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Cop 30 likely to miss $1.3 trillion/yr goal: Update

  • : Emissions
  • 25/10/16

Adds comments from Cop 30 high-level champion Dan Ioschpe.

The upcoming UN Cop 30 climate summit will likely undershoot the goal of attracting $1.3 trillion/yr in international finance to help developing countries combat climate change, Cop 30 president Andre Correa do Lago said in a televised interview.

"No, we are not going to see $1.3 trillion in Belem, unfortunately," he said.

One of the main topics of the Cop 30 event in the Parana state capital Belem in November is the Baku-to-Belem roadmap, an initiative launched during Cop 29 in Baku, Azerbaijan, to increase climate project financing for developing countries from the $300bn/yr agreed to at that event.

Climate financing has been a complicated issue for decades, do Lago said, involving may different sectors of business and society.

"Developing countries pay a lot for capital and receive much less aid than expected, and this has been dragging on for years," do Lago said. "I think this is what has created a great frustration."

Do Lago said he and other delegates will try to use Cop 30 to show that investing in developing countries can be a "great business".

But there are some pathways to reach the coveted $1.3 trillion/yr goal, he said. Although most economic analysts agree that it is very unlikely that countries will increase donations this year — "because the economic situation of rich countries is complicated" — multilateral banks can increase their lending capacity by two- to threefold by 2035, he said.

Additionally, the private sector will be "absolutely crucial", because it can increase its investments into developing countries by 25 times by 2035, he said.

"Private investment will certainly grow a lot", said entrepreneur Dan Ioschpe, the Cop 30 high-level champion who serves as a bridge between the summit's presidency and the private sector. "It is already growing in sectors such as renewable energy and the restoration of degraded areas, just to name two examples."

But the world is off track from meeting renewable energy and efficiency goals agreed to at Cop 28, a report from renewable energy groups and the Cop 30 presidency said.


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25/11/10

Cop: Agenda agreed, key issues left to presidency

Cop: Agenda agreed, key issues left to presidency

Belem, 10 November (Argus) — Countries at the UN Cop 30 climate summit were able to agree on an agenda a day prior to the summit's beginning, but key issues — unilateral trade measures, climate finance and countries' climate plans and emissions reporting — were left off, the Cop 30 presidency said today. The absent topics will be resolved through presidency consultations, Cop 30 officials said. A two-hour meeting was, at the time of writing, scheduled later today to discuss the items. There were eight agenda item proposals, and four of them did not make the cut, according to Cop 30's chief strategy and alignment officer Tulio Andrade. But there was an understanding that all will be considered in presidency consultations that "will start immediately", he added. Delegates will also discuss the issues in a plenary on 12 November, he added. Cop 30 president Andre Correa do Lago commended all delegations for agreeing to the agenda quickly. "This is good, not only to allow us to start working today already very intensively, but it will also allow us to explain to the world why these additional issues that have been raised really matter", he told reporters. Non-profit World Resources Institute (WRI) had previously flagged the four items as "notable". The climate finance topic is encompassed in a request from a group of developing countries to discuss the Paris climate agreement's Article 9.1. This section of the accord states that "developed country parties shall provide financial resources to assist developing country parties" — a topic that dominated last year's Cop 29 , with many developing nations disappointed at the outcome. Unilateral trade measures encompass the EU's carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) — a topic that proved contentious at previous climate talks , with pushback from some developing countries. EU climate commissioner Wopke Hoekstra is also responsible for overseeing the bloc's taxation measures. WRI noted that the alliance of small island states (Aosis) — some of the most vulnerable to climate change — requested that countries discussed how to respond to the latest round of countries' climate plans, and the gap between these and the Paris agreement's temperature goals. "There are some countries that are concerned that [including an item on climate plans lacking ambition] may create a kind of deviation from the subjects that they believe should be dealt with first", Correa do Lago told reporters today. The presidency will address those countries individually, he added. Cop 30 started today in Belem, northern Brazil. By Lucas Parolin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EPA does not update court on biofuel timing: Correction


