardian for its take on the negotiations, which have included a demand for a phaseout of fossil fuels that Trump would surely balk at, a White House spokeswoman said that other countries are “lining up” to import American oil and gas.
“The president has set a strong example for the rest of the world by reversing course on the green energy scam and unleashing our natural resources, like beautiful, clean coal and natural gas, to strengthen our grid stability and lower energy costs,” she said.
“President Trump has been clear: he will not jeopardize our country’s economic and national security to pursue vague climate goals that are killing other countries.”
Trump, then, may well be the phantom that haunts this Cop, as depicted in a rather grotesque statue placed in front of the venue by the artist Jens Galschiøt, rather than one that actively shapes it.
Most countries have steered clear of criticizing the US’ absence, bar one brave Tuvaluan, and the lack of Trump should, many think, remove a hefty barrier to the negotiations. As Christiana Figueres, the former UN climate chief, said last week when asked about the Trump administration’s no-show: “Ciao, bambino!’
So far there isn’t any information on what sparked the fire but emergency crews are working to contain the flames. Rains have started which may aid in their efforts.
Power was cut to the buildings as a precaution. Some delegates have been allowed back into their darkened offices, but the venue is largely under evacuation.
The fire erupted in a pavilion, an area of spaces hosted by each country where they can have private meetings and offices away from official negotiating rooms.
The area is part of the sprawling Blue Zone, inaccessible to the public.
A fire has ignited forcing evacuations
A fire has broken out in the Blue Zone. Videos posted on online showed flames billowing from pavilion as security personnel blew whistles and called for evacuations.
In areas farther from the fire, alarms disrupted afternoon discussions as attendees were asked to leave the venue. Smoke could be seen wafting from the temporary structures by throngs of people who evacuated outside.
Fire trucks have arrived on scene.
This is a breaking story and we will share more as we have it.
Gabrielle Canon here, taking over for Ajit to take you through the second half of day 10.
Let’s start with a quick recap of where things stand:
The summit started with 121 agenda items on the table, according to Carbon Brief, which has hosted a live tracker of what’s been agreed, drafted, or postponed.
The breakdown currently shows 51 items done, 38 in drafts, and 4 with informal text, and 10 still in the red – a number that’s persisted since Monday.
The days left are winding down to check off these agenda items, which include some of the most challenging issues to reach consensus.
Among the biggest questions is whether a fossil fuels roadmap that will help implement a phaseout and a just transition will make the cut. Ministers are also hoping to work out financing and who will put up the finds to ensure the most impacted nations don’t continue to bear the brunt of the climate crisis.
New draft text is expected tonight.
US President Donald Trump may have snubbed Belém and the UN climate process, but my colleague Fiona Harvey has spotted him in the form of a statue outside the venue.

Titled “The Orange Plague”, the statue claims to depict US President Donald Trump as a self-proclaimed king of justice, sitting atop a frail man as he wields a golf club next to an Earth-shaped golf ball.
The sculpture by Jens Galschiøt seeks to “highlight America’s failure to share responsibility for Earth’s future.” The Danish artist, who has exhibited at climate summits dating back to 2002, is best known for his “Pillar of Shame” series of sculptures, which memorialise the loss of life during the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre in Beijing, China.

It’s unclear how long the statue will last in Belém.
Next year’s Cop is set to take place in a stunning resort city on the Mediterranean - a tourist magnet that boasts a rich history stretching back to the empires of ancient Greece and Rome.
But in recent years, the weight of the climate crisis has borne down on Antalya. The southern Turkish city and surrounding province of the same name have been plagued in recent years by horrific fires and severe floods.




