A renewed call for action
Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva opened the CO30 Leaders Climate Action Summit with conviction: “We can’t wait for others to act — we must lead.”
His words captured the spirit of Belém urgency, courage, and a refusal to accept delay. Lula’s call set the tone for a summit defined by action over rhetoric.
Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro followed with a blunt demand for “zero oil, zero gas” a line that landed like a challenge to the world’s addiction to fossil fuels. His message was echoed by Chile’s President Gabriel Boric, who urged countries to “end the hypocrisy of climate promises made while expanding fossil fuel projects.” It was a reminder that credibility in climate politics comes not from speeches, but from shutting down pipelines.
Representing the U.K., Prince William spoke on behalf of the government, urging leaders to act with urgent optimism — to believe that solutions are still within reach if we act together and without delay. It echoed his message from last year, and a reminder that even in dark times, courage and collective action can still change the story.
1.5°C is not dead
Signed in 2015, the Paris Agreement is the world’s landmark accord to limit global warming to 1.5°C, a threshold scientists say is critical to avoid the worst impacts of the climate crisis.
Just days before the summit, the UN released its latest Emissions Gap Report, warning that current national pledges still put the world on track for well above 1.5°C of heating. The timing made Belém a test of political will over a diplomatic stop.
In one of his sharpest speeches yet, UN Secretary-General António Guterres offered hope insisting that the 1.5°C target remains alive, while calling out governments still pouring $1 trillion every year into fossil fuel subsidies on holding back change:
“The United Nations will not give up on the 1.5-degree goal. Too many corporations are making record profits from climate devastation with billions spent on lobbying, deceiving the public and obstructing progress.”
“Last year, 90 per cent of new power capacity came from renewables,” he also said noting that a clean energy revolution is underway. “Clean energy is now the cheapest source of new electricity almost everywhere – and creates three times more jobs than fossil fuels.” A fact long backed by research.
Calling out bad-faith actors
The Summit became a stage for frank criticism of climate denial and obstruction, a welcome shift toward honest and accountability.
Colombia’s President Petro didn’t mince words when speaking about U.S. President Donald Trump’s climate denial: “Mr. Trump is against humanity. His absence here demonstrates that.”
Chile’s President Boric too joined in that frustration: “The president of the United States recently said the climate crisis does not exist. That is a lie. Denying climate science is an insult to the generations that will follow.”
And President Lula went further, without naming Trump directly, warning of “extremist forces that fabricate fake news and condemn future generations to life on a planet altered forever.”
It’s just as well then that the U.S. President skipped the summit. Notably absent too were India, Russia, and China, though China’s vice premier attended in the premier’s stead. The absences said as much as the speeches — a sign of who’s choosing delay over duty.
Still, leadership found another form. Dozens of U.S. subnational leaders stepped up to showcase local climate action. More than 100 state and local officials will travel to COP30 and together, they represent two-thirds of Americans, three-quarters of U.S. GDP, and over half of national emissions — proof that momentum is shifting from federal paralysis to local possibility.
Multilateralism finds new ground
The summit also gave space for a more open, balanced dialogue — one where smaller nations could speak freely, without being overshadowed.
As Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley put it:
“The world has never been changed by spectators. It’s time for a coalition of the willing.”
That coalition spanning island nations, forest protectors, and serious leaders is what now gives multilateralism its pulse. If countries are going to show up to climate talks, let them show up ready to act, not just to slow progress down.
It’s clear that ambition now comes from those who see the crisis not as a headline, but as a lived reality.
If there’s one message from Belém, it’s that multilateralism endures, not in speeches from the biggest economies, but in a new center of climate leadership driven by the Global South, by cooperation over competition, and by a shared belief in climate justice.
As COP30 begins, that’s the note to carry forward: real progress depends not on who has the loudest voice, but on who’s still willing to listen — and act.
