UN Climate Talks Begin in Brazil's Amazon Amidst Urgent Calls for Global Unity

Updated : Nov 10, 2025 11:03
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Editorji News Desk

Belem (Brazil), Nov 10 (AP) – UN climate negotiations are set to commence on Monday on the outskirts of the Brazilian Amazon. Leaders are stressing the need for urgency, cooperation, and acceleration, having spent over 30 years attempting to combat global warming by significantly reducing carbon emissions.

Andre Correa do Lago, president of this year’s conference, COP30, emphasized the importance of “mutirao,” a Brazilian term derived from an Indigenous word that refers to a community joining forces to accomplish a shared task.

“We face a choice,” Lago penned in a letter to negotiators on Sunday. “Either we change by choice, together, or change will be forced upon us by tragedy. We can change. But we must do it together.”

However, calls for unity face obstacles from the United States. The Trump administration has not sent senior negotiators to the discussions and is exiting the Paris Agreement for the second time. Despite the withdrawal, the Paris Agreement is still hailed as a partial success in Belem.

The United States historically has emitted more heat-trapping carbon dioxide than any other nation due to its reliance on coal, oil, and natural gas. Presently, China leads in carbon pollution, but because carbon dioxide can persist in the atmosphere for over a century, the U.S. remains a significant historical contributor.

“The current geopolitical environment is particularly challenging,” stated Palau Ambassador Ilana Seid, who chairs the Alliance of Small Island States. Small island nations often endure some of the harshest climate change effects, such as land loss due to rising sea levels. “The United States' withdrawal from the Paris Agreement has fundamentally shifted the dynamics of the negotiation system.”

Former US Special Envoy for Climate Todd Stern remarked that President Donald Trump's actions harm efforts against climate change.

“It’s fortunate they are not sending anyone; their presence wouldn't have been constructive,” Stern said.

The Nature Conservancy chief scientist Katharine Hayhoe likened the negotiations to a potluck dinner.

“Everyone contributes something,” which in this case refers to new and stronger plans to reduce carbon emissions, explained Hayhoe. “And it’s clear who’s made the effort to prepare a fresh pie with handpicked fruit and who’s offered year-old chicken nuggets retrieved from the back of a freezer.”

“The United States, as a country, won't be contributing,” Hayhoe noted. However, she and several other leaders, including former key American negotiators, point to U.S. cities, states, and businesses that are stepping up to fill the gap.

In a letter to negotiators issued late Sunday, UN climate chief Simon Stiell stated that while the decade-old Paris Agreement is working to a degree, “we must accelerate in the Amazon.” He highlighted the existing devastating climate impacts, ranging from Hurricane Melissa hitting the Caribbean, enormous typhoons affecting Vietnam and the Philippines, to a tornado destroying parts of Southern Brazil.

Nations are urged to act more swiftly and “connect climate action to people's real lives,” Stiell wrote.

(Only the headline of this report may have been reworked by Editorji; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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