Climate Action Archives - CAN Europe https://caneurope.org/work-areas/climate-action/ Climate Action Network Europe is Europe's largest coalition working on climate and energy issues. With over 120 member organisations in more than 25 . Mon, 24 Nov 2025 12:11:14 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://caneurope.org/content/uploads/2023/09/cropped-can-logo-400px-rgb-6-32x32.gif Climate Action Archives - CAN Europe https://caneurope.org/work-areas/climate-action/ 32 32 COP30 Supports A Just Transition Mechanism – But Leaves Civil Society’s Justice Package Undelivered https://caneurope.org/cop-30-reaction/ Sat, 22 Nov 2025 17:05:15 +0000 https://caneurope.org/?p=29269 Belém, 22 November 2025 – COP30 was hyped as the first implementation COP, the first COP since the landmark ICJ Advisory Opinion on Climate Change and the COP that would honour the 10th anniversary of the Paris Agreement. Expectations were high, but the outcomes, underwhelming. The Climate Action Network came to this COP with demands […]

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Belém, 22 November 2025 – COP30 was hyped as the first implementation COP, the first COP since the landmark ICJ Advisory Opinion on Climate Change and the COP that would honour the 10th anniversary of the Paris Agreement. Expectations were high, but the outcomes, underwhelming.

The Climate Action Network came to this COP with demands for a justice package, which included the creation of the Belém Action Mechanism (BAM) for a Just Transition, the tripling of adaptation finance, the narrowing of the ambition gap caused by weak Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and a clear roadmap for the phase out of fossil fuels.

While negotiators ultimately agreed to create a Belém Action Mechanism, a hard-won victory from civil society pressure, the rest of the package fell far short. Adaptation finance outcomes were strikingly weak, with Parties failing to commit to tripling the Glasgow target for 2026–2029, and pushing back the target year to 2035. Effectively this means a doubling by 2030, but without a known baseline. This leaves frontline communities without the scaled-up support they urgently need. Even more alarming was the complete absence in the final decision text of the previously agreed language on fossil fuel phaseout from COP28. With no reference to a global road map and no acknowledgement of the need to phase out coal, oil, and gas, COP30 missed the chance to anchor the transition at the heart of the UN climate process.

The COP30 outcomes also fail to offer any credible response to the widening NDC ambition gap. While rich countries frequently highlight this gap, many barely met the deadline to submit their own NDCs, and, ten years after Paris, not a single one includes a timeline to phase out fossil fuels. The final text’s vague reference to “accelerating implementation of the UAE Consensus” is far too weak to drive the transformational mitigation action needed. With no clear process to strengthen NDCs and no signal that the biggest emitters will move first and fastest, COP30 falls short of the scientific imperative and the Paris Agreement’s core equity principles. We expect the EU to engage constructively in the parallel initiatives to transition away from fossil fuels launched by the Presidency and parties like Colombia but also keep all efforts to anchor this work into the Paris Agreement obligations. 

Chiara Martinelli, Director at CAN Europe:

“Delivering BAM was a major civil society win, it creates a coordinated institutional home to drive forward progress on the Just Transition. Beyond this success though, COP30 leaves us with a grim picture when it comes to the whole justice package we came here for. Adaptation was sidelined, and fossil fuels were erased from the outcome. Ten years after Paris, we expected courage. Instead, world leaders delivered the bare, bare minimum.”

The EU did not meet the moment

The EU arrived in Belém promising to defend multilateralism, but its negotiating tactics told a different story. The EU repeatedly held up progress on finance in an effort to secure gains on fossil fuel phase-out. This included taking huge unnecessary risks to block the whole negotiation package and undermine the collaboration and trust with other parties, especially from the Global South. With the United States largely absent, Europe had a rare chance to step into a genuine leadership role it had prepared itself for; instead it ended up aligning with other delayers and contributed to a diluted outcome across the board.

Chiara Martinelli, Director at CAN Europe:
“The EU came to Belém speaking the language of leadership, but too often acted like a procrastinator, swooping in at the last minute with weak proposals. Europe cannot claim to defend multilateralism while playing tactical games that undermine trust and weaken ambition. The EU was not alone in blocking ambition, but the block signposted an easy hiding place for others.”

A moment for mobilisation, with missed chances for inclusion

The beginning of COP30 was energised by the Amazon, its people and the hope Parties in Belém could deliver with progress the locale inspired. This COP has been a stark reminder though, that meaningful climate action requires meaningful participation. For the first time in four years, the host country opened public spaces for civil society to organise, culminating in an inspiring People’s Summit in Belém that showcased cross-border cooperation and the power of collective action.

Yet inside the COP30 negotiations, dynamics have been affected by the ‘shuttle diplomacy’. The Brazilian Presidency failed to provide written reports or transparent updates during the crucial last days, leaving civil society and the press limited ability to monitor or assess the evolving discussions. As we mark the tenth anniversary of the Paris Agreement, it is clear that conversations need to take place on UNFCCC reform to broaden participation, safeguard transparency, and ensure measures to stop corporate capture by fossil fuel lobbyists.

Pablo Chamorro, Campaigns and Mobilisations Network Coordinator at CAN Europe:
“Belém showed the strength of people’s movements on the streets and inside the negotiations venue through hundreds of creative protests pushing for our justice package, but the negotiations themselves fell far short of the openness that climate justice demands. If we want the Paris Agreement to continue to deliver into its second decade, we need a system that is transparent, inclusive, and truly accessible to those fighting for a liveable future.”

Javier Andaluz Prieto, Climate and Energy Coordinator for Ecologistas en Acción (Spain): 
“The COP30 has been one of the most opaque summits in history. The Brazilian presidency has been incapable of moving towards a final, fair decision that would allow progress on climate justice. Apart from the BAM (Belém Action Mechanism), no progress has been made. Once again, governments worldwide are prioritizing their own interests, putting the lives of everyone at risk, particularly those of vulnerable people. We came to the Amazon seeking adequate funding and a roadmap for the end of fossil fuels and deforestation, one that would place people and ecosystems at the center of climate action. However, the final result has once again been a geopolitical clash that is costing us too much.”

Themed and detailed quotes from the CAN Europe network on the specifics of the negotiations:

 

Just Transition

James Trinder, International Climate Policy Coordinator at CAN Europe:
“We welcome the agreement on the Belem Action Mechanism – a long overdue home for Just Transition in the UNFCCC and a vital institution to accelerate climate action, in line with the Paris Agreement, grounded in equity, solidarity, shared opportunity, and human rights. The BAM is a hard-won victory for people-centred climate action: protecting social dialogue, gender equality, disability, indigenous, and Afro-descendent inclusion, as well as the right to a clean, health, and sustainable environment and intergenerational equity, but the struggle for a just and liveable future continues.”

Gaïa Febvre, Head of International Policy, Climate Action Network France:
“For two weeks, we spoke of a ‘COP of truth’. And the truth is not a pleasant one: multilateralism is in distress, and the diplomacy conducted largely behind closed doors has not helped rebuild trust in the COP process. We needed more transparency, but also more honesty. Along with other developed countries, the European Union held the finance outcomes hostage until the very last moment, which, after numerous betrayals, did nothing to restore its credibility or strengthen its relationships with vulnerable countries. The disruptive tactics of several groups and of the Presidency weighed heavily on the process. Despite all these obstacles, a new mechanism on Just Transition has been agreed. This is a major victory for workers, young people, women, and all the civil society organisations who came to the COP demanding a framework that ensures climate action also protects jobs and improves people’s lives. Let us never forget that those who always pay the price of these blockages are the people and the most vulnerable.”