Like other countries on the Mediterranean, Turkey is no strange to violent weather made stronger by carbon pollution. A World Weather Attribution analysis this summer found weather conditions leading to deadly wildfires in July in Turkey, Cyprus and Greece were made 10 times more likely due to climate change.
'That is a death sentence for many': UN secretary-general on climate action plans

Damian Carrington
“How much more must we suffer?” asked António Guterres at Cop30. He said frontline communities bearing the brunt of the climate crisis had heard enough excuses and were demanding results.
The UN secretary-general is in Belém to urge the world’s nations to find compromises in the final hours of Cop30 and deliver a deal to accelerate climate action: “We are down to the wire and the world is watching.”
The stakes could not be higher. He said the emissions cuts pledged to date by countries – nationally determined contributions in UN jargon – would lead to a global temperature rise of more than 2C: “That is a death sentence for many… we must move much faster, with a drastic cut in emissions.”
Guterres said that overshooting the 1.5C target is now inevitable: “We know what that means, more heat and hunger, more disasters and displacement, and the higher risk of crossing climate tipping points and irreversible damage, including here in the Amazon.”
But he said temperatures could be returned to 1.5C by end of the century with action: “I strongly appeal to global nations to show willingness and flexibility to deliver results that protect people and keep 1.5C alive,”
Agreeing a roadmap to phase out fossil fuels is a difficult issue at Cops, despite the burning of coal, oil and gas being the root cause of the climate crisis. That is because petrostates can easily obstruct and delay a process that works by consensus decision making.
But Guterres said: “The world must pursue a just, orderly and equitable transition away from fossil fuels.” Asked if Cop30 would be a failure without a roadmap to transition away from fossil fuels, he was diplomatic, saying this is not the moment to talk about possible failure, but the moment to stop failure happening.
He was notably firm on wanting finance for adaptation tripled – the current target is a doubling of the money from rich nations to pay to protect people around the world from extreme weather, which is being turbocharged by the climate crisis.
“For millions, adaptation is not an abstract goal,” he said. “It is the difference between rebuilding and being swept away, between replanting and starving, between staying on ancestral land or losing it forever.’ He also supported a just transition, to ensure those working in the fossil fuel industry are supported into new livelihoods.
“None of this can happen without finance that is predictable, accessible and guaranteed,” Guterres said. Climate finance – the provision of money from the rich nations that caused the climate crisis to the poorer nations who are impacted the most – is the basis of trust between the nations. But rows continue about the delivery of the $1.3tn a year by 2035 pledged at last year’s Cop.
Guterres was asked for his message to Donald Trump, who recently called the climate crisis a “con job”. “We are waiting for you,” he said. Asked if he thought Trump and the US would engage positively on climate at some point, he said: “Hope is the last thing to die.”

Damien Gayle
Inside the halls of Cop30 you see people from all around the world, and it can be easy to forget that there are many people who remain unrepresented.
On Thursday morning, Magne Tony was standing with compatriots from French Guiana outside the entrance to the conference centre, trying to push pieces of paper into the hands of arriving delegates and observers headed: “Our Amazon is dying”.
Although it is almost 4,500 miles away from the geographic continent of Europe, French Guiana remains a French colonial possession. As such, decisions about its future are taken by France.

Tony, who was representing the Union of French Guianese Workers, said he had been unable to gain access to the conference. But he still wanted to alert the people going in about the issues his country was facing. He said:
The main problem is that France are in 9,000 kilometres from Amazonia, from South America, and they’re taking decisions. [But] they don’t really know what is the problem really. They’re taking the decisions from their own mind and the problem is that they’re far from reality.
That’s why we decided to alert the people in the world about [our] problems: water coming up, getting enough to eat, more heat – in some parts of French Guiana, people don’t have water.
According to the document he shared, the forests of French Guiana represent almost two-thirds of France’s forests but receive just 10% of national forest ranger staffing. Thousands of hectares are deforested every year.
The territory is also the location of the European Space Centre, which “has already killed several protected species with France’s complicity”, according to the document. It goes on:
These crises, a consequence of Western capitalist madness, primarily affect the most vulnerable: women and communities dependent on forests and rivers. But they also concern all of humanity: French Guiana is part of the Amazon, a regulator of the global climate and essential to planetary balance.
We remind you that French Guiana is the last colony in South America without self-determination. We will not be able to protect our environment or guarantee our food and energy self-sufficiency, essential for our collective survival, as long as decisions are made in Paris without consulting the affected communities or taking into account local specificities.
Guteress has told delegates that “communities on the frontlines are watching too” as he reminds them of flooded homes, failed harvests and lost livelihoods.
“Please engage in good faith to reach ambitious compromise,” he pleaded. “1.5c must be your only red line. This is the hour for leadership. Be bold. Follow the science. Put people before profit and please keep your eyes on the finish line.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres has begun speaking at the summit, urging countries to work together to deliver fair outcomes that are “concrete on funding and adaptation, credible on emission cuts, and bankable on finance.”
More to follow…
Calls to tax meat go unheard

