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Cold or Heat, A Disputed Roadmap to Leave Fossil Fuels Behind in COP30

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Thu, 11/20/2025 - 04:41

Entrance to the Hangar Convention Center of the Amazonia in the northeastern Brazilian city of Belém. The climate summit, which began on November 10 and is due to conclude on Friday the 21st, is debating issues such as the phase-out of fossil fuels and adaptation goals. Credit: Emilio Godoy / IPS

By Emilio Godoy
BELÉM, Brazil, Nov 20 2025 (IPS)

The heat in the Hangar Convention Center of the Amazonia, in the northeastern Brazilian city of Belém, has reached the negotiation rooms of the climate summit. Over the past 72 hours, one of the most delicate and significant discussions of this climate meeting has been taking place: the path to progressively abandon the production and use of coal, gas, and oil.

In recent hours, a global coalition of rich and developing countries, led by Colombia, has doubled down on pushing for a fossil fuel phase-out roadmap, while major producer countries resist it.

“The plan must have differentiated commitments, the elimination of fossil fuel subsidies, and the reform of the international financial system, because foreign debt payments are punishing us,” Colombian Environment Minister Irene Vélez explained to IPS.

For the official, the 30th United Nations Conference of the Parties (COP30) on climate change must result in a roadmap. “People are mobilizing, demanding climate action; we have to start now,” she urged.

In Belém, the gateway to the planet’s largest rainforest, it is no longer just about reducing emissions but about transforming the foundation of the energy system, thus acquiring a moral, political, and scientific urgency. What was initially meant to be the “Amazon COP” has mutated into the “end-of-the-fossil-era-COP,” but the roadmap to achieve it is a toss-up.“The plan must have differentiated commitments, the elimination of fossil fuel subsidies, and the reform of the international financial system, because external debt payments are punishing us” –Irene Vélez.

Two years after the world agreed at COP28, held in 2023 in Dubai, to move away from fossil fuels, Belém is the moment of truth, upon which the effort to keep global warming below the 1.5° Celsius limit largely depends—a goal considered vital to avoid devastating and inevitable effects on ecosystems and human life.

Thus, the discussion among the 197 parties to the United Nations climate convention has shifted from the “what” to the “how,” and especially to the “when,” questions that have turned potential coordinates into a geopolitical labyrinth.

In that vein, a coalition of over 80 countries emerged on Tuesday the 18th to push the roadmap, including Colombia, Chile, Guatemala, and Panama among the Latin American countries.

One challenge for the roadmap advocates is that the issue is not explicitly part of the main agenda, a resource that the Brazilian presidency of COP30 could use to shirk responsibility on the matter.

The issue appears on the thematic menu of COP30, which started on the 10th and is scheduled to conclude on the 21st, and whose official objectives include approving the Global Goal on Adaptation to climate change and securing sufficient funds for that adaptation.

Approximately 40,000 people are attending this climate summit, including government representatives, multilateral agencies, academia, and civil society organizations.

An unprecedented indigenous presence is also in attendance, with about 900 delegates from native peoples, drawn by the ancestral call of the Amazon, a symbol of the menu of solutions to the climate catastrophe and simultaneously a victim of its causes.

Also present and very active in Belém are about 1,600 lobbyists from the hydrocarbon industry, 12% more than at the 2024 COP, according to the international coalition Kick Big Polluters Out.

The clamor from civil society demands an institutional structure with governance, clear criteria, measurable objectives, and justice mechanisms.

“The roadmap has become a difficult issue to ignore; it is already at the center of these negotiations, and no country can ignore it. The breadth of support is surprising, with rich and poor countries, producers and non-producers, indicating that an agreement is about to fall,” Antonio Hill, Just Transitions advisor for the non-governmental and international Natural Resource Governance Institute, told IPS.

Activists protest on Wednesday the 19th against fossil fuel exploitation at the entrance to the venue of the Belém climate summit, in the Amazonian northeast of Brazil. Credit: Emilio Godoy / IPS

Poisoned

The push for the roadmap comes from the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty, promoted by civil society organizations, strongly adopted by Colombia, and which so far has the support of 18 nations, but no hydrocarbon-producing Latin American country, such as Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, Mexico, or Venezuela.