Stephanny Ulivieri, Secretary General, Youth and Environment Europe
“We came with a clear goal: to ensure young people’s voices and lived experiences shape UNFCCC decision-making. We, the youth, who contributed least to the triple planetary crisis, are and will suffer the most. With allies worldwide, we pushed for a justice package centered on a just transition, science, and climate-justice-based decisions on adaptation, finance, and the ambition gap. Today, we leave Belém with bittersweet feelings. The BAM decision, a major cross-constituency rights-based achievement, passed, but other negotiations saw no real progress. Fossil fuel ambition weakened, climate finance stagnated, and the ambition gap remains. Our fight continues. There’s no time to waste. Governments, especially in the Global North: we are watching.”

Agnes Schim van der Loeff, Policy Advisor Climate Justice, ActionAid Netherlands:
“The major achievement of this COP is the tangible outcome to make Just Transition a reality. For the first time, clear agreements will ensure that ordinary people, workers, communities, and vulnerable groups are protected and involved when it comes to climate action. More importantly, an institution will be established to turn principle into practice.This breakthrough came not from governments, but from a dedicated push by civil society organizations, unions, youth, and feminist groups, as well as the loud calls of Indigenous movements in Brazil. Where governments failed to achieve progress on other issues, it is thanks to civil society that there is in fact a concrete outcome at this “implementation COP”’.

Friederike Strub, Climate Finance Campaigner, Recourse, said:
“The ‘COP of truth’ is shamelessly perpetuating business as usual. This draft decision puts unaccountable, undemocratic international financial institutions at the centre of a climate finance architecture that has thus far failed to deliver justice and development. The proposed COP30 package won’t result in real climate action if countries are still trapped in debt and extractivism. The move to establish a just transition mechanism is positive and shows the power of civil society organising. But to make the just transition happen we need public finance backing, systemic economic reform, and a clear roadmap to end fossil fuels”.

Clàudia Custodio, Climate justice officer, Debt Observatory in Globalisation (ODG):
“In the face of the climate crisis, only a just transition to a fossil-free world will deliver the outcomes the UNFCCC was created for. Thanks to the tireless effort of civil society, who came to Belem to get a just transition mechanism, we have an outcome to celebrate. However, sufficient finance and a clear roadmap to phase out fossil fuels are still missing, while opacity has reigned during the two weeks of negotiations. A reform of the process which involves kicking lobbyists out is mandatory to ensure the future of multilateralism.”

Angelika Derfler, Climate Justice Campaigner, Südwind:
“The agreed global mechanism for just transition is a ray of hope amid otherwise disappointing results. This means that a specific demand made by countries in the Global South and civil society has been included in the text, putting people and their realities at the heart of a just transition”.

Leïla Réau, Climate Justice Activist, Swiss Youth for Climate (SYFC)
“COP30 didn’t deliver the justice package we urgently need – especially on adaptation finance and mitigation. Developed countries must step up, take responsibility, and help shape outcomes that are truly future-fit.
But there was one big win (BAM!): a concrete step on Just Transition putting youth and frontline communities at the center. When governments fell short, civil society, including youth worldwide, united behind a shared vision and delivered this outcome. We showed what real cooperation and solidarity look like — and countries should follow our lead so a fair and inclusive sustainable future becomes possible”.

Adaptation and Finance

Rachel Simon, International Finance Policy Coordinator at CAN Europe:
“Along with developed countries, the EU held finance outcomes to ransom until the last moment, which has hugely damaged its credibility and relationships with climate vulnerable countries. The new at least tripling of adaptation finance target may sound significant, but it’s riddled with weaknesses. As the International Court of Justice’s recent Advisory Opinion sets out, finance provision to support developing countries to achieve Paris Agreement goals is a legal obligation for developed countries. The EU needs to set out a path forward to dramatically scale up adaptation finance – so sorely needed by countries in the Global South and to support global stability – focusing on grants, access and contributions to the UNFCCC climate funds.”

Nicolas Bormann, Climate policy officer at CNCD-11.11.11 (Belgium):
“Scarce are those who pass the exam without having done their homework before. The EU sits in this exact position having failed to honor the Paris agreement – because they came to COP30 unwilling to deliver qualitative finance again. Through massive cutbacks in official development aid instead of unlocking new sources of public finance, member states continuously shy away from their obligations on the international stage. Transitioning away from fossil fuels is of the utmost importance and it needs to be fair, inclusive and funded – and cannot be traded off against adaptation in the global south”.

Hamdi Benslama, EU Advocacy Adviser, ActionAid International:
“COP30 was sold as the COP of truth and implementation – the EU helped turn it into posturing and a blame game. The EU talked about phasing out fossil fuels while it should already be leading with a clear phase-out pathway; it talked about ambition while its own pledge doesn’t match its fair share; and it dodged hard questions on support, giving no clear signal on how last year’s finance deal will be implemented, particularly for the most vulnerable. COP after COP, this widening gap between words and action is eroding the EU’s climate credibility, weakening the Paris Agreement it claims to defend, and handing easy excuses to those who never wanted real climate action in the first place.”  

Salomé Lehtman, Advocacy Advisor at Mercy Corps and the Zurich Climate Resilience Alliance: 
“Ten years after Paris, COP30 should have delivered a justice package for communities suffering from the climate crisis. Instead, we got a hollow adaptation finance ‘commitment’ with no obligations for developed countries, no baseline, and delivery kicked to 2035. The European Union, alongside other rich countries, refused to put any money on the table, despite clear duties under the Paris agreement. This is a failure of climate justice. The outcome on adaptation finance is weak, and people’s lives are on the line. It is time governments are held accountable and deliver sufficient and quality adaptation finance, not more empty promises because communities cannot adapt to inaction.”

Barbara Rosen Jacobson, Senior Advocacy Advisor, Mercy Corps and the Zurich Climate Resilience Alliance:
“This year, we needed a strong and ambitious outcome on adaptation. This COP offered a critical chance to elevate adaptation for communities already facing escalating climate impacts. Unfortunately, the result falls short. While the outcome includes a commitment to triple adaptation finance, it lacks a defined baseline, does not clarify who will pay, and delays delivery to 2035; far too late for those on the frontlines. Still, throughout this COP, it became crystal clear that more and better-quality adaptation finance is needed, even if the outcome fails to reflect it. We must build on this and continue pressing governments for real, urgent action.”

Marlene Achoki, Global Climate Justice Policy and Advocacy Lead, CARE International
“This outcome is a failure — and failure to act is negligence. Communities are already living the climate crisis, and millions are paying the price. Adaptation is essential to protect lives and safeguard economies, yet at a COP30 billed as the ‘COP of Truth,’ outcomes fall far short. There is no clarity on how much money is channeled to adaptation, where it will come from, its quality, or how progress will be measured. Without adequate, public, grant-based finance and ambition, climate change will keep multiplying poverty and deepening inequality, especially for women and girls fighting daily for safety and dignity.”

Sinéad Loughran, Climate Justice Policy & Advocacy Advisor, Trócaire:
“COP30’s outcome fails to even acknowledge the stark and devastating neglect of rich, historically-high polluting states to deliver on their loss and damage finance obligations. The Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage remains critically underfunded, resulting in a denial of basic human rights. Communities are facing droughts, floods and other extreme weather events, causing loss of homes, lives and livelihoods, and are owed remedy for this harm. As long as big polluters, states and corporations alike, fail to deliver adequate climate action including a fair and funded fossil fuel phase out, communities will continue to experience escalating losses and damages.”

