EVENT

COP30 outcomes: A “stabilization” agreement, far from the ambition that was expected

By ENGIE - 27 November 2025 - 18:10

The 30th Conference of the Parties, held in Belém, Brazil, concluded last week. After two weeks of negotiations, the 195 Parties finally managed to adopt a joint declaration at the last minute. This compromise avoided a formal failure, but it has generated major diplomatic frustration for a COP that was meant to mark the 10th anniversary of the Paris Agreement. 

 

Fouquet Florence

 

Analysis by Florence Colombo-Fouquet, ENGIE Vice President, ESG.

 

Why was ENGIE at COP30?

To demonstrate that the energy transition is already underway — and that there will be no turning back. We also aimed to support an initiative launched by the Brazilian presidency to give biomolecules a genuine role in the energy transition, complementing green electricity. We can welcome the Belém 4x pledge, an international commitment to quadruple the production and use of sustainable fuels (biofuels, biogas, hydrogen, e-methane) by 2035. 
This aligns perfectly with our strategy based on the alliance between the electron and the molecule. 

 

How did you experience these few days in Brazil?

There was a real sense of urgency among participating countries. President Lula also chose Belém as a symbolic location. On site, the effects of climate change are extremely tangible: temperatures reached 35°C with 80% humidity. I realized, as a European person, how difficult daily life already is there. 

 

Why did this COP turn out to be disappointing overall?

Belém took place in an international context marked by the absence of the United States. The Brazilian presidency led the negotiations but realistically could not achieve a highly ambitious outcome in today’s geopolitical climate. For example, the gradual phase-out of fossil fuels remains a major source of disagreement between countries. The European Union, several Latin American nations, small island states and the Africa Group openly regretted the lack of clear signals on ending oil, gas, and coal, stating that COP Belém “missed its appointment with history” while the +1.5°C target is now slipping out of reach.

However, the Brazilian presidency set the path for the next COP by keeping this issue on the agenda for 2026. It also secured an agreement on adaptation, including the goal of tripling adaptation finance by 2035. 

 

Did the “Amazon COP” advance efforts against deforestation?

Again, results were mixed. The Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF) was launched and collected 6.5 billion dollars. But some countries consider this insufficient and far below the identified needs. 

 

What positive elements do you see in this COP?

Even if Belém did not raise global ambition, COP30 has several merits: it stabilizes the multilateral framework, launches the adaptation workstream, and sets a structured roadmap for COP31, 32 and 33.

One notable step forward is adaptation. Diplomats progressed on defining criteria to compare countries in terms of climate impacts and resilience — assessing infrastructure, health systems, water and food security, and agriculture. They called for tripling adaptation funding, but only by 2035, while several countries, including the Africa Group, called for 2030.

The technical modalities of the Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA) remain contested and have been deferred to the mid-year sessions in Bonn in 2026.

Other major technical decisions have also been pushed to Bonn 2026: tracking the Global Stocktake and the new trajectories that countries must set for 2030 (NDCs). 

 

In conclusion, what is your takeaway from COP30?

Belém will be remembered as a COP of stabilization rather than transformation. A diplomatic failure was avoided, some political fault lines were clarified, and new workstreams were opened. But this COP did not deliver responses at the scale of the climate emergency. 

 

And for ENGIE?

For ENGIE and for all energy players committed to the transition, Belém confirms the importance of accelerating low-carbon solutions, strengthening adaptation, and actively contributing to the development of future NDC trajectories in collaboration with States. This COP also helped spotlight biomolecules (biofuels, biomethane, hydrogen, synthetic fuels…) as a key lever for the transition, which is highly relevant for ENGIE. 

 


 

ENGIE: a company committed to the environment and biodiversity

What is ENGIE’s decarbonization strategy?

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ENGIE’s ambition is to become the leading utility of the energy transition. The Group supports its clients by working to deliver decarbonized, reliable, and as affordable as possible energy worldwide.

In 2021, ENGIE adopted an ambitious roadmap to reach Net Zero Carbon by 2045. On April 24, 2025, the General Meeting approved an updated climate strategy, introducing new milestones for 2035 and 2040.

We aim to become the champion of zero-carbon energy. To achieve this, we follow a unique approach: the alliance of the molecule and the electron. 

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To help tackle global biodiversity loss, address its impacts, and continue benefiting from ecosystem services, the Group committed back in 2010 to integrating biodiversity into its business activities and the development of new projects. 

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ENGIE’s carbon footprint across all three scopes (1, 2 and 3) amounts to 157 million tons of CO2 equivalent in 2024. This represents a reduction of 107 Mt CO2-eq since 2017, or a 41% decrease.

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What role does ENGIE play in climate action?

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Convinced of the urgency of climate change and aware of our responsibilities, ENGIE aims to contribute to a transition toward a carbon-neutral world by making greenhouse gas emissions management a core priority. Since 2015, the Group has aligned its trajectory with the Paris Agreement, drastically reducing emissions from industrial activities with science-based targets that are compatible with a 1.5°C or well-below 2°C pathway, depending on assessments.

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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Where and when did COP30 take place?

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The 2025 Belém Climate Change Conference, or COP30, was held from November 10 to 22, 2025, in Belém, in northern Brazil, capital of the state of Pará, on the edge of the Amazon rainforest. 

What were the outcomes of COP30?

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While Belém did not raise overall ambition, COP30 did have several achievements:

• It stabilized the multilateral framework. 
• It launched the adaptation workstream. 
• It set a structured roadmap for COP31, 32 and 33. 
• It deferred several key technical matters to Bonn 2026: the Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA), Global Stocktake tracking, and new Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs).

On this page, you can find the official documents from COP30.