…Global South rejects debt-funded climate aid
Onome Amuge
The first week of COP30 closed on Saturday with an uneasy calm in Belém as slow moving negotiations exposed a volatile undercurrent at this year’s UN climate summit, revealing a widening rift over who will pay for the global shift away from fossil fuels and who will ultimately benefit from it.
While diplomats welcomed the appearance of a new draft text that, for the first time, formally elevates “just transition” to a central pillar of the talks, the language has done little to resolve a deeper dispute over the economic consequences of the energy transition for poorer countries. For many developing nations, especially in Africa and parts of Latin America, the draft recognition represents symbolic progress but symbolism alone will not protect them from the economic shocks they fear could accompany decarbonisation.
The tension has been simmering since the opening day of the summit. COP30 President Andrea do Lago, seeking to prevent the early procedural clashes that derailed previous climate meetings, urged countries to defer contentious debates on climate finance, carbon border measures and data transparency. The move bought the presidency some time, but it did not mask the fundamental disagreements that quickly re-emerged once real negotiations began.
A brief security scare on Tuesday, when indigenous demonstrators attempted to breach the venue gates. The protesters called for stronger protections for land, culture and livelihoods, reflecting a frustration that communities most exposed to climate change remain relevant to the decisions shaping global climate governance.
By midweek, as ministers and senior negotiators arrived for the high-level segment, the mood shifted from restrained optimism to measured anxiety. The unveiling of the so-called Belém Action Mechanism (BAM), which embeds ‘just transition’ principles into the negotiating text, was welcomed as a notable breakthrough. But almost immediately, developing countries raised concerns about how the mechanism will be financed, governed and enforced.
Delegates from Africa, in particular, fear a future in which their mineral-rich economies become increasingly locked into low-value segments of the emerging clean-energy supply chain. Demand for lithium, cobalt, nickel and rare earths, which are essential to electric vehicles, solar panels and battery storage, is soaring. Yet African negotiators warn that without safeguards, the transition risks replicating the exploitative resource patterns of the past century, when raw materials were extracted from the continent while manufacturing, profits and technological advancement accrued elsewhere.
Kudakwashe Manjonjo, energy adviser at PowerShift Africa, called BAM’s inclusion “a milestone”, but warned that transition governance must reflect the lived realities of those whose economies will bear the highest adjustment cost.
“The minerals needed for the transition lie overwhelmingly in the Global South. If value chains are not structured equitably, this transition will not be just, it will be another cycle of extraction without development,”he told reporters.
African representatives insist that any just transition mechanism must include protections for small businesses, cooperatives and informal workers who underpin rural adaptation efforts. They are also pushing for binding provisions to prevent “green protectionism”, a reference to new trade measures, including the EU’s carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM), that impose emissions-based tariffs on imports.
A battle over metrics threatens to slow the summit
The negotiations over the global goal on adaptation (GGA) have emerged as week one’s most divisive issue. Delegates are attempting to narrow a sprawling list of adaptation indicators to a more manageable set, but at least 16 key metrics remain unacceptable to developing nations.
The dispute centers on whether adaptation progress should be assessed with standardised, quantifiable metrics preferred by wealthier countries or with flexible frameworks that consider national capacity and financing gaps.
Richard Muyungi, chair of the African Group of Negotiators, accused developed nations of promoting indicators that expect developing countries to do more with less.
“Some indicators shift responsibility onto nations that lack the financial and technological means to deliver. They must come with real support. Without that, the framework becomes punitive rather than enabling,” he said.
African negotiators are calling for a two-year policy alignment period to allow countries to evaluate the metrics and their domestic implications. Developed countries want immediate adoption, warning that delays risk slowing the global adaptation agenda at a time when climate impacts, from flooding to extreme heat, are intensifying.
Amy Gilliam-Thorpe of PowerShift Africa warned that several proposed indicators infringe on national sovereignty, noting that metrics tied to private-sector mobilisation or budgetary allocations effectively penalise low-income countries.
Financing remains the immovable barrier
Despite advances in just transition language, finance continues to drive every negotiating track. Developing countries repeatedly cite article 9.1 of the Paris Agreement, which obliges developed nations to provide funding, but years of unfulfilled climate finance promises have undermined trust.
Delegates from Africa and South Asia argue that new financing proposals, including blended and hybrid models, obscure commercial terms and could worsen debt burdens rather than alleviate them. With many developing economies already facing high borrowing costs, rising interest rates, and structural fiscal strain, they fear that climate finance may push vulnerable countries further into debt distress.
Trade tensions are also rising. African representatives warned that measures such as CBAM and new EU forest regulations could penalise their exports, squeezing industries already struggling with competitiveness. “When Africa emits the least globally, penalising isolated sectors without considering development contexts is unjust,” Muyungi said.
Despite the disagreements, many observers say the first week proceeded more smoothly than expected. The presidency succeeded in moving the agenda forward without the procedural confrontations that paralysed COP25 and slowed COP29. Negotiation rooms remained open late into the night, with blocs engaging in multiple informal consultations.
The geopolitical landscape remains fragile as industrialised nations push for rapid decarbonisation while developing countries demand fairness, financial support, and a transition that preserves growth. Analysts note that these goals are not mutually exclusive, but achieving them requires political will that has often been absent.
Iskandar Vernoit, executive director of the IMAL Initiative, said the week’s relative calm should not be mistaken for consensus.
“What you see on the surface is disciplined diplomacy. But underneath, the economic fractures are widening. Without structural solutions on finance and trade, just transition commitments risk becoming rhetorical,” he said.
As ministers prepare to resume negotiations, several unresolved questions will shape whether COP30 meets expectations. Key issues include who will fund the just transition mechanism, since developed nations have not indicated how much they are willing or politically able to commit. Another question is whether adaptation indicators will be adopted or delayed, as a standoff could slow the summit’s overall momentum. The presidency also faces the challenge of preventing new trade tensions from derailing progress, with green-industrial policies from Brussels, Washington, and Beijing remaining flashpoints. Finally, it is uncertain whether emerging economies will accept conditionality in climate finance, as many continue to push for grant-based support rather than debt-creating instruments.
For Brazil, the stakes are particularly high. Hosting COP30 in the Amazon was intended to signal a new era of climate diplomacy focused on environmental justice. Indigenous protests earlier in the week highlighted that Brazil’s climate leadership will be judged not only by its international role but also by its domestic credibility.