NDCs and Ambition

Petter Lydén, Head of International Climate Policy, Germanwatch:
“A large part of COP30 was about the fundamental cause of climate change, and how to remove it. The final weak response to the gap in necessary emissions reductions commitments is countered by the loud call from more than 80 countries across continents to transition away from fossil fuels. This initiative will be taken forward in the year to come and the EU needs to be onboard and support.”

David Knecht, Fastenaktion Switzerland:
“Climate action must be people centered. It is good to see that COP30 brought us a step closer to a just transition mechanism. We have to celebrate this! At the same time, countries were unable to address the glaring gap in ambition and implementation of the Paris Agreement. COP30 does not deliver a plan on how countries will concretely work towards more climate action, socially just and funded climate action. This is a lost opportunity. We need the COP30 and COP31 Presidencies to focus”.

Kaysie Brown, Associate Director, Climate Diplomacy & Geopolitics, E3G:
“A deal was always going to be hard-fought, and the outcome shows that Parties were not consistently resolute in pursuing the level of collective ambition required, or united in their support for some critical elements. The work is far from over, and Brazil has a considerable amount to do in the days ahead to assure Parties on next steps and processes. Looking ahead, the question remains: whether there is political will to match what is happening in the real economy. And there are important foundations coming out of this COP to build on and deepen – elements that can be translated into tangible acceleration of real-world progress in cutting emissions, phasing out fossil fuels, strengthening adaptation, protecting nature, and matching needs with resources.”

Fossil Fuel Phase-Out

Rachel Simon, International finance Policy Coordinator at CAN Europe:
“While global action on fossil fuel subsidy phaseout would have a huge impact on the energy transition, it was shockingly omitted at COP30 representing a backwards step on previous years. The EU could have brought more countries on board by focusing on equity and just transitions and by getting its own house in order, as it has committed to phasing out fossil fuel subsidies by 2025 numerous times. Swift progress is now needed at home on the forthcoming EU fossil fuel subsidy phaseout framework, starting with tackling the billions poured into industry.”

Matilde Angeltveit, Senior Climate Policy Adviser at Norwegian Church Aid:
“This agreement fails to respond to the severity of the climate crisis. Climate-vulnerable people deserved a fast, fair, and fully funded phase-out of fossil fuels, paired with a major scaling-up of climate finance to the Global South. This COP did not deliver that. In Norwegian Church Aid we have worked with climate adaptation for many decades, and we know that the solutions exist. But the Global North is not stepping up to the challenge, and recognizing their historical responsibility to increase support. This needs to change, starting with national policies to increase ambition on a globally just transition.”

Susann Scherbarth, Head of Climate Justice, Friends of the Earth Germany: 
“The end of COP30 in Belém feels like a ship sailing into a storm and throwing away its compass. No mention of the long-discussed roadmap for phasing out fossil fuels and no progress toward a fair, fully financed phase-out—a bitterly disappointing result. And yet there was finally momentum again to make the phase-out of fossil fuels a reality. Now it’s a clear free pass for the fossil fuel industry and a hard blow for those who suffer most from the climate crisis and a goodbye to the 1.5 pathway. Rich countries such as Germany or the EU must not continue to shirk their responsibilities at the expense of poorer ones.”

Alexandra Azevedo, Head of National Board of Directors, Quercus:
“The world hopes for a fair and fast phase-out of fossil fuels, shown by science to provide the best economic gains while also protecting our lives and planet. Yet, growing numbers of fossil-fuel lobbyists are working from within to slow this progress and developing countries have taken on heavy debt to support global climate efforts without enough help from the richest economies. Still, civil society’s presence at COP continues to rise and this year’s decision demonstrates that by having included the strongest language yet on human rights, labour, gender, youth, education, ecosystems, and biodiversity.
Colombia and the UN had key roles in presenting and supporting respectively the urgent need for a roadmap to transition away from fossil fuels and to tackle climate misinformation. We entered with giant steps and left with baby ones but progress remains. Next time we shall make longer strides.”

Marc Weissgerber, Executive Director, E3G Berlin (Geschäftsführer):
“The EU has made a significant contribution to proving that multilateralism and climate cooperation work even in a very difficult geopolitical environment – and that large parts of the world are ready to move to implementation. The EU showcased its agency to strengthen ambition, building on its role as middle-ground convener while adapting to geopolitical realities. It also showcased flexibility regarding the tripling of adaptation finance and on so-called unilateral measures. The EU can build on its actions at COP30, engaging further and constructively with partners in EMDES, using real economy opportunities and building coalitions.”

Erica Martinelli, COP30 Coordinator, Generation Climate Europe (GCE):
“COP30 was presented as the COP of implementation, yet its outcome falls short of 1.5°C science and states’ legal obligations under the ICJ’s Advisory Opinion. It advanced justice by calling for a just transition mechanism grounded in human rights, but it failed to deliver a time-bound fossil fuel phase-out roadmap and increased grant-based public finance. As this COP showed, ambition is sidelined when fossil fuel lobbyists outnumber vulnerable communities. With tipping points approaching and lives at risk, we demand greater ambition, real finance, and a time-bound fossil fuel phase-out to keep 1.5°C alive.”

Federica Dossi, Global Carbon Market Expert, Carbon Market Watch:
“COP30 has demonstrated that the spectre of inadequate carbon crediting rules and blurred carbon market deals will continue to haunt climate targets for years to come. We call on countries not to buy carbon credits to reach their climate goals. EU policymakers, especially, must take note.
The adopted decisions may add marginal improvements to the overall Article 6.2 rulebook, but such increments do little to change the rather worrying course that Article 6 seems to be on”.

Isa Mulder, Global Carbon Market Expert, Carbon Market Watch
“While the old CDM framework is now put to rest, it’s dire that credits from the Kyoto mechanisms have been given yet another lifeline. The absurd message coming from governments seems to be ‘the CDM is dead, long live the CDM!’
Governments averted disaster by fending off numerous financial interests that sought to weaken carbon market rules in Article 6.4. At the same time, they leave Belém with a lot of unfinished business if this carbon crediting mechanism is to fulfill an exemplary function for carbon markets globally.”

ENDS

For more information and media requests:

Tomas Spragg Nilsson, Senior Communications Coordinator (in Belém)

tomas.spraggnilsson@caneurope.org // +46 707 65 63 92

 

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CAN Europe initial reaction to the 21 November Mutirão text at COP30 https://caneurope.org/can-europe-initial-reaction-to-the-21-november-mutirao-text-at-cop30/ Fri, 21 Nov 2025 13:14:18 +0000 https://caneurope.org/?p=29258 Belém, 21 November – Reacting to the 21 November Mutirão text at COP30 Initial analysis of the latest Mutirão text shows some significant weaknesses. In particular, anything resembling a roadmap to transition away from fossil fuels is completely missing. What could be seen as a response to the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) gap is also […]

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Belém, 21 November – Reacting to the 21 November Mutirão text at COP30

Initial analysis of the latest Mutirão text shows some significant weaknesses. In particular, anything resembling a roadmap to transition away from fossil fuels is completely missing. What could be seen as a response to the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) gap is also very weak: it would only set up a process for the next Presidency to collate discussions and prepare a report for the next COP, with no clear process elements and no clear call to step up NDCs.

Sven Harmeling, Head of Climate at CAN Europe, said:

“We don’t yet see in the text what is needed to address the NDC gap, so negotiators cannot walk away from Belém with a decision as the text currently stands.”

