At the COP30 Leaders’ Roundtable in Belém, Brazil, Prime Minister Gaston Browne of Antigua and Barbuda delivered a compelling address during Thematic Session 3, focusing on Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and climate financing. Speaking to global leaders, Browne issued a stark warning: the planet is not waiting for humanity to act. He highlighted that global CO₂ levels surged by 3.3 parts per million in 2024, marking the largest increase ever recorded. While 64 new NDCs now cover approximately 30% of global emissions, Browne emphasized that current efforts fall far short of the 1.5°C warming limit, which he described as a critical threshold for small island states like Antigua and Barbuda. ‘For us, 1.5°C isn’t just a headline; it’s the line between survival and irreversible damage,’ he stated. Browne reaffirmed Antigua and Barbuda’s commitment to achieving this goal through comprehensive sectoral targets, including energy, transport, waste management, agriculture, and coastal protection. He stressed that for Small Island Developing States (SIDS), mitigation, adaptation, and resilience are inseparable components of a survival strategy. Referencing the devastation caused by Hurricane Melissa in Jamaica, Browne underscored the inadequacy of global climate action. He also criticized the disparity between climate finance needs and actual support, noting that while updated NDCs outline nearly US$2 trillion in financial requirements, vulnerable nations receive far less. ‘Ambition without finance is just aspiration,’ he declared, calling for a revolution in both energy systems and financing mechanisms. Browne urged large polluters to fulfill their obligations, framing climate finance as a matter of fairness and justice. ‘This is how we turn ambition into action and survival into shared success,’ he concluded.
Prime Minister Gaston Browne Calls for Urgent Climate Action and Fair Financing at COP30 Leaders’ Roundtable