Jonathan Watts

The elephant in the room is a cow
At last someone at Cop30 is talking about the main cause of Amazon destruction and Brazilian greenhouse gas emissions: the price of beef.
It has taken more than two weeks of the conference and hundreds of panels on every other topic under the sun to get on to this point, but finally someone had the courage to suggest that Brazil – and all other nations – should put a tax on meat and diary, and use the revenue this generates to subsidise healthier plant-based foods.
“It’s the elephant in the room,” said Tim Reysoo at a press conference by the True Animal Protein Price Coalition (TAPP). “There are 60,000 delegates at Cop30 and we are the only ones mentioning this.”
The health and environment problems caused by beef and other types of meat are global, but nowhere is worse affected than Brazil.
The presentation noted that 74% of Brazil’s greenhouse gas emissions come from food production, mostly in the form of deforestation to clear land for farms and pastures.
The world’s biggest meat producer, JBS, which originated in Brazil, is a major sponsor of Cop30 and its representatives are part of a “food systems working group” inside the conference that is drawing up policy recommendations for governments.
By contrast, the TAPP coalition’s event was poorly attended, but the participants drew applause for arguing that plant-based products from a living Amazon should be a climate solution: “The future of sustainable food already exists inside the forest,” said Larissa Carreira of Te Protejo, a Latin American NGO dedicated to animal rights. “The Amazon shows these solutions already exist. Our role is to strengthen and scale them.”

The speakers said Europe should take the lead. They noted that the EU currently spends €380bn to subsidise agriculture, even though it accounts for only 1.2% of GDP. If it instead put a €1 per kilogram tax on meat, this would generate €35.6bn of revenue, which could then be used to subside healthier foods.
This would also reduce pressure on health systems. The panel displayed a Lancet study that found health-directed taxation of meat products could yield a 9% decrease in premature deaths related with red meat and processed meat consumption with an estimated 14% decrease in attributable health costs globally.
“We need governments to provide incentives to guide consumers to food that is healthy for people and the planet,” said Jeroom Remmers of The True Animal Protein Price Coalition.
The coalition called on the Cop conference to include a reference to “transitioning away from animal protein overconsumption.”
The meat industry has also come under fire for its enormous discharge of methane, a gas that heats the planet far more than carbon dioxide. Finding solutions for this is a topic of a panel discussion later this morning organised by Mighty Earth.
In a rare positive development, another of Brazil’s big beef producers, Marfrig, is expected to announce a methane target at the panel.

Ajit Niranjan
Two key pieces of climate jargon – adaptation and mitigation – are sometimes seen as alternative ways to survive a hotter planet. In reality, people’s worlds are already being torn apart by weather that has been made more violent by fossil fuel pollution and more deadly by human mismanagement.
A few weeks ago I spoke with Toñi García, who saw this first-hand. Here is her story.

I had been working with my husband, Miguel Carpio, for over 30 years. We would spend the day together, we would meet at work. With our daughter, Sara, and her boyfriend, we went everywhere – the gym, the dentist, the hairdresser – as a happy and close-knit family.
In my house, there wasn’t a pair of trousers, a dress or a sock that we didn’t buy together. In my family, there was never a day without an “I love you” or a hug.
On 29 October 2024, we left work at half past four in the afternoon and arrived home at around five to our apartment on the fourth floor of a building in Benetússer, on the outskirts of Valencia. Despite working for the regional government, we had received no warning about the rains that were falling in the interior of the Valencian community.
But my daughter – a nurse working at La Fe hospital on the intensive care ward – was scared. At half past six, she asked me from the balcony if the town could get flooded. I told her it was impossible. I’m 60 years old and I had never seen it flood. My elders had always led me to believe that it was impossible. Still, as a civil servant who knows the system, I knew that if there was any danger, the authorities would contact us via WhatsApp or text. I made her look at her mobile phone. She had no messages, no alerts. We asked my husband, who also had nothing.