It is impossible to recognise a justice package in the latest Mutirão text if there is no real progress on transitioning away from fossil fuels. It is critical that the COP sends a strong signal that this debate has now started, and that negotiations move forward on how the transition can actually happen. Negotiators are not at the end of the process yet, and there are many more hours ahead to strengthen the text.

Chiara Martinelli, Director at CAN Europe, added:

“Mitigation is currently one of the biggest weaknesses in the Mutirão text, alongside financial support. If there is no progress on mitigation, there is no progress on climate justice. There is no climate justice in a 2.5°C world – and stronger support from developed countries is critical to accelerate mitigation efforts.” 

It will be critical for the EU to gather allies to push for more ambition on the NDC response and on the roadmap for transitioning away from fossil fuels. Many countries beyond the EU have called for this, and it is important to lift up those voices. At the same time, there is still a need for significant strengthening in adaptation finance. The Just Transition Mechanism is on a good track, but many elements are still missing. If the EU brings these elements together and joins forces with other progressive countries, it should still be possible to improve the final result.

Colombia declaration for transitioning away from fossil fuels

Outside the COP30 process, the launch of the Colombia Declaration showed that momentum for phasing out fossil fuels is growing. More than 80 countries now support a global shift away from oil, gas and coal, with Colombia and the Netherlands leading the way toward a 2026 conference on the just transition, announced in Belém.

James Trinder, International Climate Policy Coordinator at CAN Europe, said:

“It is encouraging to see so many countries, led by Colombia and the Netherlands, stepping up to build a global roadmap for phasing out oil, gas and coal in line with science and the legal obligations, as ruled by the International Court of Justice. The EU must now match this momentum and sign the declaration. Above all, the developed countries must now match that ambition on public finance, and move the money flows away from the fossil fuels destroying the planet to a just transition centred on creating opportunity for people worldwide.”

ENDS

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COP30: “If the EU is serious about defending multilateralism, it should now publicly support a TAFF roadmap” https://caneurope.org/cop30-if-the-eu-is-serious-about-defending-multilateralism-it-should-now-publicly-support-a-taff-roadmap/ Tue, 18 Nov 2025 15:55:46 +0000 https://caneurope.org/?p=29223 Belém, 18 November – Reacting to the COP30 Brazilian Presidency’s new text this morning: CAN Europe is concerned by the weak options on the table for supporting a roadmap for the transition away from fossil fuels. The EU has long been calling for a negotiated outcome to address the global ambition gap, and this is the […]

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Belém, 18 November – Reacting to the COP30 Brazilian Presidency’s new text this morning:

CAN Europe is concerned by the weak options on the table for supporting a roadmap for the transition away from fossil fuels. The EU has long been calling for a negotiated outcome to address the global ambition gap, and this is the moment to finally stand up and put forward concrete proposals for what a Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels roadmap must deliver.

 

Chiara Martinelli, Director at CAN Europe:

“As we progress into the second week, this is the EU’s last real chance to demonstrate it is staying the course on implementing the Paris Agreement and to clearly anchor the roadmap in the 1.5°C goal. 

If the EU is serious about defending multilateralism and countering the rise of climate-denying leaders, it should now publicly and unequivocally support President Lula’s call for a TAFF roadmap in plenary. A credible roadmap should be coupled with clear domesctic fossil fuel phase-out dates, an end to fossil fuel subsidies, and concrete tools, support and initiatives to double energy efficiency and triple renewable energy, turning political signals into real implementation”.

ENDS.

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Invitation: COP30 Mid-Point Hybrid Press Briefing https://caneurope.org/invitation-cop30-mid-point-hybrid-press-briefing/ Sat, 15 Nov 2025 19:44:10 +0000 https://caneurope.org/?p=29164 Meeting room 24 – Area C (and online) Monday 17 November, 12.00-12.30 Belém time CAN Europe invites you to a concise mid-point media briefing, live from Belém, on Monday 17 November 12:00 – 12:30, Belém time. This event is held in the blue zone of COP30 and livestreamed via zoom, exclusively for journalists and will […]

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Meeting room 24 – Area C (and online) Monday 17 November, 12.00-12.30 Belém time

CAN Europe invites you to a concise mid-point media briefing, live from Belém, on Monday 17 November 12:00 – 12:30, Belém time. This event is held in the blue zone of COP30 and livestreamed via zoom, exclusively for journalists and will not be recorded.

In this timely briefing, taking place at the first COP since the International Court of Justice clarified that ambitious climate action is a legal obligation, Climate Action Network (CAN) Europe will unpack progress in the negotiations so far, and the empty leadership seat that is yet to be filled.


Our panel of experts will discuss:

  • Scorecard on the EU’s actions at COP30 so far
  • The Belém Action Mechanism for a just transition
  • Adaptation finance 
  • The transition away from fossil fuels
  • Youth perspectives on the negotiations


Our expert speakers will explore these crucial issues, offering valuable context and analysis. The session will conclude with a Q&A.


Speakers:

  • Sven Harmeling, CAN Europe
  • Stephanny Ulivieri, Youth and Environment Europe
  • Claudio Angelo, Observatorio del clima
  • Marlene Achoki, CARE International

 

Registration link (for remote viewers only): https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_w5OjHCx1Ro2CXVSo6eoWUQ 

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98 Civil Society Organisations Pledge for Fossil Free Politics https://caneurope.org/96-civil-society-organisations-pledge-for-fossil-free-politics/ Mon, 17 Nov 2025 11:56:06 +0000 https://caneurope.org/?p=29151 For decades, the fossil fuel industry has worked to block effective climate action – denying climate science data, delaying progress towards clean energy and distorting democratic debate. Through massive lobbying efforts, greenwashing campaigns, promoting false solutions, and even suing countries and communities for acting on climate, fossil fuel companies have prioritised profits over people and […]

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For decades, the fossil fuel industry has worked to block effective climate action – denying climate science data, delaying progress towards clean energy and distorting democratic debate. Through massive lobbying efforts, greenwashing campaigns, promoting false solutions, and even suing countries and communities for acting on climate, fossil fuel companies have prioritised profits over people and the planet.

This influence is consistently undermining the EU’s ability to deliver on the goals of the Paris Agreement and is delaying the just and urgent transition towards a 100% renewable energy system, needed for a safe and sustainable environment. To secure that future, we must draw a clear line: those responsible for the crisis -and who continue to benefit from it- must not shape its solutions. As we now enter the second week of COP30 in Belém, civil society is drawing a clear line: climate and energy policy for people, not polluters..

Climate Action Network (CAN) Europe, together with the Fossil Free Politics campaign, has launched the Civil Society Pledge for Fossil Free Politics, a collective call to end fossil fuel influence in policymaking. The Civil Society Pledge, signed by 98 civil society organisations is a commitment to:

  • Protect policymaking from fossil fuel capture, ensuring climate policies are shaped by and for people’s needs, not polluters’ profits.
  • Demand transparency from politicians on their interactions with the fossil fuel industry and their lobbyists.
  • Raise public awareness of the privileged access to decision makers that fossil fuel lobbyists continue to benefit from, despite profiting from an industry that harms people and the planet.
  • Make fossil free politics a fundamental part of our work by aligning our partnerships, event attendance, and public engagement with this goal.

Why is this important

While civil society organisations face smear campaigns, uncertain funding and access to policymakers, politicians continue to roll out the red carpet for the fossil fuel industry. The latest data show that during its 2019 – 2024 term of office, the Von der Leyen Commission held nearly 900 meetings with fossil fuel lobbyists – almost one every working day for four and a half years.

