COP30 shifts the focus from promises to delivery on coal transitions

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
15,586
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Ghawar
November 20, 2025

As COP30 comes to an end in Brazil, the global spotlight is firmly on converting climate pledges into concrete action

After COP28 set ambitious goals to keep the 1.5°C target within reach, including commitments to scale down unabated coal and transition away from fossil fuels, this year’s conference is being framed as the moment countries must demonstrate real on-the-ground implementation.

Momentum builds, but the pace is still slow.

Recent years have seen significant progress in reducing reliance on coal. Since the signing of the Paris Agreement in 2015, the global coal project pipeline has shrunk by nearly two-thirds, and Latin America has now become the first continent free of planned coal projects. The rapid deployment of renewable energy is accelerating the shift, with the vast majority of new renewable installations in 2023 proving cheaper than new coal and even more affordable than many existing coal plants.

Across OECD countries, coal generation has dropped by half since 2015, and more than 60% of existing coal capacity is already retired or scheduled to close on a Paris-aligned timeline. This year also marks a global milestone where renewables have surpassed coal as the largest source of electricity generation.


Despite these developments, coal continues to provide about one-third of global electricity and remains responsible for 40% of energy sector emissions. The International Energy Agency warns that meeting the 1.5°C goal requires the immediate end of new unabated coal and the complete phase-out of existing plants by 2040. Current retirement rates fall far short of this trajectory, with only a quarter of the needed annual retirements achieved last year.

New PPCA members show growing global commitment

On the opening Monday of COP30 (17th November 2025), the Powering Past Coal Alliance (PPCA) welcomed two new members, the Republic of Korea and Bahrain. Korea, home to the world’s seventh-largest coal fleet and a major industrial exporter, has now committed to halting new unabated coal construction and phasing out existing plants.


This shift is expected to strengthen its competitiveness by attracting industries seeking zero-carbon power and by reducing dependence on imported coal.


Bahrain joins as a country with no coal power generation and a pledge to avoid future coal development. Both nations have signalled their intention to work with other PPCA members to accelerate the global transition from coal to clean energy.


With these additions, 62 countries are now part of the PPCA, supported by dozens of subnational governments, major financial institutions, and utilities.

Farah Heliantina, Assistant Deputy for the Acceleration of Energy Transition at the Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs, Indonesia, said;


“Through the CTC, we are turning global commitment into real action, action that take place in power plan, investment decision and our commitment. Indonesia shares real experience as a country that still relies on coal yet is determined to move forward towards clean energy.”

Launch of a new plan to accelerate coal transitions

One of COP30’s main announcements is the release of the PPCA’s Plan to Accelerate Coal Transitions. Developed with 29 countries, financial institutions, and partner organisations, the plan outlines specific steps to scale up early coal retirement, expand clean energy deployment, and strengthen policy frameworks.

It aims to help translate the political commitments of COP28 into tangible progress and supports the COP30 Presidency’s focus on making this an “Implementation COP.”


The plan highlights ongoing efforts to expand financing for coal-to-clean transitions, including the Climate Investment Funds’ $1.6 billion ACT programme and emerging mechanisms designed to attract private capital. Examples of successful transition models are also highlighted through the PPCA’s Solutions Bank.


Additional reports expected at COP30 will explore how to expand the pipeline of coal-to-clean projects and assess how certain existing coal plants could operate flexibly to support renewable integration during the transition period. With tools, financing, and policy models increasingly available, the challenge now is to scale them quickly.

 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
15,586
2,780
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Ghawar
Canada has been successful in phasing out use of coal as fuel for power generation.
It is great surplus coal production has added to our export of fossil fuels and consequent
carbon emission and pollution and brought in more profits. Now it is up to climate clowns
Steven Guilbault and Julie Dabrusin in COP30 to explain to the world why buying coal from
Canada is climate positive.
 

JohnLarue

Well-known member
Jan 19, 2005
19,115
4,501
113
November 20, 2025

As COP30 comes to an end in Brazil, the global spotlight is firmly on converting climate pledges into concrete action

After COP28 set ambitious goals to keep the 1.5°C target within reach, including commitments to scale down unabated coal and transition away from fossil fuels, this year’s conference is being framed as the moment countries must demonstrate real on-the-ground implementation.

Momentum builds, but the pace is still slow.

