There was a briefing on the Cop30 agenda, with Simon Evans, a journalist from Carbon Berto, Posting on Bluesky Yesterday afternoon the agenda was already on the fourth repair.
“Clashes on the agenda have been common in recent years,” Evans reports, citing similar disagreements at Cop29 in Azerbaijan. Negotiations don’t really start until the parties agree on what they’re going to talk about.
Among the potential items on the agenda are two from “like-minded developing countries”, a call for a new one, including the discussion of “unilateral restrictive measures”.
Honduras, Suriname and Papua New Guinea want to discuss the financing of deforestation. The Small Island of the Island Wants space on the agenda to discuss how to “accelerate the implementation and drive 1.5C”, with the current process of the demand for the need for the delivered action “, they said.
And the EU, in the meantime, wants to discuss the service under Article 13, the UNSCCC provision that asks countries to report their emissions.
“Many developing countries do this out of necessity,” Evans wrote. “[I] This is a suspicious way to put it in response to calls for more finance…”

Fiona Harvey
Ministers and high-ranking officials from almost 200 countries gathered in the city of Belem in the Amazon to discuss how to change the climate crisis, before the climate levels of recovery are inevitable, Fiona Harvey, Guardian World Editor writes.
On Sunday, carpenters and builders are still hard at work in the Conference Center where the Cop30 UN climate boxes will take place, that countries will show to deal with greenhouse gas emissions and transfer the greenhouse economy to a low carbon one.
On Monday, the initiation ceremony and ceremony are ready. There is an element of deja vu here – world leaders have already visited Belem, jetting last week to this same conference center to join in round tables about climate action, preserving forests, boosting biofuels and ensuring social justice while the climate crisis bites.
More than 50 heads of state and government or their representatives participated in the “leaders’ summit” Summit “, including URSula Von Vonen, and the EU’s Friedrich Ure Der Leyen, and Friedrich Meren, and Germany’s Friedrich Meren, and Friedrich Meren. (Donald Trump, Of course, removed the US from the Paris Climate Agreement and they also did not attend the Summit.
But these are climate talks of a difference. Brazil refuses to appear the standard form of the negotiators described with the last 30 years of climate change “(copts) at the UN conferences of the parties”
Those characterized by long and bitter sessions, often stop at night, where traders declare positions at the end of the end – sometimes – reach an opportunity to always seek to return to return immediately to the later retracement immediately.
However, Brazil insists, it is the “enforcement cop”. That means the real world impact of measures to prevent the climate crisis now will take precedence over long-term discussions on future pledges.
“Negotiations must be united,” said Andre Correa to do Lago, president of Cop30. “But implementation is countries that choose what they want to do and implement what they say they’re going to do.”
The problem with that approach is that countries that choose to do so are less likely to get away with it. How Brazil intends to curb that trend remains to be seen.
The main results of this cop, instead of a list of pledges as usual, are more a collection of “roadmaps” covering key issues: a financial roadmap, which has already been published; a roadmap on how to transition away from fossil fuels; A roadmap on how to scale up low-carbon energy and reduce greenhouse gas emissions in line with the target of limiting global warming to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels.
In some of these issues, it may not be possible to make the last path of this cop – in the case of moving from forimps that can continue for many policemen before reporting.
COP30 covers a lot of ground – from the future of energy, to the future of climate finance, to the need for social justice to go hand in hand with climate action. It includes ministers, diplomats, local government officials, scientists, businessmen, indigenous people and representatives of all forms of civil society, from almost every country in the world. Issues including health, biodiversity, environment, wildlife, water, transport, migration, food, gender, diet, food and technology will be discussed during the two weeks of talks.
Police officers who are in the solution are not really urgent: scientists warn that, as the temperature rises faster than at any point in at least 24,000 yearsthe world stands at a series of “Tipping Points” that could put us on the verge of accelerated warming and unstoppable climate catastrophe.
But one question reigns supreme: the question of whether a collective way to solve this problem exists. Can the world unite in Geopolitical Findowinds and open conflict, despite the climate claim, despite the climate claim before it should be the climate claim before it should be the climate claim before it is done before it is done
Welcome to the Cop30 Live Blog! I’m the Guardian’s consefile creator Damien Gayle, and I’ll be taking you through the first few hours of our live coverage of the UN Climate Summit taking place in Belpe, Brazil.
I will launch all the latest dispatches from our correspondents on the ground, the files from the news agencies and any media pieces to give you the best picture of the summit as it unfolds.
This morning we will see the opening plenary for Cop30, where the first point of order is to vote on an agenda, because at the moment it will remain unclear during the two-week summit.
Andre Correa is Lago, the Cop30 President, that the countries have been delayed for months in what to include, a process that he describes as a healthy exchange of priorities. The President of Brazil said that he hopes that countries will consider putting together a plan for the cessation of fossil fuels, in their countries not less than what is necessary to limit warming.