Ahead of COP30, over 225 organisations from around the world, including CAN Europe, signed a call for a COP free from polluters’ influence and with a strong accountability framework to protect against interference from vested interests and big polluters, urging the UNFCCC Presidency to stop inviting the world’s largest polluting industries.

Despite these calls, the problem remains. According to new research by the Kick Big Polluters Out coalition and Fossil Free Politics, 9 EU governments brought a total of 84 fossil fuel lobbyists to COP30, granting them access to the very process meant to deliver climate solutions. This contributed to the overall figure of 1,600 fossil fuel lobbyists at COP30, one in every 25 participants -showing that the very same industries driving the climate crisis still hold power over the negotiations meant to solve it.

With this pledge, civil society sends a united message: fossil fuel interests must be excluded from decision-making to ensure fair, science-based climate policies that put people and the planet first! 

NOTES: 

  1. Find the Pledge here.
  2. Find FAQs here.
  3. Do you still want to sign? Contact us:  joe.inwood@caneurope.org, julia.cabre.surroca@caneurope.org, marianna.plomariti@caneurope.org


The pledge was signed by:

  1. A Sud
  2. Act Church of Sweden
  3. Action Solidarité Tiers Monde (ASTM)
  4. AirClim
  5. Altro Modo Flegreo
  6. Amis de la Terre France / Friends of the Earth France
  7. Anti-Jindal & Anti-POSCO Movement (JPPSS)
  8. ASSOCIACIÓ CATALANA PER LA PAU
  9. Associazione Bianca Guidetti Serra
  10. Austrian Alliance for Climate Justice
  11. Bond Beter Leefmilieu
  12. Campagna Nazionale Per il Clima Fuori dal Fossile
  13. CAN Europe
  14. Canopea
  15. CEE Bankwatch Network
  16. Center for Climate Change
  17. Center for ecology and energy
  18. Center for Environment
  19. Center for environmental research and information Eko-svest Skopje
  20. Centre for Citizens Conserving Environment & Management (CECIC)
  21. Christian Aid Ireland
  22. CIDSE
  23. Clean Air Action Group
  24. Climate Alliance Switzerland / Alliance Climatique Suisse / Klima-Allianz Schweiz
  25. Co-ordination Office of the Austrian Bishops’ Conference for International Development and Mission (KOO)
  26. COBAS Brindisi
  27. Comitato Ulivivo
  28. Coordinamento Nazionale No Triv
  29. Coordinamento Ravennate Fuori dal Fossile
  30. Cordaid
  31. Debt Observatory in Globalisation (ODG)
  32. Deutsche Umwelthilfe
  33. eco-union
  34. ECODES
  35. Ecological Association EKO-UNIA
  36. Ecologistas en Acción
  37. Ecor.Network
  38. Ecoteam – Energy and Environmental Consulting non for profit NGO
  39. EDEN Center
  40. EEB
  41. EKOenergy ecolabel
  42. Electra Energy Cooperative
  43. Emergenzaclimatica.it
  44. Enginyeria sense Fronteres
  45. Environmental Association “Za Zemiata” – Friends of the Earth Bulgaria
  46. Environmental Justice Foundation
  47. Eurocadres
  48. Fastenaktion
  49. Fern
  50. Focus društvo za sonaraven razvoj
  51. Food & Water Action Europe
  52. Forests of the World
  53. Forum Ambientalista
  54. Friends of the Earth Europe
  55. Friends of the Earth Ireland
  56. Fronte Verde
  57. Fundacja Mission Possible
  58. Generation Climate Europe
  59. GLOBAL 2000
  60. Global Witness
  61. Go Green
  62. Green Liberty
  63. Greenpeace (European Unit)
  64. International Network for Sustainable Energy (INFORSE) – Europe
  65. Kolektiv Z
  66. Legambiente
  67. Les Amis de la Terre – Belgique asbl
  68. Magyar Természetvédők Szövetsége – Friends of the Earth Hungary
  69. Milieudefensie | FoE-NL
  70. Mouvement Ecologique
  71. Movimento No TAP/SNAM di Brindisi
  72. Naturefriends International
  73. No Gasdotto SNAM
  74. Plant-for-the-Planet
  75. PowerShift e.V.
  76. Pro Natura – Friends of the Earth Switzerland
  77. Protect the Planet – Gesellschaft für ökologischen Aufbruch
  78. Quercus – Associação Nacional de Conservação da Natureza
  79. ReCommon
  80. Rete Legalità per il clima 
  81. Rete Nazionale No Rigass No GNL
  82. Rise For Climate Belgium
  83. SAVE MY WORLD
  84. Seas At Risk
  85. Shifting Advocacy
  86. Swiss Youth for Climate (SYFC)
  87. The Climate Reality Project Europe
  88. Trócaire
  89. Ultima Generazione Lazio
  90. United for Global Mental Health
  91. Utviklingsdfondet / The Development Fund, Norway
  92. VšĮ “Žiedinė ekonomika”
  93. WISE Nederland
  94. Women Engage for a Common Future – WECF International
  95. World’s Youth for Climate Justice (WYCJ)
  96. WWF European Policy Office
  97. Youth and Environment Europe
  98. ZERO – Associação Sistema Terrestre Sustentável

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EU Parliament Backs 2040 Climate Target, But sticks to Council’s weakened plan https://caneurope.org/eu-parliament-backs-2040-climate-target-but-sticks-to-councils-weakened-plan/ Thu, 13 Nov 2025 10:58:52 +0000 https://caneurope.org/?p=29129 13 November 2025, Brussels – The EU Parliament Plenary voted today on the proposal to amend the European Climate Law by introducing the EU 2040 climate target. The vote upheld the text previously agreed at ENVI Committee, despite many EPP MEPs breaking ranks by voting against the report and tabling amendments to weaken the target […]

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13 November 2025, Brussels – The EU Parliament Plenary voted today on the proposal to amend the European Climate Law by introducing the EU 2040 climate target. The vote upheld the text previously agreed at ENVI Committee, despite many EPP MEPs breaking ranks by voting against the report and tabling amendments to weaken the target and further delay the start of ETS2. Thanks to the rest of  the EPP honouring the agreement for a 90% net 2040 climate target, the far-right attempt to scrap the target was once again averted.

However, while the worst has been avoided with the adoption of a 90% net reduction target by 2040, the compromise with the EPP came at a cost. Renew, S&D and the Greens were forced to accept a heavily watered-down text, less ambitious than the Commission proposal and extremely close to the Council position agreed last week. The Parliament’s text mirrors the Council’s  flexibilities to achieve the net 90% target, including up to 5% use of international credits and review clauses that could still undermine the headline target. Nevertheless, compared to the Council position, the Parliament text makes a few improvements, notably by strengthening the quality criteria for international credits.

Sven Harmeling, Head of Climate at CAN Europe, said:

“Today’s vote marks an important milestone: the European Parliament has endorsed the amendment to the Climate Law setting a 2040 target of 90% net emission reductions, despite ideologically driven resistance from the far right and parts of the conservatives. Yet the compromises reached by Member States and within Parliament have further weakened the Commission’s original proposal, which was already insufficient. Still, with strong support for a rapid expansion of renewable energy and the phase-out of fossil fuels, and a socially just approach, there remains an opportunity to shape the necessary transformation quickly and successfully through broad consensus.”

The three institutions – Council, Parliament, and Commission – must now negotiate the final deal in trilogue.