I tried to reassure her, saying: “Look, they haven’t warned us about anything, so nothing is going to happen.” My husband and I continued doing things at home. She stayed on the balcony, worried, and at exactly quarter past seven in the evening, she cried: “Mum, Dad, come, come.” We looked out and saw a very low tongue of brown water, less than 15cm deep.
The first thing we thought to do was to take the car on to the street in case water seeped into the underground garage. My husband went downstairs and my daughter, who drives a separate car, joined him. I stayed on the balcony and called my sister, who was in Valencia city, to tell her not to come over that night.
But not long after they went down, I heard a strange noise in the background. It was as if something heavy was being dragged on asphalt. I looked to the right and suddenly saw a huge wave carrying a wall of reeds. And that scared me, because right afterwards, water started coming in, very strong and with high pressure. It was dragging containers, and soon it was dragging cars. It lifted up all the cars that were parked on the street and started to carry them away. I hung up on my sister and immediately the power went out. We had no electricity.
Read the full story here.

Damian Carrington
There was excitement on Tuesday when 82 countries from across the globe came together to back a roadmap for the transition away from fossil fuels. Making progress on phasing out the root cause of the climate crisis is frustratingly difficult at UN Cops, because the need for consensus decisions means petrostates like Saudi Arabia can easily block efforts.
However, an analysis by Carbon Brief shows that despite the backing of 82 nations, the roadmap remains far from being passed. That is because while 82 is almost half of the nations at Cop30, they represent just 7% of fossil fuel production. If the big producers can’t be somehow persuaded to get on board, the roadmap will be a road to nowhere.

Adam Morton
Adelaide has lost out to Antalya to host next year’s Cop. My colleague Adam Morton, the Guardian Australia’s environment editor, has the account from Belém of what went down.

Ouch. From one perspective, Australia’s long-running bid to host the Cop31 UN climate conference next year has ended in clear failure.
It campaigned for more than three years for the rights to put on the world’s biggest climate summit and green trade fair, which would have brought tens of thousands of people to the South Australian capital of Adelaide next November.
That’s not happening. Instead, the conference known as Cop31 is headed to the resort city of Antalya, on the Turkish Mediterranean.
The result will be a major let down to many people who had hoped hosting the climate carnival could help accelerate Australia on a transition from being a fossil fuel economy to a renewable energy superpower, and bring international focus to the existential plight facing Pacific island nations, who would have been co-hosts.
The process that led to failure has been an opaque mess. In recent days, there have been doubts that Anthony Albanese and other senior figures really wanted the bid to succeed. The prime minister’s language sent mixed messages at best. It translated to stories in the Australian and international media saying the government was walking away.
This contrasted with the message being relayed at the Cop30 talks in the Brazilian city of Belem, where the Australian climate change minister, Chris Bowen, had just declared the country was “in it to win it”.
Uncertain support is not a new issue for Australia’s Cop31 bid. While Bowen championed it, other senior members of the government have only occasionally appeared to care.
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, traditionally responsible for international climate negotiations, has been disengaged and sometimes outright opposed.
There is little sign Albanese has considered UN climate conferences a priority. He hasn’t attended one since becoming prime minister in 2022. We’ll never know for certain, but some will wonder if more could have been done to get the bid over the line.
That’s the negative take. But there is another way to look at it.
In the context of the Cop30 talks this week in Brazil – and from an international perspective – the announcement on Wednesday night may, perversely, have been the best result possible.
Read the full story here.

