
The United Nations COP30 climate summit ended this weekend with the publication of a declaration calling for a mutirão, or “collective effort,” to prevent climate disaster. Few specifics were offered on how exactly to do so. [emphasis, links added]
The declaration suggested that the world’s nations should triple their spending on the “climate crisis” in the next decade, use suggested “voluntary indicators” to track their environmental progress, and participate in the launch of the “Global Implementation Accelerator,” which is intended to speed up the transition away from fossil fuels in unspecified ways.
Radical green activists lamented the failure to explicitly declare an ending deadline for the use of fossil fuels and mandate dramatic increases in governments’ expenses on climate activism, echoing the disappointment from senior United Nations officials, including Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.
Limiting the consequences of any statement out of the summit was the absence of the leaders of the world’s three most prolific polluters: China, India, and the United States.
COP30 is the 30th edition of the U.N.’s “Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)” – in short, an annual meeting of parties to the Paris Climate Agreement.
The objective of the summit is for participants to hash out concrete policy proposals to combat the alleged “climate crisis” [largely by] pressuring the world’s richest countries to redistribute their wealth to more impoverished countries deemed to be on the “front lines” of the “climate crisis.”
This year’s edition of the summit took place in Belém, Brazil, deep in the Amazon rainforest, intended to highlight the prominence of that biome in the mystique of the climate movement.
This year’s edition was especially chaotic, as Belém did not boast sufficient and appropriate venues to house the tens of thousands of diplomats, activists, and fossil fuel lobbyists who attend the COP events.
The summit’s active days were sandwiched between a security failure that allowed violent indigenous activists to access the “blue zone” for diplomats inside the summit on November 11 and a massive fire engulfing the “blue zone” on Thursday.

The summit statement itself declared the beginning of a “Global Mutirão,” using a Portuguese and indigenous word for collective effort, which allegedly represented a new action against alleged climate change and is “calling on all actors to work together to significantly accelerate and scale up climate action worldwide.”
The Mutirão calls for the establishment of voluntary progress markers on climate change to suggest to countries and the nebulous creation of the “Global Implementation Accelerator, as a cooperative, facilitative, and voluntary initiative.”
The document also called on involved countries to increase spending on climate alarmism to threefold the current amount in the next decade and “reaffirm[ed] the call on all actors to work together to enable the scaling up of financing to developing country Parties for climate action from all public and private sources to at least USD$1.3 trillion per year by 2035.”
Other proposals in the document include “peer exchange workshops” and the adoption of a “gender and climate action plan.”
The document concludes with a warning that nothing in it should be construed to support state action to punish major polluters:
“[M]easures taken to combat climate change, including unilateral ones, should not constitute a means of arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination or a disguised restriction on international trade.”
Guterres, the U.N. chief, was among the first to lament the results of the COP as insufficient.
“COPs are consensus-based — and in a period of geopolitical divides, consensus is ever harder to reach. I cannot pretend that COP30 has delivered everything that is needed,” Guterres said following the end of COP30, according to Al Jazeera. “The gap between where we are and what science demands remains dangerously wide.”
Stiell, the U.N.’s top climate official, also appeared to concede defeat in subsequent comments.
Top image via AP/YouTube screencap
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