 

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CAN Europe COP30 Media Briefing https://caneurope.org/can-europe-cop30-media-briefing/ Thu, 06 Nov 2025 15:45:45 +0000 https://caneurope.org/?p=29028 Brussels, 6 November 2025, As the world faces deepening geopolitical divides and growing mistrust in international cooperation, the climate crisis remains a shared threat that no nation can solve alone. COP30 in Belém will be a defining test for safeguarding multilateralism, global peace, and solidarity. Ten years after the adoption of the Paris Agreement, countries’ […]

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Brussels, 6 November 2025, As the world faces deepening geopolitical divides and growing mistrust in international cooperation, the climate crisis remains a shared threat that no nation can solve alone. COP30 in Belém will be a defining test for safeguarding multilateralism, global peace, and solidarity.

Ten years after the adoption of the Paris Agreement, countries’ climate commitments remain far from sufficient to keep the 1.5°C goal within reach. This year’s summit must therefore reaffirm the Paris Agreement as the cornerstone of peaceful, rules-based cooperation, a space where countries act in solidarity, not self-interest.

Heads of State and Government and leaders of international organisations have been invited to the COP30 leaders’ segment, at the ‘Belém Climate Summit (6-7 November). Earlier numbers reported by the Brazilian Presidency indicated lower participation than the previous COP, with Vice Premiers or ministers stepping in in some cases but still signalling waning global momentum.European leaders are likely to attend in greater numbers, but true commitment to climate multilateralism means more than showing up. The Brazilian Presidency is inviting leaders to endorse key initiatives on forests, fire management, sustainable fuels, and the link between climate and poverty. Yet Europe must go further by announcing scaled-up public finance, stronger energy and climate plans that close the 1.5°C gap, and concrete measures to boost adaptation and resilience.

“COP30 must deliver an ambitious and fair global package of outcomes that restores faith in international cooperation and shows that multilateralism can still deliver justice, stability, and security in an increasingly fractured world,” said Chiara Martinelli, Director at CAN Europe. “The EU’s political force at COP30 must be unwavering and tirelessly working to close the emissions, finance, justice and solidarity gaps – working with others to keep 1.5°C alive.”

COP30 is the first UN Climate Summit since the International Court of Justice (ICJ) affirmed that ambitious climate action is not a political choice but a legal duty. The advisory opinion clarifies that states must act in line with equity and common but differentiated responsibilities, phasing out fossil fuel production and subsidies to uphold the right to a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment. Outcomes in Belém must reflect this legal and moral imperative.


CAN Europe’s Key Demands for COP30

Just Transition 

At COP30, Parties must establish an International Mechanism for Just Transition to drive a fair, holistic shift across all sectors and countries. This mechanism should operationalise agreed UNFCCC principles, enabling transitions away from fossil fuels, transforming food and industrial systems, and guaranteeing affordable access to clean energy and sustainable livelihoods. The EU should be vocal in supporting efforts to agree on the principles, safeguards, and an international action plan ensuring transitions are rights-based, inclusive, grounded in equity, and anchored in the UNFCCC and Paris Agreement – backed by public finance, technology transfer, and fair global cooperation.

“COP30 must deliver a Just Transition that works for people and the planet,” said James Trinder, International Climate Policy Coordinator at CAN Europe. “The EU should champion the call for a new international mechanism that turns promises into coordinated action – ditching incrementalism and a few technologist’s vision of speculative fixes – and instead supporting countries to transform their societies away from fossil fuels, protect workers and nature, and unlock affordable clean energy for all. A real Just Transition means decent jobs, social protection, and fair access to finance and technology, so that no one is left behind in the shift to a 1.5°C world.”

 

Climate finance

To deliver a fair and ambitious outcome in Belém, the EU must put public finance at the heart of the negotiations. While recent Finance Minister discussions concluded with the need for new resources, the continued overreliance on private finance for countries in the Global South risks repeating past failures. Private capital has simply not delivered at the scale or speed required. 

The EU must now advocate at COP30 for scaling up new and additional public climate finance to meet its fair share of the USD 300 billion target under the New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) by 2035. Adaptation and loss-and-damage finance must increase sharply and be delivered mainly as grants, not loans. Equitable fossil fuel, aviation, and wealth taxes could provide the new revenue streams at the scale needed.

The EU must also ensure ambition in phasing out fossil fuel finance and shifting finance flows globally in line with climate resilient development, by committing to lead with other wealthy countries domestically and looking at debt, tax, and trade systems to free fiscal space for investment and break the cycle of dependence on climate-harming industries in Global South countries. 

“In Belém, the EU needs to step up its game by backing a goal to at least triple adaptation finance, committing along with other wealthy countries to phase out fossil fuel finance, and supporting international reforms that make finance fair, predictable and aligned with climate justice”, said Rachel Simon, Senior Policy Coordinator at CAN Europe.

Read CAN Europe’s detailed demands for COP30: www.caneurope.org/cop30 –  which include recommendations on safeguarding civic spaces, championing gender, transforming the global energy system as well as specific demands for the Western Balkans.

 –

CAN Europe COP30 Delegation

From the CAN Europe Network, there will be 70+ delegates from 20+ European countries present in Belém for COP30. The CAN Europe secretariat delegation in Baku consists of:

  • Chiara Martinelli –  Director
  • Sven Harmeling – Head of Climate
  • James Trinder – International Climate Policy Coordinator
  • Frosina Antonovska – Climate and Energy Policy and Network Coordinator for the Western Balkans
  • Tomas Spragg Nilsson – Senior Communications Coordinator
  • Jani Savolainen – Communications Coordinator
  • Samuel Martin-Sosa – Head of Network 
  • Pablo Chamorro – Campaigns and Mobilisation Network Coordinator

Throughout COP30, the CAN Europe network has a rich array of spokespersons, both on the ground, and following remotely. These spokespersons are available to respond to media requests on a range of topics, in a variety of languages.

 

Side events

Outside of the formal negotiations, CAN Europe and its member organisations have organised and will participate in a number of side events during COP30.

The full details of these 50+ side events taking place during COP30 can be found here

 

Mobilisation

Grassroots movements, civil society organisations and climate activists are organising actions in Belem, both inside and outside the official UN zone, putting pressure on the negotiations.

“This is the first COP in four years where actions outside the official venue are welcomed. After multiple years in a row where the civil society and activists were silenced and sidelined, we will take full advantage of using the opportunities to call for an ambitious outcome in Belem”, said Samuel Martin-Sosa, Head of Network at CAN Europe. COP30 needs to be the space to embrace diverse voices, including the Indigenous Peoples native to the region.”

The Global Day of Action on 15 November mobilises environmental, climate and social movements, both in Belem and around the world, coinciding with the mid-point of COP30. As part of the People’s Summit, thousands are expected to take to the streets of Belém, demanding climate justice and system change. In Europe, actions on 15 November are planned in Spain, Italy, Denmark, Portugal, Switzerland and more.

ENDS

Notes to the Editor:

 

For more information and media requests:
Tomas Spragg Nilsson, Senior Communications Officer, CAN Europe
tomas.spraggnilsson@caneurope.org // +46 707 65 63 92

Jani Savolainen, Senior Communications Coordinator, CAN Europe
jani.savolainen@caneurope.org // +358 504 66 78 31

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2040 Climate Target Agreed: a deal, but not a breakthrough https://caneurope.org/2040-climate-target-agreed-a-deal-but-not-a-breakthrough/ Wed, 05 Nov 2025 08:21:33 +0000 https://caneurope.org/?p=28974 Brussels, 5 November – Today European environment ministers finalised the long-awaited decision on the EU’s 2040 emission-reduction target and the 2035 climate plan under the Paris Agreement, just days before COP30 in Belém. The agreement concludes more than 20 months of debate since the European Commission first proposed a 90 per cent net domestic reduction […]

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Brussels, 5 November – Today European environment ministers finalised the long-awaited decision on the EU’s 2040 emission-reduction target and the 2035 climate plan under the Paris Agreement, just days before COP30 in Belém. The agreement concludes more than 20 months of debate since the European Commission first proposed a 90 per cent net domestic reduction target in February 2024. CAN Europe expects the EU to swiftly submit its new Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) to the UNFCCC Secretariat.