Colombia, despite also being a producer and exporter of fossil fuels, has presented its Roadmap for a Just Energy Transition, with which it seeks to replace income from coal and oil with investments in tourism and renewable energy.

Colombia’s 2022-2052 National Energy Plan projects long-term reductions in fossil fuel production. The country announced US$14.5 billion for the energy transition to less polluting forms of energy production.

But for the rest of the region, the duality between maintaining fossil fuels and promoting renewable energies persists.

A prime example of this duality is the COP30 host country itself, Brazil. While the host President, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and his Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Marina Silva, have insisted on the need to abandon fossil fuels, the government is promoting expansive oil and gas extraction plans.

In fact, just weeks before the opening of COP30, the state-owned oil group Petrobras received a permit for oil exploration in the Atlantic, just kilometers from the mouth of the Amazon River.

But Lula and his team committed that this summit in the heart of the Amazon would be “the COP of truth” and “the COP of implementation,” and the issue of fossil fuels has become central to the negotiations, which Lula joined on Wednesday the 19th to give a push to the talks and the outcomes.

In their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)—the set of mitigation and adaptation policies countries must present to comply with the Paris Agreement on climate change signed in 2015 at COP21—Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, or Chile avoid mentioning a managed phase-out of fossil fuels.

Simply put, they argue they cannot let go of the old vine before grasping the new one. This stance also involves a delicate aspect, as nations like Ecuador depend on revenues from hydrocarbon exploitation.

Therefore, the Global South has insisted on its demand for funding from rich nations, due to their contribution to the climate disaster through fossil fuel exploitation since the 17th century.

The result of the presented policies is alarming: although many countries have increased their emission reduction targets on paper, they lack details on phasing out production. The only existing roadmap is the growing extractive one.

In fact, the Global Stocktake of the Paris Agreement process, originating from COP28, demanded that countries take measures to move towards a fossil-free era.

The argument is unequivocal: various estimates indicate that fossil fuels contribute 86% of greenhouse gas emissions, the cause of global warming.

But a key point is where to start. For Uitoto indigenous leader Fanny Kuiru Castro, the new general coordinator of the Coordinator of Indigenous Organizations of the Amazon Basin –which  brings together the more than 350 native peoples of the eight countries sharing the biome–, the starting point must precisely be at-risk regions like the Amazon.

“It is a priority. If there isn’t a clear signal that we must proceed gradually, it means the summit has failed and does not want to adopt that commitment. We will have another 30 years of speeches,” she told IPS, alluding to that number of summits without substantial results.

In the Amazon, oil blocks threaten 31 million hectares or 12% of the total area, mining threatens 9.8 million, and timber concessions threaten 2.4 million.

And in that direction, a major obstacle arises: how to finance the phase-out. The roadmap has a direct link to the financial goals aimed at the Global South, with a demand for US$1.2 trillion in funding for climate action starting in 2035.

“Can the COP deliver the financial backing that countries need to reinvent their economies in time to guarantee just and inclusive development?” Hill questioned.

The atmosphere in Belém is of a different urgency compared to Dubai or Baku, where COP29 was held a year ago. The roadmap to a world free of fossil fuel smoke remains a blurry map, drawn freehand on ground that is heating up far too quickly.

In Belém, humanity is deciding whether to brake gradually or to accelerate, with the air conditioning on and a full tank.

Categories: Africa, Swiss News

«Wahrheit kommt ans Licht»: Trump unterschreibt die Freigabe der Epstein-Files

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/20/2025 - 02:36
US-Präsident Donald Trump hat die Freigabe der Epstein-Files unterzeichnet. In einem Beitrag auf Truth Social schreibt er von einem Schwindel und bezichtigt die Demokraten, Verbindungen zu Sexualverbrecher unterhalten zu haben.

06 partis en lice pour les législatives

24 Heures au Bénin - Thu, 11/20/2025 - 00:53

La Commission électorale nationale autonome (CENA) a enregistré dans le cadre des élections législatives de 2026, les dossiers de candidatures de 6 partis politiques. Il s'agit des partis Union progressiste le renouveau (UP-R), Force cauris pour un Bénin émergent (FCBE), Mouvement des élites engagés pour l'émancipation du Bénin (MOELE-Bénin), Les Démocrates (LD), Bloc républicain (BR), et GSR.

