COP30 misses deadline on final agreement

Mr. Jindal
3 Min Read

André Corrêa do Lago, COP30 president, speaks during a plenary session at the COP30 U.N. Climate Summit, Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025, in Belem, Brazil.

André Corrêa do Lago, COP30 president, speaks during a plenary session at the COP30 U.N. Climate Summit, Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025, in Belem, Brazil.
| Photo Credit: AP

Keeping with history of missed deadlines, the 30th edition of the Conference of Parties (COP30) has gone into overtime with countries failing to arrive at a consensus agreement as of late Saturday (November 22, 2025).

The COP 30 proceedings are considered closed after the Presidency convenes a final plenary meeting with a final version of the ‘cover text’ — a summary of the major meeting points — on the table and all countries assembled in a common space. The President of the proceedings gavels an agreement, and countries deliver statements.

This was to conclude on Friday (November 21, 2025), but as of late Saturday (November 22, 2025), these plenary proceedings had not begun.

On Saturday (November 22, 2025), Belem-time, COP President Andrei Lago presented a final version of the text that is expected to be the final version, but, as observers say, has no significant changes from earlier versions and still contains no reference to fossil fuel or even a timeline of moving away. The lack of this language has chagrined European negotiators and those from at least 80 countries.

“While far from what’s needed, the outcome in Belem is meaningful progress. The Paris Agreement is working; the transition away from fossil fuels agreed in Dubai is accelerating. Despite the efforts of major oil-producing states to slow down the green transition, multilateralism continues to support the interests of the whole world in tackling the climate crisis,” Jennifer Morgan, former German climate envoy, said in a statement.

“The latest mutirao text [the Brazilian theme word that translated to consensus] on November 22 morning offers little that is new from the previous day with few substantial commitments,” said Avantika Goswami, with the Centre for Science and Environment and a close observer of climate proceedings in a statement, “The goal of tripling adaptation finance remains vague with no specific accountability of contributors… beyond talk shops however, this COP has delivered little else.”

Although not mentioning fossil fuels, the current text, in at least 13 instances, reiterates the necessity of striving to pursue measures to keep temperatures from exceeding 1.5 °C, and that funding from a wide range of public and private sources is necessary to achieve that

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