25/11/10
25/11/10

EPA does not update court on biofuel timing: Correction

Corrects government shutdown's impact on court deadlines, and updates with new information throughout. New York, 10 November (Argus) — President Donald Trump's administration did not update a court on its timeline for finalizing new biofuel blend mandates, as a partial government shutdown slows down court cases and regulatory work. Biofuel groups Clean Fuels Alliance America and Growth Energy have repeatedly sued the administration over its delays, hoping that a court will require the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to set new biofuel quotas before year-end. Judge Timothy Kelly of the US District Court for the District of Columbia ordered the administration to provide an update on its timeline by 7 November. But in a filing that evening, the biofuel groups said they had not heard back from government lawyers. No timing update was provided. "It is the understanding of Clean Fuels and Growth Energy that counsel for defendants may currently be furloughed," they told the court. Kelly ordered the update before the ongoing partial government shutdown began. The DC district court later said in a general order that it would give the government more time to respond across all civil cases because of the funding lapse. Government lawyers had previously warned courts that the shutdown would sideline critical officials and make it hard to meet deadlines. But the government's lack of response to biofuel groups in the case is still raising fears of more prolonged delays updating a program that is important for producers of ethanol, renewable diesel and other biofuels and is popular among powerful farm-state Trump allies in Congress. EPA told Argus it was reviewing comments on its plan to make oil companies offset past program exemptions and "continues to work on final regulations" to establish new blend mandates. In past cases over biofuel program deadlines, biofuel groups and federal officials have negotiated new timelines or judges have ordered EPA to act by a set date. Clean Fuels said it would continue to ask the DC court to expedite the case and require the agency to publish a final regulation by year-end. Under the Renewable Fuel Standard, EPA requires oil refiners and importers to annually blend different types of biofuels or buy credits from those that do. The program is crucial for the production margins of ethanol, renewable diesel and other biofuels and is popular among powerful farm-state Trump allies in Congress. EPA — required by law to set new mandates 14 months in advance of a new year — is late setting new quotas for 2026 and 2027. Even before the shutdown, the Trump administration told the DC court that developing a complicated plan to offset the impact of small refinery exemptions meant it might not be able to finalize new blend mandates until next year . Biofuel advocates fear that further delays would mean less ambitious final quotas, another hurdle for biorefineries that have cut run rates this year and for farmers hurting from this year's tariff fights. EPA has indeed been more cautious in the past when finalizing retroactive mandates since oil companies have less notice on volumes they must bring to market. Lawyers and lobbyists who closely track the program have also told Argus that delays raise the chance that major program updates — like a plan to halve program credits for fuels made abroad or from foreign feedstocks — are at least pushed back. Oil refiners have argued the half-credit idea is illegal and questioned how EPA could roll out a new feedstock tracking system in a matter of weeks. By Cole Martin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: Climate plans project 12pc GHG cuts over 2019-35


25/11/10
25/11/10

Cop: Climate plans project 12pc GHG cuts over 2019-35

London, 10 November (Argus) — Countries' most recent climate plans are projected to cut total global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by around 12pc over 2019-2035, UN climate body the UNFCCC said today. Global GHG emissions were, before the Paris climate agreement was adopted, projected to rise between 20pc and 48pc over 2015-2035, UNFCCC data show. The UNFCCC's projections today are based on 113 climate plans, known as nationally determined contributions (NDCs), submitted, covering a timeframe up to 2035. It released a report, known as an NDC synthesis , which covered climate plans submitted by the end of September. But since then, 22 new NDCs have been submitted, including by the EU — and covering all 27 member states — and by the world's highest-emitting country, China. If countries implement all elements of their NDCs, global GHG emissions could drop by 14pc over 2019-2035, the UNFCCC projected. Developing countries often split climate plans into unconditional and conditional actions — the latter reliant on external support. Signatories to the Paris agreement are required to submit NDCs every five years, rising in ambition each time. While countries reach decisions at Cops, the NDCs are the chief route for the implementation of climate action. "The emissions curve has been bent downwards. Because of what was agreed in halls like this, with governments legislating, and markets responding", UNFCCC executive secretary Simon Stiell told delegates today, as the UN Cop 30 climate summit began in Belem, northern Brazil. He warned countries that they "must move much, much, faster on both reductions of emissions and strengthening resilience", as "individual national commitments alone are not cutting emissions fast enough". "We don't need to wait for late NDCs to slowly trickle in, to spot the gap and design the innovations necessary to tackle it… Not one single nation among you can afford this, as climate disasters rip double-digits off GDP", Stiell told delegates. By Georgia Gratton Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: Paris goals remain elusive


