Cop30 live: ‘We will exterminate ourselves’ if we keep extracting fossil fuels, activists say | Cop30

‘We will exterminate ourselves' if we keep on extracting fossil fuels, activists say

Oliver Milman

An international group of activists here have issued impassioned pleas for a treaty to phase out fossil fuels, urging the Brazilian presidency of Cop30 to prod countries towards ending the era of coal, oil and gas that has caused the climate crisis.

The proposed Fossil Fuel Treaty is already backed by 17 countries and advocates in Belem said that countries needed to hurry up and act on the root cause of the climate crisis. In 2023, the Cop in Dubai resulted in countries vowing to “transition away” from fossil fuels, although there is little evidence of this happening as yet.

“If we continue to extract hydrocarbons from the Earth, we will exterminate ourselves,” said Olivia Bissa, president of the Chapra Nation in the Peruvian Amazon.

“We worry what will happen if we don’t have concrete action now. We as indigenous people in the Amazon are tired of being sacrificed by a group of powerful people who want to rule the planet. If we don’t do something together we will be complicit with ecocide and the assassination of humanity.”

Activists from the Fossil Fuel Treaty.
Activists from the Fossil Fuel Treaty at Cop30 climate summit in Belem, Brazil, on 13 November 2025 Photograph: Oliver Milman/The Guardian

Tzeporah Berman, chair of the Fossil Fuel Treaty Initiative, praised Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva for urging a fossil fuel phase out but criticized the Brazilian president for allowing a new oil drilling project near the mouth of the Amazon, pointing to a recent International Court of Justice ruling that demands countries address the climate crisis.

“We know fossil fuel production continues to rise, pushing the world past planetary limits and deepening inequality,” said Berman, singling out the US, Australia, Norway and Canada for ramping up oil and gas drilling since the Paris agreement a decade ago. A treaty to end all this would be a “major act of love and justice for our time,” she added.

Given the format of this Cop, and pushback that is already happening from Saudi Arabia and other big oil producers, it’s unclear what, if any, language on fossil fuel phase out will be included in this year’s agreement.

A major opponent of any such pact would be Donald Trump, who has called for the US, and the rest of the world, to “drill, baby, drill.” Crystal Cavalier, a Native American woman from North Carolina, is at Cop30, unlike the US government, and said a new treaty would at least put international pressure on the US to kick its fossil fuel habit.

“We are being targeted in sacrifice zones that are pushing our ecosystems to the brink,” she said. “Our current government is aggressively rolling back environmental protections.

“The Fossil Fuel treaty can be a tool, a pressure point that frontline communities can wield when their governments avoid accountability. We need external pressure in the US, we can’t do this alone. The US isn’t showing up, but the rest of the world can show up for us.”

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Key events

Ajit Niranjan

Ajit Niranjan

As European negotiators in Belém urge countries to raise their climate ambitions, their politicians at home have voted to lower their own.

The European Parliament voted on Thursday to cut planet-heating pollution by 90% by 2040 from 1990 levels and allow 5% of that to come from foreign carbon credits – a landmark plan that falls short of what its scientific advisors recommend.

MEPs in Strasbourg earlier today also backed proposals to weaken a delayed law to stop deforestation in supply chains and to restrict the scope of corporate green rules.

European countries are some of the biggest historical polluters of greenhouse gas but have long championed stronger action at UN climate summits. Yet in the last two years, the EU and many of its member states have begun to roll back and “simplify” ambitious climate policies under the banner of increasing the bloc’s competitiveness.

A German wind turbine and power pylons obscured by fumes from a coal-fired power plant. Photograph: Ina Fassbender/AFP/Getty Images

The EU’s 2040 target with room for carbon credits – a compromise solution that won over climate ministers last week, just in time for Cop30 – is among the most ambitious interim targets of any major polluter. But it falls short of the 90-95% domestic cuts recommended by the European Scientific Advisory Board on Climate Change.

Green campaigners were also angered by the vote to weaken the EU’s corporate sustainability rules – the first of several “omnibus” deregulation packages – which removes an obligation on companies to create climate transition plans. The requirement would have forced companies to explain how they plan to align their business practices with the Paris Agreement, which seeks to limit global heating to 1.5C (2.7F).

To obtain a majority in the Parliament’s plenary, the centre-right European People’s Party (EPP) voted with far-right parties that pro-EU centrists have traditionally shunned.

“While the world looks to Cop30, the EPP banded with the far right to make sure business actors no longer have to create and adhere to climate transition plans,” said Frances Verkamp, a corporate accountability campaigner at Friends of the Earth Europe.

“They betrayed their own promises by ignoring several moderate centre-left proposals,” she added. “If this is the dynamic, the centre-far right alliance on the next deregulation omnibuses will bulldoze protections for citizens and the environment.”

The positions adopted today will be negotiated with member states and the European Commission before final versions of the laws come into force.

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