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COP30峰会无果而终
Zhong Guo Hua Gong Bao· 2025-11-28 03:09
Core Insights - The COP30 climate conference in Belem, Brazil, ended without consensus on a fossil fuel transition roadmap, disappointing climate activists and highlighting ongoing divisions among nearly 200 participating countries [2][3] - The final communiqué of the summit did not mention "fossil fuels," marking a significant setback in global warming response efforts [2][3] - The conference acknowledged the failure to meet the 1.5°C temperature control target set by the Paris Agreement, with projections indicating a potential rise of 2.6°C to 3.1°C by 2100 if current trends continue [2][6] Fossil Fuel Transition Roadmap - Over 80 countries, including Colombia, the UK, Germany, and Kenya, supported the creation of a formal fossil fuel transition roadmap prior to the conference [3] - The initiative faced strong opposition from major oil-producing countries led by Saudi Arabia, resulting in its rejection [3] - The absence of the strong language regarding the "phasing out of fossil fuels" from the previous COP28 summit was noted as a significant regression [3] Climate Financing Gaps - Developed countries pledged to double "adaptation funding" by 2035, with a target of $300 billion, of which approximately $120 billion is allocated for the most vulnerable nations [4] - This timeline is five years later than what developing countries requested, and the total amount falls short of the thousands of billions needed by countries most affected by climate change [4] - The voices of island nations, which are at risk of being submerged, were overshadowed by larger countries with fossil fuel interests [4] Shift from Prevention to Adaptation - COP30 marked a notable shift in focus from "prevention" of climate change to "adaptation" to its impacts, acknowledging the failure to meet the 1.5°C target [5][6] - The conference recognized that future efforts would need to concentrate on mitigating the damage from climate change rather than preventing it [5][6] Overall Conference Outcomes - COP30 continued the trend of recent climate summits failing to achieve significant progress, with increasing divisions among countries [6] - Criticism was directed at the lack of actionable outcomes, with calls for concrete results rather than vague roadmaps [3][6] - Experts emphasized that without progress on fossil fuel phase-out, achievements in other areas like forest protection and adaptation funding would lack significance [6]
虽未取得预期目标但转型是“大势所趋”,贝伦气候峰会“加时谈判”后闭幕
Huan Qiu Shi Bao· 2025-11-23 22:55
Core Insights - The COP30 climate conference in Belem, Brazil, concluded with a "voluntary political document" after extended negotiations, failing to achieve expected goals due to differing demands from participating countries [1][2] - The final document titled "Global Mobilization: Unity and Cooperation to Address Climate Change Challenges" aims to promote the implementation of the Paris Agreement, covering aspects such as mitigation, adaptation, funding, and international cooperation [1][3] Group 1: Conference Outcomes - The conference did not reach consensus on phasing out fossil fuels, which disappointed some environmental organizations in Brazil [1][2] - Developed countries agreed to triple climate financial aid to developing nations, committing to provide $120 billion annually starting in 2035 to address damages from global warming [2] Group 2: Negotiation Dynamics - Tensions during negotiations were high, with Colombia's representative strongly opposing a climate document that disregarded scientific evidence, labeling it as ineffective [2] - Over 80 countries, led by the UK, France, and Colombia, advocated for a transition plan from fossil fuels based on resolutions from COP28, facing strong opposition from major oil-producing countries like Saudi Arabia and Russia [2] Group 3: Global Climate Diplomacy - COP30 marked the first formal acknowledgment of the significant risk of a 1.5-degree Celsius global temperature rise, despite criticisms of the conference's limited outcomes [3] - The conference was seen as a test of globalization and multilateralism, with the ability to reach a consensus document indicating a glimmer of hope for global climate diplomacy [3] - UN Secretary-General António Guterres emphasized that the political document reflects a collective commitment to tackle challenges that cannot be addressed individually [3]