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COP30 at a turning point: Why Belém deal has split global opinion

A decade after Paris, the Amazon-hosted COP30 reveals the gap between climate ambition and political reality and what it means for global climate governance

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Brazil: Indian delegation, led by Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav, at the ongoing UN COP30 Climate Summit in Amazonian city of Belem, in Brazil. (PTI Photo)(PTI11_20_2025_000001B)

COP30 in Belém was meant to be an “Implementation COP”, marking a shift from climate promises to climate delivery. Held at the edge of the Amazon rainforest, the summit combined symbolism with urgency: the first Global Stocktake since Paris, a push for stronger finance commitments and efforts to align climate and biodiversity goals. Yet, after two intense weeks, the final deal reflected both progress and profound disagreement.

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