By Antonio Guterres
Our world faces massive headwinds and a multitude of crises. But we cannot allow climate commitments to be blown off course.
We must keep building momentum for action at COP30 in Brazil — and today was an important part of that effort. We don’t have a moment to lose.
No region is being spared from the ravages of accelerating climate catastrophes. And the crisis is deepening poverty, displacing communities, and fuelling conflict and instability.
At the same time, countries are waking up to a clear fact:
- Renewables are the economic opportunity of the century.
- Dissenters and fossil fuel interests may try to stand in the way.
But as we heard today, the world is moving forward. Full-speed ahead. No group or government can stop the clean energy revolution. Science is on our side — and economics have shifted.
Prices for renewables have plummeted and the sector is booming — creating jobs and boosting competitiveness and growth worldwide. The pathway out of climate hell is paved by renewables.
They offer the surest route to energy sovereignty and security, and ending dependence on volatile and expensive fossil fuel imports.
We also know collective climate action works. Since the adoption of the Paris Agreement, the projected global warming-curve has been bent down — from over four degrees of temperature rise within this century, to 2.6 degrees if current national climate action plans are fully implemented.
But that is catastrophic so we must go further and faster.
Today, I urged leaders to take action on two fronts.
First — to step up efforts to submit the strongest possible national climate plans well ahead of COP30.
And leaders today committed to put forward ambitious and robust plans as soon as possible what was a strong message of hope.
These new climate plans offer a unique opportunity to lay out a bold vision for a just green transition over the next decade.
They should align with 1.5 degrees and set emissions-reduction targets that cover all greenhouse gases and the whole economy as several today mentioned clearly.
Most importantly, they should help speed-up a just transition away from fossil fuels to renewables…
Link national energy and development strategies with climate goals…
And signal to policymakers and investors alike a total commitment to achieving global net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.
Second — as leaders turbocharge their own transitions, I urged them to scale-up support for developing countries.
Those least responsible for climate change are suffering from its worst effects.
Africa and other parts of the developing world are experiencing faster warming —and the Pacific islands are seeing faster sea-level rise — even while the global average itself is accelerating.
Meanwhile, despite being home to 60 per cent of the world’s best solar resources, Africa has only around 1.5 per cent of installed solar capacity – and receives just two per cent of global investment into renewables.
We need to change this — fast. At COP30, leaders must deliver a credible roadmap to mobilize $1.3 trillion a year for developing countries by 2035.
Developed countries must honour their promise to double adaptation finance to at least $40 billion a year, by this year.
And we need significantly increased contributions and innovative sources of finance to support the Fund for responding to Loss and Damage.
Across all these fronts, we will keep up the push — including at a special event in September in the final weeks to COP30.