While reaching an agreement before COP30 has been critical, today’s decision is certainly a disappointing outcome. After nearly two years of negotiations, ministers have agreed on a deal that weakens the core of Europe’s climate ambition. Although the 90 per cent headline figure remains, only 85% will be domestic, with up to 5 per cent of reductions occurring abroad through questionable credits.This would divert resources away from domestic decarbonisation and undermine the integrity of the EU’s transition. The agreement also indicates the further weakening of existing climate legislation.

Sven Harmeling, Head of Climate at CAN Europe, said:
“This long-awaited deal is far weaker than the 90 per cent headline suggests. By bowing to pressure of obstructing Member States, ministers have dangerously opened the door to up to 5 per cent of foreign carbon credits. This level of ambition fails to live up to the EU’s responsibility and ability to seriously confront the climate crisis.”


ENDS

 

Notes to the editors:

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Methane Regulation: A test of climate credibility and political will https://caneurope.org/methane-regulation-a-test-of-climate-credibility-and-political-will/ Fri, 07 Nov 2025 12:26:04 +0000 https://caneurope.org/?p=29061 On 30 October 2025, policymakers, academics, national methane experts and civil society representatives met in Brussels to discuss the implementation of the EU Methane Regulation (EUMR). The Roundtable came at a critical time where Member States are working hard to translate the EUMR’s provisions into enforceable national measures, overshadowed by growing deregulation attempts. However, some […]

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On 30 October 2025, policymakers, academics, national methane experts and civil society representatives met in Brussels to discuss the implementation of the EU Methane Regulation (EUMR). The Roundtable came at a critical time where Member States are working hard to translate the EUMR’s provisions into enforceable national measures, overshadowed by growing deregulation attempts.

However, some EU governments are delaying implementation, questioning the law’s scope, cost and feasibility, while lobbying from across the Atlantic is intensifying. With increased transatlantic gas flows since the 2022 energy price crisis and the recent EU–US trade deal aiming to triple LNG exports to Europe, EU and US industry groups, official representatives of the Trump administration are seeking to weaken numerous EU climate, environmental and social laws, including the EUMR. If properly enforced, the EUMR will regulate methane intensity and toxicity of US – and other regions’ – fossil gas supply chains and exports to the EU

The Methane Roundtable event underscored one reality: the implementation of the EUMR is a work in progress, which, if done correctly, will have a great impact on reducing climate wrecking methane emissions.

 

Why methane action matters

Methane is the second most potent greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide. It stays in the atmosphere for about a decade, so cutting it now – particularly the methane emissions from the energy sector –  offers the fastest and most effective way to slow climate change in the short term. This is why the EUMR is a key instrument for staying within the 1.5°C limit, and comes at a particular time as we are celebrating the tenth anniversary of the Paris Agreement. However it is not the only tool, but rather one important piece of the puzzle contributing to an urgently needed EU wide fossil gas phase out by 2035.   

Global energy-related methane emissions continue to rise, as better data now reveal emissions that have long been underreported and underestimated by the fossil fuel industry. This is precisely where the EUMR intervenes, setting binding rules for detecting, reporting, and reducing emissions, banning routine venting and flaring, and repairing leaks from fossil fuel operations, for EU based operators as well as for importers placing coal, oil and gas on the EU market. Given that the EU is one of the world’s largest importers of fossil gas and has significantly increased its methane-intensive LNG imports since 2022, the import framework of the EUMR would ensure upstream emissions are addressed and reduced, placing the EU as a key international player in methane mitigation.

But this would also prevent Europe from outsourcing the cost of methane pollution, as communities near fossil fuel extraction and export sites pay the price of unregulated emissions with their health and lives, made evident by John Beard from Port Arthur Community Action Network testimony at the event (see here). Through greater transparency in the supply chains and verifiable data, the EUMR helps address these harms and indirectly strengthens the EU’s broader effort to phase out fossil fuels and move toward a cleaner energy system. But turning this ambition into measurable results depends on how well Member States and industries put the law into practice. And right now, two major implementation bottlenecks are threatening that progress.

 

The sanction gap: rules need to have teeth

Discussions at the Roundtable highlighted that a strong Methane Regulation would enhance resilience, transparency, and gas savings while reducing dependence on volatile fossil fuel markets. But without clearly defined sanctions for non compliance with the EU methane rules, the EUMR would be just a toothless piece of paper. 

A first draft of a comparative analysis produced by the Ecologic Institute was presented during the discussions, looking at four different penalty regimes that some Member States are currently working on. The analysis warned of a growing “patchwork” of national approaches risk leading to “enforcement shopping”. Indeed, while some front runner Member States are setting ambitious fines adequate to the proportionality, effectiveness and dissuasiveness requirements of EU law, others are introducing big loopholes such as security of supply exemption clauses, risking rendering their whole penalty system ineffective.

Experts discussed how to avoid creating an un-even level playing field at EU level, focusing on how to make sanctions truly dissuasive, in the meaning of significantly depriving those responsible for infringements of any economic benefits gained from the non-compliance, while avoiding translating this cost of non-compliance into tariffs bared by end consumers. 

Some stakeholders argued for a harmonized default value to define the fines across the EU, while others favored linking sanctions to the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS), aligning the cost of methane with that of carbon. The viability and effectiveness of the latter approach however was questioned. Ultimately, the chosen solution needs to satisfy the objective of making methane financially visible and oil and gas operators accountable for their emissions. 

 

Tracing Methane back to the source

The second major challenge lies in the import framework. From 2027 onwards, fossil fuel importers will need to demonstrate the MRV equivalence of their supplier, meaning tracing methane emissions back to specific production sites, to get the access to the correct site-level reported data and emissions measurements. These rules are based on the global voluntary reporting standard set by the Oil and Gas Methane Partnership 2.0 (OGMP 2.0), and more specifically the Level 5 reporting framework: importers will need to demonstrate high-quality, site-level measurements complemented and verified with satellite data observations.  

This is where things become complicated: while the EUMR requires additional third party independent verification to greenlight an MRV equivalence, the up- and mid-stream supply chains can be extremely complex for importers to trace back methane emissions to site-level measurements. Here the reliance on satellite observations only reaches its limits and needs to be complemented by site-level verifications. The quality of current gas certification systems needs to be further improved and most importantly, at the end of the process an independent verification authority needs to be involved. 

To address the issue of tracing leaks, the Methane Roundtable addressed different approaches. The Trace and Claim mechanism presented by the Clean Air Task Force (CATF) ensures robust, site-level tracking of methane emissions, providing a clear chain of accountability based on the gas purchases and contracts that can be followed across complex supply chains. By contrast, the Book and Claim system allows for greater flexibility but risks producing fragmented and less reliable data, not including all asset level reported methane measurements. Some participants advocated for a more pragmatic approach, suggesting that importers could report emissions on an annual basis rather than through strict day-by-day site tracking. While such flexibility might ease administrative burdens, participants cautioned that it could weaken data credibility and the industry’s accountability. Satellite-based monitoring, while powerful, still faces limitations at site level, and the current shortage of independent third-party verifiers further complicates the picture. 

