Business backs away from UN climate talks on edge of the Amazon - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
气候变化

Business backs away from UN climate talks on edge of the Amazon

Officials resort to ‘love hotel’ bookings for COP30 accommodation

A host of businesses and consultants are backing away from the UN climate summit at the city of Belém, known as the gateway to the Amazon, deterred by a difficult political backdrop, up to $2,000-a-night for hotel rooms and lengthy travel.

Financial institutions, consultancies and advisers to businesses, which attended the climate talks in previous years, told the Financial Times they instead planned to send a smaller contingent to São Paulo or Rio de Janeiro where adjacent finance and climate conferences are being held.

This includes the UN PRI summit, an international responsible investment event, at the business hub of São Paulo, and a global forum for mayors, governors and regional leaders being held in Rio in early November, the week before the COP begins. 

Unlike previous years, the so-called leaders’ summit involving heads of state, which usually marks the start of the world’s most important climate talks, is now also scheduled to take place in the days beforehand.

Despite criticism about the thousands of business attendees. which swelled COP numbers to beyond 65,000 at its peak in Dubai, the withdrawal of the private sector goes against efforts by public bodies to encourage business to play a bigger role in climate action. 

“Businesses are saying it is going to be too expensive and hard to find accommodation. They are focusing on events in Rio and São Paulo instead,” said one person advising the COP30 team.

COP30 president-designate André Aranha Corrêa do Lago told the FT recently that private hotel prices were “absolutely absurd”. “We thought the hotels were going to be reasonable, and they are not being reasonable,” he said, adding his team was “trying every legal means to lower the prices.”

The choice of the port city in northern Brazil by President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva was on the grounds that it would directly expose delegates to an important area at risk of climate change.

Brochure for cruise ship moored in Belém listing cabin suites from $3,300 a night for 17 days during COP30

Both rich and developing countries, including small islands and African nations, have been vocal in their concerns over the logistics, which have overshadowed UN preparations. This week, the UN climate change arm held an embassies meeting where the accommodation issues were discussed.

European officials registered to attend have said they were uncertain about where they would be accommodated and might reduce their negotiating teams as a result. Other officials said they had to book rooms in “love hotels” with cheaper hourly tariffs, or hotels that were not yet built.

The COP30 hosts have resorted to converting classrooms and bringing in river cruise ships in an attempt to provide beds for the 50,000 delegates expected.

The cruise ship accommodation will initially be made available to small developing nations and island states, with a rate capped at up to $220 a night. Other countries will also be able to access rooms costing up to $600 a night. Valter Correia, the special secretary for COP30, said the priority was for all country negotiators to be accommodated.

Belém would also have difficulty presently in hosting many presidential or private jets at one time, but the COP30 team said the airport was “undergoing expansion, with investments to increase operational capacity”. 

It added that the flight network would be expanded during November, with direct flights available from major hubs, such as Lisbon and Miami.

The COP30 team maintained it planned to host the leaders’ summit in Belém, which is a 3.5 hour flight from São Paulo and 2.5 hours from the capital of Brasília, in spite of speculation that it could be moved to a more accessible location.

The summit organisers added: “For COP30 to be a milestone in implementation, the participation of the private sector and other actors — such as banks, local governments, and civil society — is essential.”

Climate Capital

Where climate change meets business, markets and politics. Explore the FT’s coverage here.

Are you curious about the FT’s environmental sustainability commitments? Find out more about our science-based targets here

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

数据公司:古巴石油储备仅能再撑“15到20天”

由于美国封锁了委内瑞拉的石油交付,并向另一供应国墨西哥施压,运往哈瓦那的原油已枯竭。

制裁见效,俄罗斯石油收入大幅下滑

俄罗斯的能源收入在2025年比上一年下降了五分之一。

Lex专栏:Meta的快速增长说明什么

按市值计算,美国六大科技巨头占标普500指数的比重已超40%。

飞机租赁业高管:到2050年实现零碳飞行是“空中画饼”

AerCap公司的高管凯利表示,没有人愿意为可持续航空燃料支付更高成本。

印度最大IT服务公司负责人:AI不会导致大规模裁员

人工智能技术的采用正帮助外包企业抵消欧美销售放缓的影响。

“节约型家庭”成为日本关键选民

通胀回潮、利率上升冲击的经济环境让食品成本成为头号政治关切,日本政治正在适应该国中间阶层分化的现实。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×