Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Fire At COP30 In Belém Turns Brazil's Climate Summit Into A Costly Failure


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) The moment that will define COP30 is not a historic climate deal, but a plume of black smoke over Belém.

A mid-afternoon fire in the core“Blue Zone” forced thousands of delegates to flee under a burning pavilion roof, halted talks in the final stretch, and sent more than a dozen people to medical teams with smoke and panic.

No one died, but an entire negotiating day was effectively erased – at the very summit Brazil wanted to showcase as proof of its global leadership.

The blaze did not come out of nowhere. The UN had already warned Brasília about leaks, water dripping through lights and“potential safety risks” in the same area, asking for urgent repairs.

That warning, plus the images of flames on the roof, turned COP30 into a textbook case of how a government can spend heavily – more than 787 million reais ($150M) so far, with the bill expected to top 1 billion – and still fail on basics like electrical safety and planning.

Outside the negotiation rooms, the experience was hardly better. Belém had around 18,000 hotel beds for an expected 45,000 visitors.

Prices exploded by up to 15 times, forcing the UN to raise daily allowances for delegates from poorer countries from $144 to $197 just so they could afford a room.


Fire At COP30 In Belém Turns Brazil's Climate Summit Into A Costly Failure
Inside the venue, participants complained about suffocating heat in temporary structures, unfinished works and long, confusing walks between key areas.

What was sold as a“green, inclusive COP” often felt like an expensive, improvised fairground. Brazil's political reaction exposed deeper fault lines.

Opposition figures quickly branded COP30 a global embarrassment, capturing a widespread feeling with the hashtag“FLOP30” and arguing that the fire was the predictable result of a government obsessed with grand speeches and inattentive to execution.

Ministers replied that such an incident“could happen anywhere,” while President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva skipped any mention of the blaze in his evening remarks.

He preferred to celebrate a trade victory: Donald Trump's decision to scrap a 40% tariff on more than 200 Brazilian farm products after months of dispute.

Then came the culture war layer. First Lady Janja publicly scolded Germany's leader for expressing relief at leaving Belém, framing his comments as disrespectful to the Amazonian city.

Brazilian social media lit up with outrage at perceived foreign arrogance, while foreign commentators quietly pointed to the basic failures they had just witnessed.

For many observers, the episode crystallised a pattern: quick offence at outside criticism, slower action on practical problems.

For expats, investors and foreign readers, COP30's story is about more than one fire.

It reveals the gap between Brazil's ambition to lead on climate, trade and the Amazon, and the harder work of delivering safe infrastructure, honest budgets and predictable organisation.

The speeches promised a new global order; the summit's execution, in the end, told a more uncomfortable truth.

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The Rio Times

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