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The EU objectors to the proposed deal prolong the COP30 discussions

The EU objectors to the proposed deal prolong the COP30 discussions
The EU objectors to the proposed deal prolong the COP30 discussions

Brazil's COP30 summit was forced to face a crucial day on Saturday after all-night discussions to break an impasse. The European Union had blocked a deal that it felt would not advance efforts to curb greenhouse gases, which are driving global climate changes. The two-week climate conference, billed as an opportunity to demonstrate that nations could still unite to combat climate change in the absence of the United States, was supposed to end on Friday. However the standoff forced the negotiators to work overtime.

The Brazilian presidency tried to reach a compromise over a deal which most of the 200 countries attending the summit would accept but the EU deemed unbalanced.

A deal must be approved by a majority.

It was unlikely that any agreement would be reached to provide more details on the way and when nations will fulfill their commitments to move away from fossil fuels. The Arab Group countries had led the opposition.

The only option left was to agree on a voluntary “Global Implementation Accelerator” in which countries can discuss how they could advance their efforts to reduce emissions.

On Saturday, a draft of a part of the final agreement, as seen by, called for the global effort to triple the funding available to assist developing nations in adapting to climate change by the year 2035.

The EU said it would "move past its comfort zone" in terms of finance for developing countries - but that only if the clauses on actions to reduce planet-warming emission were strengthened.

Sources said the COP30 presidency was preparing a text addressing fossil-fuels. However, it was unclear if Brazil was going to issue the declaration or if it had been endorsed by other countries.

The deal was not expected as part of a larger consensus after Brazil's earlier attempts to get all the countries to agree on a text regarding fossil fuels failed. Reporting by William James; Editing and editing by Kevin Liffey and Katy Daigle.

(source: Reuters)