Getting this right is however essential to maintaining the credibility of the EU’s methane data, and to ensuring that foreign suppliers meet the same standards as European operators.

 

Cutting methane for the energy transition

The debate around penalties and data verification highlights a broader truth: the success of the EUMR depends on real political will to work on measures effectively reducing the EU’s gas demand. Under the Fit for 55 package, gas demand is expected to fall by around 30% by 2030 compared to 2019 levels. The REPowerEU plan and the 2040 Climate Law set out policies to further reduce gas demand significantly with only residual volumes left in 2040 in line with current trends showing that gas in the power sector is progressively being replaced by renewables mainly wind and solar energy. This already ongoing transition goes hand in hand with the objective of curbing methane emissions quickly and permanently. 

The message from the High Level Roundtable on Methane was clear: technical bottlenecks might still exist, but so do the tools, knowledge and technology to cut methane emissions and they continue to improve while the EUMR is being  implemented. 

With COP 30 just days away and four years after the EU co-launched the Global Methane Pledge at COP 26, the EU must show the way by implementing strong methane rules and maintain its position as a global leader in climate action.

 
Read more:

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State of the Energy Union 2025: Are the EU’s 2030 Energy and Climate targets still within reach? https://caneurope.org/eus-2030-energy-and-climate-targets-still-within-reach/ Mon, 27 Oct 2025 23:20:55 +0000 https://caneurope.org/?p=28918 In the State of the Energy Union, the Commission must address Member States’ ambition and implementation gaps towards 2030 targets This week, the European Commission is expected to communicate on the State of the Energy Union. This exercise takes place every year, but 2025 is a significant milestone for achieving the 2030 climate and energy […]

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In the State of the Energy Union, the Commission must address Member States’ ambition and implementation gaps towards 2030 targets

This week, the European Commission is expected to communicate on the State of the Energy Union. This exercise takes place every year, but 2025 is a significant milestone for achieving the 2030 climate and energy targets. As the European Commission takes stock of Member States’ progress towards these targets,  it is expected to adopt measures to correct the course.

The opportunity to correct any ambition gap

In 2023-2024, EU Member States were required to update their National Energy and Climate Plans. These plans have a 10-year outlook and aim at presenting the policies and measures that will be adopted to achieve national climate and energy targets. In May 2025, the European Commission assessed the plans submitted to date (24 out of 27) and claimed that “their full implementation would bring the EU close to reaching its objectives”, namely achieving a 54% emissions reduction by 2030 (one percentage point short of the 55% emissions reduction target). 

However, civil society organisations and think tanks have identified significant flaws in those plans. An NGO analysis published in June 2025 of 16 final revised NECPs cast serious doubts on their ability to deliver on the Member States’ respective climate and energy objectives, due to the lack of policies and measures (and related financing) to back them up. For instance, only half of the assessed NECPs include policy scenarios aligned with the required emission reductions in key sectors such as agriculture, transport, buildings, and waste. In the area of energy efficiency, most plans do not include enough policies and measures to meet the minimum contributions outlined in the Energy Efficiency Directive.

Independent stakeholders such as the European Climate Neutrality Observatory (ECNO) also highlighted important gaps. In its analysis of 22 final NECPs, ECNO highlighted that gaps are visible among others in Member States’ contributions to the EU’s renewables and energy efficiency targets, as well as projected policy impacts for emissions under the Effort Sharing Regulation, natural sinks, renewables, and energy consumption. In particular: 

  • In the Effort Sharing sectors, both the European Commission and ECNO identify risks of missing the EU’s 2030 ESR target by nearly 2% points. 
  • In the LULUCF sector, the European Commission identified a gap of about 45-60 Mt MtCO2eq compared to the 2030 target under the LULUCF Regulation. ECNO found that the EU risks missing its 2030 LULUCF target by around 13%. 
  • In the area of renewable energy, the Commission identified an ambition gap of 1.5% in national contributions to achieve the EU’s 2030 binding target for renewable energy share of at least 42.5% with an additional aspirational top-up of 2.5 percentage points to reach 45%.
  • In the area of energy efficiency, many Member States plan insufficient national contributions to the 11.7% EU energy efficiency target according to the Commission, resulting again in an ambition gap of 8.1% for final and 7.5% for primary energy consumption. 

 

These findings led NGOs from 8 countries to call on the European Commission to launch legal action against their governments, arguing that the shortcomings in their climate plans are not merely policy failures, but breaches of EU law. In addition to initiating infringement proceedings, the European Commission has other tools to address the aforementioned ambition gaps. Article 31(3) of the Governance Regulation requires the European Commission to act if the objectives, targets, and contributions of the NECPs or their updates are insufficient for the collective achievement of the EU’s climate and energy targets. These legal measures at the EU level should be complemented by recommendations to Member States to close the gaps (Articles 31 and 34 of the Governance Regulation). Such recommendations are mandatory only in case of gaps for renewable energy targets, but we expect the Commission to adopt country-specific recommendations in all sectors. 

The Commission announced in May 2025 that it was “launching a set of operational actions to explore alternatives for closing the ambition gap”. We now expect it to take the next step and adopt both legal measures and country-specific recommendations, as well as any other operational actions that may be required, to close the abovementioned gaps.

A strong response needed to address the probable implementation gap

Alongside the ambition gap, the State of the Energy Union 2025 also provides the European Commission with an opportunity to act to close any possible gap in the progress to achieve the climate and energy targets. All 27 EU Member States are required to report every two years on how they progress towards reaching their targets via their NECPs Progress Reports. The latest progress reports were submitted to the European Commission in March 2025. Therefore, this year’s State of the Energy Union will take stock of them and assess progress towards achieving the EU 2030 climate and energy targets. 

While we wait for the Commission’s assessment of the latest NECPs Progress Reports, the trend from the last few years shows some worrying signs. CAN Europe’s latest update of its NECP tracker in October 2024 showed that even the implementation of the old and less ambitious 2019 NECPs was lagging behind. All of the 17 EU Member States featured in the tracker were lagging behind in at least one of the NECP tracker indicators.  

Should these trends be confirmed as part of the 2025 State of the Energy Union, we expect the European Commission to fill any implementation gaps. Article 32 of the Governance Regulation provides that, if the Commission finds that a Member State is not making sufficient progress to meet its targets, objectives, and contributions, it ‘shall’ issue recommendations to the Member States concerned. Moreover, the Commission ‘may’ further issue recommendations to all Member States if the aggregate assessment of all NECP progress reports shows that the EU is at risk of not meeting its climate and energy targets. In addition to recommendations, the Commission ‘shall as appropriate’ propose measures at the EU level to ensure the achievement of the EU 2030 targets in the area of renewable energy and energy efficiency. We therefore expect the European Commission to adopt strong recommendations and additional measures at the EU level to correct any implementation gap – including infringement procedures in case of delayed or incomplete transposition of the Renewable Energy Directive or the Energy Efficiency Directive into national law.

In parallel, the ESR and LULUCF Regulations also offer additional tools to the European Commission. If the Commission finds that a Member State is not making sufficient progress in these sectors, that Member States must submit to the Commission within three months a corrective action plan that includes, among others: 1) a detailed explanation of why it is not making sufficient progress, 2) additional actions complementing the NECP or reinforcing its implementation, 3) a strict timetable for implementing them. We therefore also expect the European Commission to require Member States to adopt such corrective action plans where necessary. 

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