
The United Nations’ annual climate conference concluded Saturday, and some critics in attendance told the Daily Caller News Foundation that it was a chaotic affair. [emphasis, links added]
After Thursday’s fire forced an evacuation and temporarily halted the talks, COP30 was prolonged by an extra day. Corporate media outlets and green groups critiqued the final agreement reached on Saturday, arguing it did not do enough to restrict carbon emissions.
The environmental groups claimed the resolution departed from COP28’s declaration, which called for an end to fossil fuel use.
Hosted in Belém, Brazil, COP30 provoked backlash after developers razed the Amazon rainforest ahead of the climate talks and China worked to seize the spotlight in America’s absence.
Craig Rucker, co-founder and president of the conservative nonprofit Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT), told the DCNF that this year’s UN climate talks were especially chaotic and disorganized.
“I’ve been to 27 of the 30 conferences. … What you see on the ground is just how chaotic it’s gotten. There was a certain chaos in the past, but this was particularly disorganized because they picked a venue that I think was unsuited for all the delegates that were coming in,” Rucker told the DCNF in an interview.
“They wanted to emphasize the rainforest, yet hypocritically, they’re chopping them down to accommodate delegates flying in on private jets.”
The UN did not respond to the DCNF’s request for comment.
Watch: Climate Depot’s Marc Morano reports on the UN’s ‘indoor weather modification’ & major infrastructure problems, including water intrusion at COP30
Bloomberg News: Belém’s heavy rains have also caused problems inside the site, Stiell said, with water entering “the ceiling… https://t.co/a9Zsps3HTR pic.twitter.com/nMuow4n8pM
— Marc Morano (@ClimateDepot) November 20, 2025
Rucker and Marc Morano, who publishes CFACT’s Climate Depot, ventured into the Amazon rainforest to investigate the four-lane highway initially reported by the BBC in March.
Rucker told the DCNF that Brazil was “still cutting and burning. We heard the chainsaws ourselves, and this is something they [the Brazilian state] try to keep [quiet].”
The highway, known as Avenida Liberdade, was shelved multiple times in the past due to environmental concerns but revived as part of a broader push to modernize Belém ahead of COP30, according to the outlet.
State officials say the development efforts will leave a lasting legacy, including an expanded airport, new hotels, and an upgraded port to accommodate cruise ships.
The Brazilian state denied that the highway was built for the climate conference, noting that plans for the road were underway as early as 2020 — well before Brazil was selected to host COP30, Reuters reported in March.
President Donald Trump sharply criticized the conference for deforesting portions of the Amazon to ease travel for environmentalist attendees. The U.S. did not send an official delegation this year.
Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Democratic Rhode Island Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse attended the talks, where they denounced the Trump administration’s energy policies and absence.
A top United Nations official reportedly directed Brazilian authorities to address concerns, including leaky light fixtures, sweltering heat, and lackluster security at the conference, according to Bloomberg News. Days later, the fire broke out.
Morano also documented water pouring from vents, and Rucker told the DCNF that attendees were not allowed to flush toilet paper as the venue “didn’t have a septic system.”

Rucker also recalled what he described as elitism, noting that delegates were in the “blue zone” while other attendees and indigenous groups were relegated to the “green zone.”
“The blue zone is where the official delegates go, the people who are from Spain, Portugal, Brazil. … And these are the people that make the decisions,” Rucker said. “The indigenous people, they say, don’t have a voice allowed in there. That’s partially why they crashed it.”
Though COP30 did host several events featuring indigenous voices, some native groups stormed the COP30 venue during the first week, demanding that the UN hear their voices.
Rucker told the DCNF that China seemed to have become a “new leader” on the environmentalism and green energy front at the climate conference, though the oriental nation is “pumping out two coal plants per week.”
Recent media reports have hailed China as a giant in building out “renewables”; however, China is far from dependent on intermittent resources like solar and wind, as it also churns out new coal plants and is the world’s top emitter.
“They genuinely looked at China as the world leader on climate change,” Rucker noted, branding it as “totally bizarre.”
Rucker recalled that upon entering the “blue zone,” there was a “very impressive Chinese booth.”
Additionally, a statue demeaning Trump stood outside COP30, according to Reuters, along with a horned jaguar-dragon hybrid statue with its hands gripping the globe.
The fanged construction purportedly represented China and Brazil partnering to protect the rainforest.
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