The Prague Post - Global tensions rattle COP30 build-up but 'failure not an option'

EUR -
AED 4.298254
AFN 82.528046
ALL 98.167182
AMD 450.3882
ANG 2.094572
AOA 1073.255166
ARS 1390.910775
AUD 1.787742
AWG 2.109644
AZN 1.98651
BAM 1.957897
BBD 2.367926
BDT 143.423627
BGN 1.953865
BHD 0.441488
BIF 3492.996717
BMD 1.170399
BND 1.494682
BOB 8.10368
BRL 6.419053
BSD 1.172751
BTN 100.458893
BWP 15.574749
BYN 3.837895
BYR 22939.813718
BZD 2.355713
CAD 1.596962
CDF 3367.237192
CHF 0.934885
CLF 0.02841
CLP 1090.21414
CNY 8.389242
CNH 8.389031
COP 4727.240184
CRC 592.236898
CUC 1.170399
CUP 31.015564
CVE 110.384652
CZK 24.735559
DJF 208.832797
DKK 7.46066
DOP 69.68494
DZD 151.846295
EGP 58.410965
ERN 17.55598
ETB 158.296407
FJD 2.618999
FKP 0.851074
GBP 0.851763
GEL 3.183112
GGP 0.851074
GHS 12.138157
GIP 0.851074
GMD 83.703103
GNF 10160.927168
GTQ 9.019777
GYD 245.352807
HKD 9.187495
HNL 30.635946
HRK 7.528941
HTG 153.682646
HUF 399.37689
IDR 18959.521958
ILS 3.959084
IMP 0.851074
INR 100.074239
IQD 1536.245532
IRR 49303.043955
ISK 142.004008
JEP 0.851074
JMD 187.88205
JOD 0.829797
JPY 169.043606
KES 151.572355
KGS 102.165036
KHR 4700.975147
KMF 491.830763
KPW 1053.383085
KRW 1590.864158
KWD 0.357861
KYD 0.977347
KZT 608.211479
LAK 25292.199498
LBP 105078.302315
LKR 351.736759
LRD 234.554246
LSL 20.731895
LTL 3.455883
LVL 0.707963
LYD 6.351776
MAD 10.61497
MDL 19.848345
MGA 5155.544327
MKD 61.444894
MMK 2457.044049
MNT 4195.934426
MOP 9.482257
MRU 46.52203
MUR 52.855362
MVR 18.030004
MWK 2033.586941
MXN 22.096657
MYR 4.94903
MZN 74.858576
NAD 20.731807
NGN 1810.955747
NIO 43.156411
NOK 11.76535
NPR 160.732854
NZD 1.928794
OMR 0.449991
PAB 1.172756
PEN 4.191089
PGK 4.834199
PHP 66.279327
PKR 332.591572
PLN 4.235831
PYG 9362.989059
QAR 4.287948
RON 5.077139
RSD 117.195557
RUB 91.996145
RWF 1693.421123
SAR 4.389132
SBD 9.769714
SCR 17.175502
SDG 702.827634
SEK 11.07392
SGD 1.492866
SHP 0.91975
SLE 26.337209
SLL 24542.67897
SOS 670.220762
SRD 44.014054
STD 24224.889217
SVC 10.261992
SYP 15217.147138
SZL 20.715277
THB 38.174908
TJS 11.598572
TMT 4.108099
TND 3.453243
TOP 2.741191
TRY 46.672222
TTD 7.968535
TWD 34.13175
TZS 3086.443064
UAH 48.78126
UGX 4213.513256
USD 1.170399
UYU 47.161121
UZS 14696.742247
VES 124.271244
VND 30543.308606
VUV 140.597388
WST 3.214454
XAF 656.663183
XAG 0.032488
XAU 0.000356
XCD 3.163061
XDR 0.816678
XOF 656.657566
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.529692
ZAR 20.944576
ZMK 10534.996979
ZMW 27.647496
ZWL 376.867891
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Global tensions rattle COP30 build-up but 'failure not an option'
Global tensions rattle COP30 build-up but 'failure not an option' / Photo: Nicolas TUCAT - AFP/File

Global tensions rattle COP30 build-up but 'failure not an option'

This year's UN COP30 summit in Brazil was hotly-anticipated as a pivotal moment for the planet, as the world fast approaches a key global warming threshold.

Text size:

But the hosts are yet to propose a headline ambition for the marathon November talks, raising concerns they could fall flat.

The build-up has been overshadowed by devastating conflicts on three continents and the US withdrawal from global cooperation on climate, trade and health.

Expectations have dimmed since Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's pitch three years ago to host climate talks in the Amazon.

A warm-up UN climate event in Germany that concluded on Thursday saw disputes flare over a range of issues, including finance, adding to anxiety about how much headway COP30 can make.

Brazil is a deft climate negotiator, but the "international context has never been so bad", said Claudio Angelo, of the Brazilian organisation Climate Observatory.

Given the stakes, former UN climate chief Patricia Espinosa said Brazil may have to make do with "baby steps".

"One of the main messages that should be coming out of COP30 is the unity of everyone behind multilateralism and international cooperation. Not achieving that means everybody will suffer," she told AFP.

"Failure is not an option in this case."

- 'Survival' -

Previous COPs have been judged on the deals clinched between the nearly 200 nations that haggle over two weeks to advance global climate policy.

Recent summits have produced landmark outcomes, from a global pledge to transition away from fossil fuels, to the creation of a specialised fund to help countries hit by climate disaster.

COP30 CEO Ana Toni said that "most of the big flashy topics" born out of the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change had been dealt with.

That leaves Brazil with an arguably harder challenge -- trying to ensure what has been agreed is put into practice.

Much of the action is set for the COP30 sidelines or before nations arrive in the Amazonian city of Belem.

National climate plans due before COP30 from all countries -- but most importantly major emitters China, the European Union and India -- will be more consequential than this year's negotiations, experts say.

It is expected this latest round of national commitments will fall well short of containing global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius, and possibly even 2C, the less ambitious of the Paris accord's climate goals.

"I expect that the COP will need to react to that," said Ana Toni, although what form that reaction would take was "under question".

Uncertainty about how COP30 will help steer nations towards 1.5C has left the Alliance of Small Island States bloc "concerned", said lead negotiator Anne Rasmussen.

"Our survival depends on that," she told AFP.

- 'Threat to humanity' -

How countries will make good on their promise to transition away from fossil fuels may also become a point of contention.

Angelo said he hoped Brazil would champion the idea, included in the country's climate plan, of working towards "schedules" for that transition.

But he likened Brazil's auctioning of oil and gas extraction rights near the mouth of the Amazon river this month -- just as climate negotiators got down to business in Bonn -- to an act of "sabotage".

Another key priority for Brazil is forest protection, but otherwise COP30 leaders have mostly focused on unfinished business from previous meetings, including fleshing out a goal to build resilience to climate impacts.

According to the hosts of last year's hard-fought climate talks, global tensions might not leave room for much else.

"We need to focus more on preserving the legacy that we have established, rather than increasing ambition," said Yalchin Rafiyev, top climate negotiator for COP29 host Azerbaijan.

He fears that trying and failing to do more could risk undermining the whole UN process.

Those close to the climate talks concede they can move frustratingly slowly, but insist the annual negotiations remain crucial.

"I don't think there's any other way to address a threat to humanity as big as this is," Espinosa told AFP.

Q.Pilar--TPP