NewsCOP bureau meeting ends in stalemate as Brazil insists Belém logistics can...

COP bureau meeting ends in stalemate as Brazil insists Belém logistics can work

Countries remain at loggerheads with the Brazilian government team organising COP30 logistics in the Amazon city of Belém, after concerns that some delegations, especially from poorer countries, will not be able to afford to attend the annual UN climate talks in the numbers they view as necessary.

A meeting of the COP bureau – which has 11 members from different countries and advises on COP organisation – took place on Friday after being postponed twice. It followed an emergency session of the committee at the end of July, where African and Pacific delegations raised concerns to the COP30 presidency about the cost and conditions of accommodation in the city on the edge of the rainforest.

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Aiming to get the pulse of the logistics woes, the UN climate change secretariat at the start of August circulated a survey to all countries. Nearly three-quarters responded and the overwhelming majority indicated they had not yet booked their accommodation because of exorbitant costs and minimum booking periods imposed on the official COP30 platform, according to the survey data seen by Climate Home News.

129 delegations said they had not yet booked accommodation, most of them developing countries, the survey showed. In the case of Least Developed Countries (LDCs), 90% of respondents said they had not yet booked rooms. 94% of respondents from small island states also said they had not booked.

When asked about the main reason for not securing accommodation so far, 87% of respondent delegations said it was due to “prices significantly higher” than their available resources. 57% also said it was because of the minimum booking periods required by the official platform.

UN climate chief Simon Stiell then laid out a series of recommendations to the Brazilian presidency, including offering better financial incentives to bring down the cost of lodgings, especially for the world’s poorest nations, Climate Home has learned.

In response to the COP bureau’s initial questions, the presidency issued a Q&A document in mid-August in which it made clear that the summit will take place in the Amazon city of Belém as planned, despite growing calls to move it to a bigger city in Brazil. It also outlined the arrangements it was putting in place to ease worries about the number of affordable beds, transport and security for COP delegates.

Its core position has not changed since, though it has made adjustments to some criteria such as shortening the minimum booking period.

Taskforce set up to help LDCs and SIDs

This Friday after the meeting, the COP30 presidency issued a statement saying that Brazil’s federal government, in coordination with the state government of Pará, had reaffirmed that “all the logistical, infrastructure and security conditions are ensured for the realisation of the COP30”.

It added that Belém has the capacity to accommodate delegates for COP30, with a total offer of 53,000 beds, a number higher than the estimated 50,000 participants in the event.

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