Cop30 live: summit president warns ‘everybody will lose’ if countries fail to cooperate | World news

Cop presidency issues plea for nations to come together and agree a deal

Damian Carrington

After a fast moving night, with petrostates accused of blocking a plan for a roadmap to phase out fossil fuels, a large group of developed and developing nations saying that including a roadmap is a red line for them, and civil society accusing rich nations of failing to fulfil their obligations to fund climate action in poor nations, the Brazilian president of Cop30, André Corrêa do Lago, has issued a plea for cooperation.

“We need to preserve this [Paris Accord] regime with the spirit of cooperation, not in the spirit of who is going to win or is willing to lose,” he said. “Because we know if we don’t strengthen this, everybody will lose.”

The world is currently on target for a catastrophic 2.6C of global heating and funds to protect people against climate impacts are puny. “Extreme weather events are telling us that the work we do here is urgent,” Do Lago said. He is usually an energetic and charismatic speaker, but looked tired – he may well have had no sleep last night.

One key message was that the Paris agreement was working and had achieved much more than critics say: ”This regime [caused] not only the action of countries, the action of citizens, but the action of communities, business, technology.” But it must be strengthened, he said.

Cop decisions are made by consensus, giving effective vetoes to small groups of countries, like the fossil-fuel rich Arab group. But Do Lago defended consensus: “The same consensus that exasperates so many people – that is the strength of this regime,” as it sends the most powerful messages to the world.

Do Lago emphasised the huge benefits of climate action: “We are creating a new economy that offers amazing opportunities for growth, amazing opportunities for jobs. This is and has to be a positive agenda. This cannot be an agenda that divides us.” But he said the pull out of the US under climate denier Donald Trump was a challenge.

“But let’s not stress divides now, in the moments we have left to reach an agreement, we need to preserve this regime,” he said.

Do Lago said there was going to be a meeting of all the countries’ ministers this morning to try and thrash out a deal, As things stand, that is a huge task.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Dharna Noor

Most Americans say the US should take ambitious climate action with or without other countries.

From centrist politicians to hardline activists, Americans at Cop30 are repeating one refrain: Donald Trump doesn’t represent us on climate policy. A new poll shared exclusively with the Guardian lends credence to that sentiment.

A strong majority of US voters — 65% — believe the US should undertake ambitious climate action even if other states do not, shows the new survey from progressive polling group Data for Progress. That includes majorities of Democrats and Independents at 85% and 63% respectively. And it includes a plurality, 47%, of Republicans 47%.

By contrast, just 25% of voters said that the US should not take bold climate action if other countries fail to do so.

Perhaps even more strikingly, a majority of US voters — 55% — support a global phaseout of fossil fuels, like coal and oil, shows the new poll. These fuels are responsible for some 90% of all planet-heating carbon emissions.

Most voters also said the US should also make its own national commitment to phase out fossil fuels. 54% of voters — including 74% of Democrats and 54% of Independents — backed a national phaseout by the century’s end.

The new data was based on a web panel held last week, to which 1,224 U.S. likely voters responded. The sample was weighted to be representative of likely voters by age, gender, education, race, geography, and remembered presidential vote.

Leave a Comment