Brief

COP30: What Businesses Need to Do Now

COP30: What Businesses Need to Do Now

At this year’s COP30 in Brazil, the message for businesses was clear: Climate strategy can’t just be commitments—it must be about execution.

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Brief

COP30: What Businesses Need to Do Now
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With the world tracking toward a 2.4–2.5°C warming trajectory—well above the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C target, though better than earlier 4°C forecasts—business resilience was center stage at this year’s COP30 in Belém, Brazil. The thousands of large companies that attended delivered a clear message to the world: Despite the slow consensus politics of the negotiations, they are committed to getting on with the work of climate action. It is, to them, essential to remaining competitive, attracting investment, and creating long-term value.

Navigating this landscape isn’t simple. With each major emitting nation holding its own natural assets and geopolitical objectives, “cookie cutter” policies applicable across the globe are out of vogue. In their place, countries are implementing policies specific to their economic and climate objectives, from direct investment to standards and incentives. Companies, particularly multinationals operating in global industries, must monitor the signals each country is sending. Winning strategies will continue to depend on the smart interplay of policy, technology, and consumer dynamics, often at a very local level.  

Amid the complexity, three areas stood out as signals of real commitment and action, unique to this year’s “Amazon COP”:

1. Finance is closing the execution gap

Innovative financing tools—from blended finance models to evolving carbon markets—are bringing pledges and execution closer together. A proposal to reach $1.3 trillion in annual investment in public and private climate finance by 2035, as well as the launch of a Global Climate Finance Accountability Framework to increase transparency and trust, signal the importance of closing that gap.

Investors are on the lookout for climate strategies and business models that use decarbonization to deliver real cash flow. They are also looking harder at data about physical risk and net-zero plans, particularly in emerging markets. As major corporations engage with shareholders and investors, and climate transition planning becomes embedded in financial regulation around the world, having a clear plan for mitigating climate risk and a bankable plan for creating value are more essential than ever.

2. Resilient and circular supply chains will be key to the food and fuel of the future

As expected at a summit dubbed the “Amazon COP,” agriculture and sustainable fuels featured prominently in Belém. New pledges focused on halving food waste by 2030, restoring degraded farmland, and scaling bio-based energy. Brazil’s RAIZ land restoration initiative and the “Belém 4X” pledge to quadruple sustainable fuel production by 2035 signal a growing connection between climate goals and industrial strategy. For businesses, this shift makes even clearer the importance of establishing resilient and circular supply chains and sourcing climate-smart inputs, including those created through regenerative agriculture. This is critical to managing cost, risk, and stability across global food systems.

3. Natural capital and the key role ecosystems play in climate resilience are in the spotlight

With physical risks intensifying—and quite apparent at a convening in a rainforest where temperatures consistently exceeded 30°C—COP30 brought the climate adaptation challenge into sharp focus. For the first time, the COP30 Mitigation Work Programme included language recognizing forests and nature-based solutions as part of the global emission-reduction toolbox. One clear sign of business buy-in: the launch of the Tropical Forests Forever Facility, a blended finance program aiming to protect 1.1 billion hectares of forest while delivering long-term returns to investors. For businesses, assessing nature-related risks and securing deforestation-free supply chains is an ever-clearer imperative.

The business opportunity 

As international climate negotiations enter their 31st year, with COP31 to be held in Turkey, the momentum on climate action is sustained and unflagging. Decades of policy support and business ambition have established the technological foundation for continued progress. Low-carbon solutions in both the power and transport sectors are accelerating based on basic economics, and solutions for industry, food systems, and nature are squarely on the agenda.

At COP30, more than 120 countries updated their climate plans, indicating continued policy commitments. Alongside the official negotiations, the parallel “action agenda” of businesses, civil society, and ambitious governments is becoming a new center of gravity. The strong corporate presence at COP30 underscored a clear message: Regardless of the pace of global negotiations, businesses are moving forward on climate action.

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