Rich
countries have lost enthusiasm for tackling climate crisis, says Cop30 chief
Brazil’s
André Corrêa do Lago says countries should follow China’s lead on clean energy
as conference begins
Fiona
Harvey in Belém
Mon 10
Nov 2025 05.00 GMT
Rich
countries have lost enthusiasm for combating the climate crisis while China is
surging ahead in producing and using clean energy equipment, the president of
the UN climate talks has said.
More
countries should follow China’s lead instead of complaining about being
outcompeted, said André Corrêa do Lago, the Brazilian diplomat in charge of the
Cop30 conference, which begins on Monday.
“Somehow
the reduction in enthusiasm of the global north is showing that the global
south is moving,” Corrêa do Lago told reporters in Belém, the city in the
Amazonian rainforest where the fortnight-long Cop30 conference is taking place.
“It is not just this year, it has been moving for years, but it did not have
the exposure that it has now.”
He
pointed to the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, China, which is
also the biggest producer and consumer of low-carbon energy. “China is coming
up with solutions that are for everyone, not just China,” he said. “Solar
panels are cheaper, they’re so competitive [compared with fossil fuel energy]
that they are everywhere now. If you’re thinking of climate change, this is
good.”
Ministers
and high-ranking officials from 194 countries will seek to forge plans at Cop30
to stay within, or as close as possible to, the limit of 1.5C of heating set
out in the Paris agreement, to set a roadmap to phase out fossil fuels, and to
ensure that poor countries receive the help they need.
Top of
the agenda will be national plans on cutting greenhouse gas emissions, which
currently would lead to a devastating 2.5C of heating. Vulnerable countries
want to draw up a plan that will show how countries can outdo their current
inadequate efforts and meet the Paris agreement targets.
Ilana
Seid, Palau’s ambassador to the UN and a spokesperson for the Alliance of Small
Island States (Aosis), said setting out a global pathway to deeper emissions
cuts would be key. “Progress so far has been insufficient and we have to have a
response,” she told the Guardian. “Otherwise, we don’t know where we are
going.”
The
Brazilian hosts are focused on “implementation” – that is, putting into
practice commitments that have already been made, such as cuts to greenhouse
gas emissions, a tripling of renewable energy by 2030 and a doubling of energy
efficiency. But Aosis wants more than this, arguing that without policies to
cut emissions faster, the target of limiting heating to 1.5C will be lost.
“The 1.5C
target must be our north star,” Seid said. “We need to say that collectively we
are falling short on that, and we need to have a response.”
Poor
countries also want assurances that they will receive promised funds to protect
them against the impacts of climate breakdown. A roadmap to move the world off
fossil fuels will also be under discussion.
But,
despite efforts by Brazil over more than six months to avoid a fight at the
conference opening over what should be on the agenda, bitter disagreements over
what the conference should focus on and what should be off the table are still
likely on Monday.
As the
conference begins, the Guardian can reveal that one key climate pledge is
already being undermined. At Cop26 in Glasgow in 2021, the UK, the US, the EU
and other countries forged the global methane pledge, requiring a cut in
methane of 30% by 2030. About 159 countries subsequently signed up.
Yet
emissions from some of the main signatories have increased, data from the
satellite analysis company Kayrros shows, which is likely to further raise
global temperatures. Collectively, emissions from six of the biggest
signatories – the US, Australia, Kuwait, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Iraq –
are now 8.5% above the 2020 level.
Kuwait
and Australia have made progress on cutting their emissions but emissions from
US oil and gas operations have increased by 18%.
Antoine
Rostand, the president of Kayrros, said: “Despite the promises made year after
year, despite the worsening state of the climate, methane emissions are rising.
Our analysis makes that painfully clear. Can we expect things to change? We
must at least hope they do. The clock is ticking.”
Methane
is a greenhouse gas 80 times more powerful than carbon dioxide, and is
responsible for about a third of the warming recently recorded. Cutting it
could be an “emergency brake” on global temperatures, but so far countries have
not taken the measures needed.
Durwood
Zaelke, the president of the Institute for Governance and Sustainable
Development, said countries must sign a new global agreement on methane rather
than sticking with the non-binding pledge. “With emissions still high, the
voluntary pledge is clearly not enough to keep us from passing the
fast-approaching tipping points,” he said. “We need a more muscular binding
methane agreement.”

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