25/11/07
25/11/07

Cop: Paris goals remain elusive

Belem, 7 November (Argus) — A decade after the birth of the Paris climate agreement, most countries still hail it as a landmark. But they also agree that to meet the agreement's goals, countries still need to implement much of what they committed to do 10 years ago. That seems to be the sentiment, heading into the 10 November start of the Cop 30 UN climate summit in Belem, Brazil. It is one that was raised many times during the leaders' summit held over the past two days in advance of the main conference and re-confirms its status as the "implementation Cop". "The Paris Agreement is rightly celebrated, but it is poorly implemented," said Laurent Fabius, president of Cop 21, where the agreement came together in 2015. Others at the pre-Cop leaders' summit appeared to agree. "What we must ask ourselves today is: are we really doing our best?" Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said. "The answer is: not yet." While the greenhouse gas emissions reduction pledges made over the past decade can be hailed as considerable progress, more needs to be done to reach the Paris goals. The agreement aims to limit the rise in temperature global temperatures to "well below" 2°C above pre-industrial levels and pursues a 1.5°C threshold. At the moment, the world looks to be on a path to 2.3-2.5°C . "What we are expecting from Cop is to implement things that have already been decided," Fabius said, referring to the "circle" of eight past Cop presidents he is leading in Belem. "Implementation. Implementation. Implementation," Turkish vice president Cevdet Yılmaz said. But what implementation means varies from one party to another, usually along the usual global ‘north and south' lines that are common at the UN talks. "Developed countries should take the lead on emissions," Chinese vice premier Ding Xuexiang said. He also called for "true multilateralism" and for countries to "translate commitments into concrete action." "We need to strengthen international collaboration in green technology and industry, remove trade barriers and ensure the free flow of quality green products to better meet the needs of global sustainable development", he said. European leaders reiterated their commitment to Paris goals. "This must be the Cop that keeps 1.5‌°C within reach", European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said. "Europe is staying the course, and we offer our support to our partners to do the same." Finance remains the big obstacle. "Compensation is necessary", Suriname president Jennifer Geerlings-Simons said. Last year's Cop, in Baku, Azerbaijan, resulted in a commitment of at least $300bn/yr for developing countries by 2035, with developed countries "taking the lead." The agreement also calls for public and private sources to scale up to at least $1.3 trillion/yr, also by 2035. But developing countries wanted a significantly higher commitment, and many say they are still waiting for past pledges to be fulfilled to help them transition to cleaner energy and adapt to climate change. "The promises of climate finance have not been met," Lula said. "Today, only a small portion of climate finance reaches the developing world." If that money does not come through, the goals of Paris may be further out of reach. "Without adequate means of implementation, demanding ambition from developing countries is unfair and unrealistic," Lula said. By Michael Ball Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: 11 countries join carbon market group: Update


25/11/07
25/11/07

Cop: 11 countries join carbon market group: Update

Adds details of new endorsements Sao Paulo, 7 November (Argus) — Brazil, China and the EU launched the Open Coalition on Compliance Carbon Markets, an initiative to standardise and integrate different national carbon markets, Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said at a world leaders' summit on 7 November. "Carbon markets can become important sources of public revenue, but they will only gain scale if countries move towards common parameters," Lula said. But "there are still pending tasks", he added. Those include defining better methodologies for accounting for climate finance, the creation of "equitable, collectively decided" environmental rules and increasing the size and efficiency of multilateral banks. Brazil today announced eight new endorsements, from Armenia, the UK, Canada, Chile, France, Germany, Mexico and Zambia. The coalition remains open to new signatories, Brazil added. "Carbon pricing has become a central tool to reduce greenhouse gas emissions with a strong business case for the economy and for the people," European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said. "We want to work closely with Brazil and with many like-minded partners on putting a price on carbon. The key to success is to do it right and to do it together." The coalition will work to implement ambition, effectiveness and fairness of compliance carbon markets as an "important policy tool for achieving nationally determined contributions… while ensuring environmental integrity and supporting a just transition", the European Commission said. It also creates a platform for countries to work together to develop and enhance compliance carbon markets and carbon pricing policies, it added. There are 80 carbon pricing instruments in more than 50 countries, which cover around 30pc of global greenhouse gas emissions, according to the World Bank. Brazil in October launched a secretariat to regulate the country's carbon market. The legislation creating a regulated carbon market in the country passed in December last year . Von der Leyen encouraged other countries to also launch their own domestic compliance carbon markets and join the coalition. The leaders' summit, held on 6-7 November in Belem, northern Brazil, takes place just ahead of the UN Cop 30 climate talks, which begin on 10 November, also in Belem. By Lucas Parolin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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