L'opération d'enregistrement de candidatures lancée par la CENA samedi 15 novembre dernier dans le cadre des législatives de 2026, s'achève ce mercredi 19 novembre à zéro heure.
A quelques minutes de la fin du délai imparti, 6 partis politiques ont pu déposer leurs dossiers. Il s'agit de l'Union progressiste le renouveau (UP-R) de Joseph Djogbénou ; de la Force cauris pour un Bénin émergent (FCBE) de Paul Hounkpè ; du Mouvement des élites engagés pour l'émancipation du Bénin (MOELE-Bénin) de Jacques Ayadji, de Les Démocrates (LD) de Boni Yayi ; du Bloc républicain (BR) de Abdoulaye Tchané ; et du GSR de Antoine Guèdou.
Après cette étape importante du processus électoral, les dossiers soumis par les différents partis feront l'objet d'étude approfondie par la CENA.
Contrairement aux communales, aucune rallonge ne sera accordée, avait averti Sacca Lafia, président de la CENA lors de la conférence de presse de lancement.

F. A. A.

Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Greenpeace schlägt Alarm: Shein-Schnäppchen aus Asien – Krebsrisiko inklusive?

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/20/2025 - 00:01
Der asiatische Onlinehändler Shein entzückt Kundinnen mit Billigmode. Er macht aber auch immer wieder negative Schlagzeilen wegen Schadstoffen in Kleidung und Schuhen. Nun zeigt ein neuer Bericht von Greenpeace: Verbessert hat sich gar nichts. Im Gegenteil!

Freiwillige erleben einen besonderen Arbeitstag in der Bäckerei der Stiftung Züriwerk: Mit Mehl und Herz in der Backstube

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/20/2025 - 00:01
In der Bäckerei der Stiftung Züriwerk kommen Mitarbeitende mit Beeinträchtigungen mit einem Team eines Unternehmens für einen guten Zweck zusammen. Beim Backen entstehen nicht nur Guetzli, es ergeben sich auch wertvolle Einblicke in andere Lebens- und Arbeitswelten.

Skifahren wie die Weltmeister, Essen wie Gott in Frankreich und Schnee-Erlebnisse wie im Märchen: So verbringst du das perfekte Winterwochenende

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/20/2025 - 00:01
Was eignet sich im Winter am besten, um vom stressigen Alltag abzuschalten? Hier kommt ein Beispiel, das Schnee-Adrenalin, Après-Ski und Spitzenküche vereint – im Ort der goldenen Erfolge unserer Ski-Nati, der dank des Lötschbergtunnels im Nu erreicht ist.

Trotz Zweitwohnungs-Stopp: Mit diesem Uralt-Trick wird auf der Riederalp gebaut und gebaut

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/20/2025 - 00:00
Trotz Raumplanungsgesetz und Zweitwohnungsstopp kann auf der Riederalp munter weitergebaut werden. Der brisante Grund dafür: Wer früher grosszügig einplante, profitiert heute noch davon. Kommt das Schlupfloch bald unter Druck?

Einbruch in Wettbüro, 7 Gramm Koks pro Tag – Beziehung mit 15-Jähriger: Der tiefe Fall von Konstantin Wecker

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/20/2025 - 00:00
Konstantin Wecker, einst grosser deutscher Liedermacher, ist tief gefallen. Nach Kokain-Exzessen, Alkoholabhängigkeit und mehreren Knastaufenthalten folgt der nächste Eklat: Er gesteht die Beziehung zu einer 15-Jährigen.
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

Ungeschlagen an die Endrunde: Für diese Quali-Kampagne bekommen vier Nati-Stars die Bestnote

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/20/2025 - 00:00
Die Nati qualifiziert sich souverän in der schwierigen Gruppe B direkt für die WM. Dementsprechend gut fällt auch das Zeugnis aus. Vier Spieler holen sich die Bestnote ab, eine Ungenügende gibt es keine.
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

«Packt ihn in Watte ein»: Das sind die grossen Nati-Gewinner der WM-Quali

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/20/2025 - 00:00
Im «FORZA!»-Podcast sprechen Fussball-Reporter Florian Raz und Blick-Fussball-Chef Tobias Wedermann über die Gewinner unter Nati-Trainer Murat Yakin in der WM-Qualifikation.
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