Recent years have seen significant progress in reducing reliance on coal. Since the signing of the Paris Agreement in 2015, the global coal project pipeline has shrunk by nearly two-thirds, and Latin America has now become the first continent free of planned coal projects. The rapid deployment of renewable energy is accelerating the shift, with the vast majority of new renewable installations in 2023 proving cheaper than new coal and even more affordable than many existing coal plants.

Across OECD countries, coal generation has dropped by half since 2015, and more than 60% of existing coal capacity is already retired or scheduled to close on a Paris-aligned timeline. This year also marks a global milestone where renewables have surpassed coal as the largest source of electricity generation.


Despite these developments, coal continues to provide about one-third of global electricity and remains responsible for 40% of energy sector emissions. The International Energy Agency warns that meeting the 1.5°C goal requires the immediate end of new unabated coal and the complete phase-out of existing plants by 2040. Current retirement rates fall far short of this trajectory, with only a quarter of the needed annual retirements achieved last year.

New PPCA members show growing global commitment

On the opening Monday of COP30 (17th November 2025), the Powering Past Coal Alliance (PPCA) welcomed two new members, the Republic of Korea and Bahrain. Korea, home to the world’s seventh-largest coal fleet and a major industrial exporter, has now committed to halting new unabated coal construction and phasing out existing plants.


This shift is expected to strengthen its competitiveness by attracting industries seeking zero-carbon power and by reducing dependence on imported coal.


Bahrain joins as a country with no coal power generation and a pledge to avoid future coal development. Both nations have signalled their intention to work with other PPCA members to accelerate the global transition from coal to clean energy.


With these additions, 62 countries are now part of the PPCA, supported by dozens of subnational governments, major financial institutions, and utilities.

Farah Heliantina, Assistant Deputy for the Acceleration of Energy Transition at the Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs, Indonesia, said;


“Through the CTC, we are turning global commitment into real action, action that take place in power plan, investment decision and our commitment. Indonesia shares real experience as a country that still relies on coal yet is determined to move forward towards clean energy.”

Launch of a new plan to accelerate coal transitions

One of COP30’s main announcements is the release of the PPCA’s Plan to Accelerate Coal Transitions. Developed with 29 countries, financial institutions, and partner organisations, the plan outlines specific steps to scale up early coal retirement, expand clean energy deployment, and strengthen policy frameworks.

It aims to help translate the political commitments of COP28 into tangible progress and supports the COP30 Presidency’s focus on making this an “Implementation COP.”


The plan highlights ongoing efforts to expand financing for coal-to-clean transitions, including the Climate Investment Funds’ $1.6 billion ACT programme and emerging mechanisms designed to attract private capital. Examples of successful transition models are also highlighted through the PPCA’s Solutions Bank.


Additional reports expected at COP30 will explore how to expand the pipeline of coal-to-clean projects and assess how certain existing coal plants could operate flexibly to support renewable integration during the transition period. With tools, financing, and policy models increasingly available, the challenge now is to scale them quickly.

more virtual signalling
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JohnLarue

Well-known member
Jan 19, 2005
19,115
4,501
113
November 20, 2025

As COP30 comes to an end in Brazil, the global spotlight is firmly on converting climate pledges into concrete action
It aims to help translate the political commitments of COP28 into tangible progress and supports the COP30 Presidency’s focus on making this an “Implementation COP.”

hey they have a Presidency and everything

i do not recall any presidential election where i get to vote for or against a grifter who gets to spend my tax dollars while deciding my standard of living will be reduced
 

JohnLarue

Well-known member
Jan 19, 2005
19,115
4,501
113
larue, you know nothing about the subject.
You are a science denier who doesn't even believe the greenhouse effect exists.
wrong again franken fool

i have never said the greenhouse theory does not exist
i said it is a theory which has never been experimentally proven
if it had been it would no longer be a theory it would be a scientific law

you put your scientific ignorance on full display by not understanding the difference

you think calling someone a denier is scientific proof
it is not

the climate con is falling apart
 
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Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
103,699
29,894
113
wrong again franken fool

i have never said the greenhouse theory does not exist
i said it is a theory which has never been experimentally proven
if it had been it would no longer be a theory it would be a scientific law

you put your scientific ignorance on full display by not understanding the difference

you think calling someone a denier is scientific proof
it is not

the climate con is falling apart
You really don't understand, do you larue.
You keep saying there will be no warming but there has been warming every single year.
How many times in a row can you be wrong and still think you are right?

 
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