COP30: UN Climate Change Conference in Belém, Brazil
The 30th UN Climate Change Conference (COP30) took place in Belém, Brazil, from November 10 to 21, 2025.
This dossier compiles analyses and background information on key debates at COP30
COP30: Result
COP30 has shown that consensus in climate multilateralism is hard to find these days – with or without the US, which was absent for the first time. Key issues such as phasing out fossil fuels and delivering comprehensive climate finance to the Global South remain unresolved.
No agreement could be reached on a formal roadmap process for ending fossil fuels and deforestation. Instead, the Brazilian COP presidency announced that it would launch a roadmap process outside the official negotiations. Showing true leadership, Colombia is also committed to moving ahead: it has announced plans to organise the first global conference on phasing out fossil fuels in April 2026.
This shows once again the urgent need for reforms of the UNFCCC system to push the fossil fuel industry out of climate negotiations and enable effective multilateral decision-making and action – if needed against the interests of individual blocking governments that fight to uphold the status quo.
Finally, after a dragging struggle between Australia and Turkey on the hosting of COP31, a compromise was reached: Turkey will physically host COP31 in Antalya, but Australia will be lead on the political negotiations and will convene a pre-COP meeting in the Pacific.
Böll.Global | COP30 Climate Conference Without the US - What Can We Expect? - Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung
Recording from November 5th, 2025
Böll.Global | COP30 Climate Conference Without the US - What Can We Expect?
Online discussion with:
- Luisa Neubauer, German climate activist and publicist
- Liane Schalatek, Deputy Director, Washington D.C., Heinrich Böll Foundation
- Regine Schönenberg, Director, Rio de Janeiro, Heinrich Böll Foundation
- Michael Bloss, Member of the European Parliament, Group: Greens/EFA