Bub (10) schlägt 11-Jährigen im Bus ohnmächtig – jetzt handelt die Schule: So wird der Prügel-Schüler von Dottikon AG bestraft

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/20/2025 - 00:00
Nach der brutalen Prügel-Attacke von Dottikon AG folgen Konsequenzen: Der Schläger wurde versetzt. Die neue Schule informierte die Eltern – und betont, dass dem Jungen ein Neuanfang zusteht. Die Mutter des Opfers befürwortet den Wechsel.
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

Protest events, social movements, and civil society in Central and Eastern Europe

Courrier des Balkans / Albanie - Wed, 11/19/2025 - 23:59

WEBINAR : November 19 , 6:00-7:30 PM (Brussels time)
Protest events, social movements, and civil society in Central and Eastern Europe
Registration required : jean-michel.de.waele@ulb.be
Round table with :
Szabina Kerényi, Researcher at the Institute for Sociology at the HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences, Budapest. Gilda Hoxha, Ph.D., Lecturer and Researcher based in Tirana. Claudiu Crăciun, Ph.D., Lecturer in European Politics at the Faculty of Political Science, National (…)

- Agenda / , ,

Protest events, social movements, and civil society in Central and Eastern Europe

Courrier des Balkans - Wed, 11/19/2025 - 23:59

WEBINAR : November 19 , 6:00-7:30 PM (Brussels time)
Protest events, social movements, and civil society in Central and Eastern Europe
Registration required : jean-michel.de.waele@ulb.be
Round table with :
Szabina Kerényi, Researcher at the Institute for Sociology at the HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences, Budapest. Gilda Hoxha, Ph.D., Lecturer and Researcher based in Tirana. Claudiu Crăciun, Ph.D., Lecturer in European Politics at the Faculty of Political Science, National (…)

- Agenda / , ,

KI-Blase platzt vorerst nicht: Chipgigant Nvidia überrascht mit Mega-Umsatz

Blick.ch - Wed, 11/19/2025 - 23:50
Nvidia übertrifft Erwartungen: Der Chiphersteller steigert den Umsatz im dritten Quartal massiv auf 57 Milliarden Dollar. CEO Jensen Huang versucht die Sorgen vor einer KI-Blase zu zerstreuen.
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

Poland’s healthcare pay reform faces setback as unions walk out

Euractiv.com - Wed, 11/19/2025 - 23:39
Trade unions walk out of critical healthcare wage negotiations following controversial pay proposals
Categories: European Union, Swiss News

Ajoie – Biel 3:4 n.V.: Neuenschwander (16) schnürt nach Tor-Debüt den Doppelpack

Blick.ch - Wed, 11/19/2025 - 23:06
In Zusammenarbeit mit MySports präsentiert dir Blick die Highlights der Partie Ajoie – Biel (3:4 n.V.).
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

«Es wird ein bisschen lächerlich»: Gender-Streit an Klima-Gipfel COP30 ausgebrochen

Blick.ch - Wed, 11/19/2025 - 22:28
Ein Streit über Geschlechter-Definitionen gefährdet mögliche Kompromisse an der Uno-Klimakonferenz in Belém. Sechs Staaten stellen sich stur.
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

Schauten die Behörden zu lange nur zu?: Lucia T. prellte reihenweise Pferdefreunde

Blick.ch - Wed, 11/19/2025 - 22:23
Lucia T. aus Ramiswil SO liess Hunde verwahrlosen und hielt angeblich mehr als 100 Pferde an 16 Standorten. Sie gelangte an die Tiere, zahlte aber selten die Rechnungen für sie. Warum schritten die Behörden erst jetzt ein?
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

«Ich weine jedes Mal»: US-Wintersport-Ikone kündigt emotional ihren Rücktritt an

Blick.ch - Wed, 11/19/2025 - 22:14
Die US-amerikanische Skilanglauf-Olympiasiegerin Jessie Diggins kündigt ihr Karriereende nach der kommenden Saison an. Die 34-jährige zweimalige Weltmeisterin und dreimalige Gesamtweltcupsiegerin teilt dies in einem emotionalen Instagram-Post mit.
Categories: Défense, Swiss News

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