One big piece of news out of Belém last night was that Turkey will host Cop31 next year, with Australia leading the actual negotiations, under a deal to end an unprecedented stand-off between prospective host countries.
The unusual arrangement, which was being negotiated overnight and is expected to be officially announced today, would see the event take place in Antalya, a 2000-year-old Mediterranean city that has become the country’s tourism capital. Turkey would manage the event while Australia would preside over the diplomatic wrangling to stop the planet from heating and keep people safe from the breakdown of a stable climate.
Crucially, the resolution of the spat could still leave space for vulnerable Pacific island nations - who were part of Australia’s bid to host the summit - to play a significant role. Australian climate minister Chris Bowen told journalists last night that the deal could involve an event on a Pacific island before the summit to pledge money for a Pacific resilience fund.
Brazilian president Lula addresses the conference

Damien Gayle
On Wednesday evening I joined a crowd of journalists, including my colleague Fiona Harvey, veteran of many Cops, to wait outside a plenary room in the artificially Baltic surroundings of the Cop30 conference centre.
Rumour had it that the Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who had earlier arrived at the UN climate summit, would soon emerge to speak to journalists. What exactly we would do if he did emerge was unclear.
There was no guarantee that we, out of the several hundred journalists who had gathered to catch a glimpse of Lula, would even get close. And even if we did, neither of us spoke enough Portuguese to quiz him on the finer points of international climate politics.
But then, without warning, some members of the press to our right began peeling off, moving back down the huge grey tented corridors that snake through the centre. Others nervously equivocated, then began to follow, first at a stride, then at a jog, then a sprint, whooping and hollering.
“News stampede!” shouted Fiona. “Damien, run!” I did as I was told, chasing my fellow members of the press corps, dodging tripod legs wielded at face height, trampling those too weak or slow to get out of my way, determined but unsure of where we were going, or where this race would end.
Finally, outside the conference centre’s “VVIP Lounge”, a new crowd began to form. I joined it, muscling my way as close to the front as possible, where harried looking UN guards fought to keep the jostling crowd of journalists at bay.

And as I stood there, staring at a closed, whitewashed door, shoulders squared to stop any overly keen rivals from trying to get past me, I slowly began to realise: I had no idea what on earth was happening.
If one moment sums up my experience of the Cop30 talks so far, this was it. Although I have followed – and covered – the Cop proceedings from London for several years, the Belém climate summit has been my first in-person experience of the international climate negotiations. And I don’t think it’s any threat to my journalistic machismo to admit that these talks are bewildering.
Multiple tracks of negotiations, all articulated in obscure acronyms and insider jargon; texts and draft texts; huddles, scrums and doorsteps; and thousands of people whose roles are all entirely vague but no doubt also vital to the future of the planet.
Cop attendees who spoke to the Guardian agreed that this edition of the UN climate summit is more complex than in recent years. Usually by this late stage of the negotiations talks would have coalesced around a totemic issue that would be seen as definitive. In fact, that was partly why Lula was there, to try to bash some heads together: high-level ministerial meetings, an attempt to get some decisions taken. Brazil had hoped to get a package of measures gavelled through by the end of Wednesday night. That deadline passed without a text appearing; the hosts now promise it on Thursday.
Before he headed off again, Lula told reporters that the proposal for a roadmap to the end of oil use does not involve “imposing anything to anyone” nor “determining deadlines for countries to stop burning fossil fuels”, the main cause of greenhouse gases responsible for global warming.
“We need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. And, if fossil fuel is a thing that emits a lot, we need to start thinking about how to live without fossil fuel, and build the way to live [without it].”

“I am so happy that I leave here certain that my negotiators will have the best result a Cop could have ever offered to the Planet Earth,” the Brazilian president said. He believes that the best deal can be negotiated, “because, in a COP, we don’t impose anything, everything has to be consensus, it has to be a lot of conversation. And we respect the political, ideological, territorial and cultural sovereignty of each country. We don’t want to impose anything, we just want to say it’s possible.”
His words, however, are a little optimistic. Rifts on key issues remain, particularly around climate finance, unilateral trade measures, progress on emissions-reduction plans and the central issue of whether countries will agree to develop a “roadmap” setting out how the world will transition away from fossil fuels.
That means there is plenty of bewildering work ahead, and many more late nights in the Cop media centre. As Fiona is keen on reminding me: “Cop is a marathon, not a sprint.”
Good afternoon, this is Ajit Niranjan joining you from Berlin as we enter the final days of the 30th United Nations climate summit. My US-based colleague Gabrielle Canon will be taking over later today to guide you through the latest.

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