Skip to main content

page search

News & Events Conférence des Nations unies sur le changement climatique COP26
Conférence des Nations unies sur le changement climatique COP26
UN Climate Change Conference COP26
31 October 2021 to 12 November 2021

Related content:

News

COP26: Don’t Be Fooled by Bolsonaro’s Pledges

02 November 2021

(Sao Paulo) – Brazil’s climate commitments and policies fall far short of what is needed to address the environmental and human rights crisis in the Amazon rainforest. Brazil’s delegation arrives in Glasgow for the global summit on climate change with a national climate action plan that is less ambitious than its previous one, and with forest conservation plans that either lack deforestation reduction targets or set them at far less ambitious levels than Brazil’s prior commitments. 


Blog post

Meet the people our leaders should be listening to at COP26

29 October 2021
Anna Diski
Helle Abelvik-Lawson

World leaders are failing ordinary people on climate change. From Fairbourne in Wales to China and Japan; the Amazon and Congo rainforests to the Pacific Islands – here are some of the people our leaders should be listening to at the COP26 global climate talks.



World leaders are meeting this week at the COP26 climate conference in Glasgow to agree stronger pledges to stop the world warming to dangerous levels.


News
News
Blog post
Blog post

In the Philippines, community forestry can help the climate agenda, and vice versa

28 October 2021
Koen Kusters

In conversation with Heidi Mendoza

The Filipino government can generate new momentum and resources for its longstanding community-based forest management programme, by placing it more centrally in its climate policies. This could benefit forest-dependent communities, but only if mistakes from the past are not repeated, argues Heidi Mendoza. It requires a better understanding of the conditions and constraints for community forestry.

Blog post
News
Blog post
News

Brazil indigenous people tell COP26: you need us to solve climate crisis

01 November 2021

BRASILIA, Nov 1 (Reuters) - Brazil's indigenous people said on Monday they would tell a U.N. climate conference that the world needs their expertise in protecting the Amazon rainforest to solve the global warming crisis.

The groups - who say they are facing increasing threats from loggers, miners and Brazil's own climate-skeptic government - told Reuters they had brought 40 envoys to the COP26 conference in Glasgow, their biggest ever international delegation.

News
News
News