US will not send officials to COP30 climate talks, White House says

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Brazilian Finance Minister Fernando Haddad talking to COP30 president Andre Correa do Lago during the ministerial preparatory meeting (Pre-COP30), ahead of the COP30 Climate Summit, in Brasilia, Brazil October 13, 2025. REUTERS/Mateus Bonomi/File Photo

Brazilian Finance Minister Fernando Haddad (left) talking to COP30 president Andre Correa do Lago during a preparatory meeting ahead of the COP30 Climate Summit in Brazil.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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  • The US will not send high-level officials to the COP30 climate summit in Brazil.
  • The US previously threatened visa restrictions and sanctions over a UN shipping emissions plan.
  • Trump views climate change as a “greatest con job,” prioritising bilateral energy deals and US LNG exports.

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WASHINGTON - The US will not send any high-level officials to the upcoming COP30 climate summit in Brazil, a White House official told Reuters, alleviating some concern among world leaders that Washington would send a team to scupper the talks.

Brazil will host a high-level leaders’ summit next week before the two-week UN climate negotiations begin in the Amazonian city of Belem.     

Earlier this month, the US threatened to use visa restrictions and sanctions to retaliate against nations that would vote in favour of a plan put forward by the United Nations shipping agency, the International Maritime Organisation, to reduce planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions from ocean shipping.

Those tactics led a majority of countries at the IMO to vote to postpone by a year a decision on a global carbon price on international shipping.

The White House official said President Donald Trump has already made his administration’s views on multilateral climate action clear in

his speech at September’s United Nations General Assembly,

where he called climate change the world’s “greatest con job” and chided countries for setting climate policies that he said “have cost their countries fortunes.” 

“The President is directly engaging with leaders around the world on energy issues, which you can see from the historic trade deals and peace deals that all have a significant focus on energy partnerships,” the White House official told Reuters in an email.

The Trump administration has pursued bilateral energy deals in its trade negotiations to boost US liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports with countries like South Korea and the European Union.

On Oct 31, US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said there is “room for great energy trade between China and the United States” given China’s need for natural gas as the two economic giants negotiate over tariffs. 

Mr Trump announced on his first day in office that

the US would exit

the 10-year old Paris climate agreement, taking effect in January 2026 and the State Department has been reviewing the US’ engagement in multilateral environmental agreements.

Earlier this year, the US also pressured countries negotiating a global treaty to reduce plastic pollution not to back an agreement that would set plastic production caps.

The White House official told Reuters that “the tide is turning” on prioritising climate change, pointing to a memo circulated this week by billionaire and long-time climate philanthropist and investor Bill Gates, who said it is time to pivot away from focusing on meeting global temperature goals and that climate change will “not lead to humanity’s demise.” REUTERS

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