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Gap between rhetoric and reality: Global climate talks stall again as emissions rise

By N.S. Venkataraman*  
Yet another global climate summit has concluded without any meaningful breakthrough. Like the 29 earlier Conferences of the Parties (COPs) held across the world, COP30 in Belém, Brazil, began with expectations of decisive action on the climate crisis but ended with only familiar declarations and no significant progress.
The limitations of COP processes have become evident over the years. Countries come to the table with different economic conditions, developmental priorities, and political compulsions. While all acknowledge the seriousness of the climate challenge, the sharp divergence in approaches becomes clear during negotiations. As in previous COPs, the final outcome was a compromise that fell short of the scientific and practical requirements of a rapidly warming planet.
The alarming nature of the crisis cannot be overstated. Global temperatures continue to rise steadily, and the 2023–2025 period is now projected to be the first three-year span when average global heating exceeds 1.5°C. Extreme weather fluctuations, floods, droughts, rising sea levels, and polar ice melt have already become regular occurrences. Both the Arctic and Antarctic are losing ice mass due to warming air and ocean temperatures, contributing directly to sea-level rise and destabilising climate systems worldwide.
There is global consensus that the continued rise in temperature is driven by unchecked emissions of carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide and other greenhouse gases from fossil fuel use. In principle, the solution is clear: the world must drastically reduce, and eventually eliminate, dependence on fossil fuels. In practice, however, major emitters continue to expand their fossil fuel infrastructure even while speaking of climate ambition.
Despite high-profile pledges made at earlier summits in Paris and Glasgow, progress has been underwhelming. China’s target of becoming emissions-free by 2050 and India’s by 2070 now appear distant, as the scale of action required is far greater than what is currently being undertaken. Coal consumption continues to rise, with countries such as China, India, Indonesia, Australia, and South Africa opening new mines. Global coal production reached a record 9.15 billion tonnes in 2024 and is expected to grow further.
Crude oil production is also increasing. Major producers including Russia, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, Nigeria and the United States continue to ramp up output, and global crude oil supply is projected to rise further in 2025. Methane emissions—driven largely by agriculture, landfills, and fossil fuel extraction—also continue to increase, even though rapid methane reduction is one of the most effective short-term strategies for slowing warming. The world is nowhere near the goal of reducing methane emissions by 30% by 2030.
With fossil fuel production continuing unabated and consumption increasing in many regions, much of the discussion at COP tends to take place in a vacuum. Ambitious declarations cannot compensate for the reality that neither producers nor consumers of fossil fuels are reducing their dependence in any meaningful way.
Efforts to scale up alternative energy sources are underway, but they too face practical limitations. Renewable sources such as solar and wind are expanding, yet seasonal variations and intermittency issues mean they cannot currently replace fossil fuels entirely. Hydrogen is often presented as a long-term solution, but the technology remains expensive and logistically complex. It is still unclear when, or whether, hydrogen can be produced and transported at a scale and cost that makes it a viable substitute for fossil fuels.
Another issue rarely acknowledged in climate negotiations is the environmental impact of war. Conflicts involving missile strikes, fuel combustion, and widespread destruction generate substantial emissions, yet this remains a largely neglected topic in COP deliberations. The irony is striking: nations involved in climate negotiations are often simultaneously engaged in conflicts that contribute to the very crisis they are attempting to solve.
The discussions at COP30 reflected the same entrenched disagreements that have characterised many of its predecessors. Developing countries argue that they cannot commit to strict timelines for phasing out fossil fuels without guaranteed financial and technological support. Developed nations insist that such commitments are essential to keep warming within 1.5°C. There is also persistent disagreement over how much climate finance wealthier nations should provide to assist poorer ones in adapting to climate impacts and transitioning to cleaner energy systems.
Given these unresolved contradictions, it is unsurprising that COP30 concluded without any clear collective roadmap. Each country appears set to pursue its own development trajectory based on national economic considerations rather than global environmental imperatives. With this fragmented approach, the gap between climate pledges and climate action is widening.
The result is yet another global climate summit that has done little to alter the course of the crisis. COP30 ended, like many before it, as a lacklustre exercise—high on rhetoric, low on actionable outcomes, and far from the decisive intervention the planet urgently needs.
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*Trustee, Nandini Voice For The Deprived, Chennai 

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