đź’ˇ COP30: progress made, but a weak final deal

COP30 negotiations

🌍 Back from COP30 in Belém, a conference defined by a clear contrast:

No collective mandate to phase out fossil fuels, yet a strong reminder of the key role businesses now play in turning ambition into implementation. Across negotiation rooms and action spaces, one theme kept coming back: transition plans.

What moved forward:

 ✅ Tripling of adaptation finance (still without clear delivery mechanisms)
 ✅ Agreement on a Just Transition mechanism
 🌡️ Reaffirmation of the 1.5 °C objective
 🌳 Tropical Forest Forever Facility launched ($5.5 bn pledged, $125 bn target)
 🌍 $2.5 bn mobilized for the Congo Basin

What fell short:

 ❌ No fossil fuel phase-out — despite strong pressure from a coalition of 82 countries, including the EU and France, pushing in the negotiation rooms for a clear, collective roadmap. The EU played a decisive role in this coalition despite its own internal setbacks (regulatory rollbacks, late NDC submission), which weakened its negotiation power at a critical moment.
 ❌ No global anti-deforestation roadmap (shifted to voluntary action)
 ❌ No concrete acceleration in emissions reduction
 ❌ 1.5 °C limit affirmed, but still without a binding pathway

🌅 Reasons for hope

➡️ Importantly, this coalition is not giving up: a parallel diplomatic track is already emerging, with Colombia and the Netherlands hosting in 2026 the first international conference dedicated to the fossil fuel phase-out, aiming to build the roadmap missing from the COP outcome.

🏭 One encouraging signal:
Many businesses, including major U.S. companies present even without federal representation, are moving ahead regardless of political uncertainty. Implementation is accelerating where ambition meets concrete planning.

đź”§ This is where the ACT Initiative plays a crucial role.

By providing 1.5 °C-aligned, sector-specific methodologies, ACT helps companies build and assess robust transition plans, a key lever when global frameworks remain incomplete.

📉 COP30 did not deliver the fossil fuel roadmap the world needs. But the urgency was not questioned, and the 1.5 °C goal remains intact.

👉More than ever: the transition will be built by those who choose to ACT now.

photo by Associated Press