COP30 has opened with fierce calls for both stronger action and some of the starkest warnings yet for the urgency of our climate crisis.
In a fiery speech, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres scolded world leaders for failing to act faster and for doubling down on fossil fuels.
Speaking at the opening of the Leaders’ Summit, Brazilian President Lula labelled COP30 the “COP of truth”. Guterres mirrored this theme with some hard truths for leaders, calling their failure to act in line with limiting warming to 1.5ºC a “moral failure – and deadly negligence”. He labelled those who obstruct progress as “not just short sighted [but] self-destructive”, saying “a bet on fossil fuels is a bet against humanity”.

At Greenpeace, we couldn’t agree more. Corporate greed and government inaction has brought us to the brink of climate chaos. COP30 must be the ground where we hold big polluters accountable, and in doing so turn the tide on fossil fuels and climate destruction.
Climate change can seem very complicated, but often the solutions are beautifully simple. The single most effective policy to accelerate climate action, force a fair and fast fossil fuel phase out, and ensure that all communities are supported, is making big polluters pay.
By putting a levy on fossil fuel extraction, we can level the playing field, ensuring fossil fuels are forced out of the energy system and that we accelerate the transition to renewable energy. Revenue raised can be used to support vulnerable communities adapting to the devastating impacts of climate change, as well as support workers through the transition and drive the energy transformation in less developed countries.
In Belém, the campaign to make big polluters pay is one of our three top priorities, alongside a global response plan to address the 1.5C emissions gap, and a new plan to end global deforestation and forest degradation by 2030.
Our team is fired up and ready to take action, and we’ll be using the Rainbow Warrior and every other tool at our disposal to get this demand in front of leaders and to the heart of the negotiations.

At this decisive moment for the planet’s climate, the ship returns to the Amazon alongside traditional peoples and social movements to call on world leaders for ambitious climate targets, an end to global deforestation by 2030, and a just energy transition — now! © Filipe Bispo / Greenpeace
Last night, on the bus back to our hotel, I sat with Trixy Elle, a member of our Greenpeace team in Belém and a survivor of Super Typhoon Odette, which nearly destroyed her small island in the Visayas archipelago in the Philippines in 2021. Right now, as Trixy prepares to speak truth to power at COP30, her two boys, husband and parents are in an evacuation centre as yet another powerful typhoon—the second in as many weeks—bears down on her island.
Trixy’s small fishing community has done nothing to cause the climate crisis. Her family struggled to rebuild their lives after Super Typhoon Odette, and they now face the real possibility of losing it all again.
Trixy’s story epitomises the injustice at the heart of the climate crisis, and is the very reason we are here at COP30. She will be with us throughout this week, courageously sharing her story with the media and decision makers.
You can be part of this mission by adding your name to Polluters Pay Pact.
Climate Change
A New Mexico Religious Pilgrimage Rode a Global Wave Hoping for Ripple Effects for the Environment
While the faith-based marchers failed to push the Clear Horizons Act through the state legislature, it spread prayers for the climate from ranches to oil fields to wind farms.
Oil and gas wells might seem unusual sites for religious pilgrims, but on January 12, three faith-motivated environmentalists set out on a 328-mile trek from Carlsbad, New Mexico, that would see them slogging on foot past fossil-fuel developments, through remote ranch lands and deep into the desert on their way to the state capitol in Santa Fe.
A New Mexico Religious Pilgrimage Rode a Global Wave Hoping for Ripple Effects for the Environment
Climate Change
‘Completely delusional’: UN climate chief warns against fossil fuel push after Iran crisis
Doubling down on fossil fuels in response to the spikes in oil and gas prices unleashed by the Iran war would be “completely delusional”, the UN climate chief is expected to warn on Monday, in one of his strongest attacks yet on planet-heating fossil fuels.
Addressing political and business leaders in Brussels, Simon Stiell will argue that dependence on oil and gas is “ripping away national security and sovereignty” and will urge them not to use the crisis as a pretext to slow the clean energy transition.
“Fossil fuels that supercharge disasters rake in trillions in taxpayer-funded subsidies globally,” he will say. “Money that could be far better spent”.
Climate Home News understands Stiell views the current crisis as a crucial moment to ramp up pressure against fossil fuels, as it lays bare the economic irrationality of new oil and gas investments compared with the benefits of renewable energy.
Stiell’s warning comes at the start of a pivotal week for energy policy in Brussels. Energy ministers meet on Monday to discuss soaring energy costs before environment ministers gather on Tuesday to debate climate targets and a proposal to dilute carbon dioxide emissions standards for cars. Energy security will also feature high on the agenda of the European leaders’ summit on Thursday and Friday.
Oil and gas prices surging
Oil and gas prices have surged after key Gulf producers halted output following Iran’s attacks on regional infrastructure and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil supplies pass.
The disruption is hitting Asia hardest. Nearly 90% of the region’s oil and gas flows east, and fuel shortages have already forced Bangladesh to shut universities early and the Philippines to cut civil servants’ working hours. Across the continent, import-dependent countries have scrambled to lock in supplies, driving up prices as they compete for the same cargoes.
Europe has little direct exposure to the Strait of Hormuz disruption, but integrated global energy markets mean the continent will still pay more for its oil and gas imports.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said last week that the Iran war had already cost European citizens an additional three billion euros ($3.4 billion) in fossil fuel imports. “That is the price of our dependency,” she added.
‘Renewables turn the tables’
But right-wing politicians have seized on the Middle East crisis to attack the bloc’s green policies, blaming them for rising energy prices and weakening competitiveness.
Some governments, including Italy, have called for the suspension of the Emissions Trading System (ETS), the continent’s main climate policy, which incentivises companies to invest in lower-carbon production by putting a price on pollution. Eight other governments have urged the EU not to weaken its carbon market.
Von der Leyen said abandoning the EU’s long-term strategy, focused on investment in renewables and nuclear, would be a “strategic blunder”.
Gulf oil and gas crisis sparks calls for renewables investment
Echoing her message, Simon Stiell is expected to tell leaders that “meek dependence on fossil fuel imports will leave Europe forever lurching from crisis to crisis”.
“This fossil fuel crisis will happen again and again in this new world disorder where some major powers do as they please,” the UN climate chief will say.
“Renewables turn the tables,” Stiell is expected to add. “Sunlight doesn’t depend on narrow and vulnerable shipping straits. Wind blows without massive taxpayer-funded naval escorts”.
The rollout of new wind and solar power capacity across Europe since the introduction of the Green Deal in 2019 has saved 59 billion euros ($67bn) that would have been spent on additional fossil fuel imports, according to analysis by think-tank Ember.
The post ‘Completely delusional’: UN climate chief warns against fossil fuel push after Iran crisis appeared first on Climate Home News.
‘Completely delusional’: UN climate chief warns against fossil fuel push after Iran crisis
Climate Change
Is the FBI Investigating Climate Activists?
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