| We handpick and explain the most important stories at the intersection of climate, land, food and nature over the past fortnight. This is an online version of Carbon Briefâs fortnightly Cropped email newsletter. Subscribe for free here. Key developments COP30 nears its end COP TALK: The COP30 climate summit is entering its final days in BelĂ©m â and food, forests and land have all featured across the two weeks of talks. The formal agriculture negotiations track at climate COPs is the Sharm-el-Sheikh joint work on climate action for agriculture and food security (SWJA). Talks, however, came to an abrupt halt last Thursday evening, with countries agreeing to continue discussions on a draft text â with elements ranging from agroecology to precision agriculture â in Bonn next year. DEFORESTATION ROADMAP: WWF and Greenpeace called for a roadmap at COP30 to end deforestation. There has been a lot of chatter about roadmaps in BelĂ©m, with more than 80 countries backing calls for a roadmap for phasing out fossil fuels, the Guardian said. Kirsten Schuijt from WWF told a press conference that a similar plan on ending deforestation should include âreal actions and ambition to bend the curve on forest lossâ. Writing for Backchannel, Colombiaâs environment minister Irene VĂ©lez-Torres said: âWe need to see the global north come behind a roadmap â and quicklyâ. (Carbon Briefâs Daisy Dunne has started tracking the countries in favour, such as Colombia.) CARBON MARKETS: Elsewhere at the talks, nature-based solutions featured in an early draft text of carbon market negotiations. (Carbon Briefâs Aruna Chandrasekhar took a closer look at some of these references.) In addition, the Brazilian presidency launched a global coalition of âcompliance carbon marketsâ on 7 November, which was endorsed by 18 countries. BIG AG IN BELĂM: More than 300 industrial agriculture lobbyists attended COP30, according to an investigation by DeSmog and the Guardian. This is a 14% increase on last year, DeSmog reported, and larger than Canadaâs entire delegation. One in four agricultural lobbyists attended the talks as part of an official country delegation, the outlet noted. Elsewhere, Unearthed found that the sustainable agriculture pavilion at COP30 was âsponsored by agribiz interests linked to deforestation and anti-conservation lobbyingâ. Brazilian outlet AgĂȘncia PĂșblica reported that Brazil placed the âbillionaire brothersâ who own JBS, the worldâs largest beef producer, on a âVIP listâ at the summit. TRACKING PROGRESS: A UN report found that while progress has been made towards a global pledge to cut methane emissions by 30% by 2030, emissions of the potent greenhouse gas continue to rise. The report said agricultural methane is projected to increase by 4-8% by 2030, but could instead reduce by 8% with methane-reduction measures. Elsewhere, a report covered by Down to Earth found that countries need more than 1bn hectares of land, âan area larger than Australiaâ, to meet carbon removal pledges. Indigenous presence in BelĂ©m QUESTIONED PARTICIPATION: Ahead of COP30, Brazilâs presidency had expected the arrival of 3,000 Indigenous peoples in BelĂ©m. Indigenous peoples from the Amazon were at COP30 âin greater numbers than ever beforeâ, with 900 representatives granted access to the negotiations, the New York Times reported. However, only four people from Brazilâs afro-descendant Quilombolas communities held such accreditation, Climate Home News and InfoAmazonia reported. A boat journey that took 62 Indigenous representatives across the Amazon river to attend the COP30 was covered by Folha de SĂŁo Paulo, Reuters and El PaĂs. VARIED DEMANDS: Indigenous leaders arrived in BelĂ©m with a variety of demands, including the inclusion of their land rights within countriesâ climate plans, the New York Times added. It wrote that land demarcation âwould provide legal protection against incursion by loggers, farmers, miners and ranchersâ. Half of the group that sailed across the Amazon river were youths that brought demands from Amazon peoples to the climate summit, El PaĂs reported. A small Indigenous group from Cambodia attended COP30 to combat climate disinformation and call for ensuring Indigenous rights in forest projects, Kiri Post reported. FROM BLOCKADES TO THE STREETS: During the first week of COP30, Indigenous protesters blocked the entrance of the conference and clashed with police officers when demanding climate action and forest protection, Reuters reported. Tens of thousands of protesters, including Indigenous peoples, took to the streets of BelĂ©m on Saturday to demand climate justice and hold a funeral for fossil fuels, Mongabay and the Guardian reported. News and views AGRI DISASTERS: Disasters have driven $3.26tn in agricultural losses worldwide over the past 33 years, amounting to around 4% of global agricultural GDP, according to a new report from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. The report assessed how disasters â including droughts, floods, pests and marine heatwaves â are disrupting food production, livelihoods and nutrition. It found that Asia saw nearly half of global losses, while Africa recorded the highest proportional impacts, losing 7.4% of its agricultural GDP. WATER âCATASTROPHEâ: Iran is facing ânationwide catastropheâ due to âworsening droughts, record-low rainfall and decades of mismanaged water resourcesâ, Newsweek reported. According to Al Jazeera, the country is facing its sixth consecutive drought year, following high summertime temperatures. The outlet added: âIran spends 90% of its water on low-yield agriculture in a pursuit of self-sufficiency that exacerbates drought.â BBC News reported that authorities in the country have âsprayed cloudsâ with salts to âinduce rain, in an attempt to combatâ the worsening drought. TRUMP THREAT: The Trump administration will allow oil and gas drilling in Alaskaâs North Slope â home to âsome of the most important wildlife habitat in the Arcticâ â the New York Times reported. The announcement reverses a decision made during the Biden administration to restrict development in half of the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska, the newspaper said. Separately, Reuters reported that the US Department of Agriculture directed its staff to identify grants for termination at the start of Trumpâs second administration by searching for âwords and phrases related to diversity and climate changeâ. FIELDS FLATTENED: Thousands of acres of sugarcane plantations in the Philippinesâ Visayas islands were destroyed by Typhoon Tino earlier this month, the Philippine Star reported. Damages to the countryâs sugar industry have been estimated at 1.2bn Philippine dollars (ÂŁ15.5m), it added. Sugar regulator administrator Pablo Luis Azcona told the Manila Times: âWe have seen entire fields decimated by Tino, especially in the fourth and fifth districts of Negros Occidental, where harvestable canes were flattened and flooded. We can only hope that these fields will be able to recover.â FARMS AND TREES: EU countries and the European parliament have provisionally agreed on an âoverhaulâ of farming subsidies, Reuters reported. The changes would âexempt smaller farmers from baseline requirements tying their subsidies to efforts to protect the environmentâ and increase their potential payments, the newswire said. Campaigners told Reuters that these changes would make farmers more vulnerable to climate change. Elsewhere, Bloomberg said EU countries are âpushing for a one-year delayâ of the blocâs planned anti-deforestation law â âseeking more time to complyâ with the law compared to different proposed changes from the European Commission. ANOTHER FUND: Brazil is mulling over the creation of a new fund for preserving different biomes, such as the Cerrado, inspired by the Amazon Fund, Folha de SĂŁo Paulo reported. Discussions are underway between Brazilâs president and the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES), according to the newspaper. Separately, the Washington Post reported on how Brazilâs efforts to position itself as a climate leader at COP30 has been undermined by Lulaâs approval of new oil drilling in the Amazon and elimination of environmental permits. Spotlight Key COP30 pledges This week, Carbon Brief outlines four of the biggest COP30 initiatives for food, land and forests. Tropical Forest Forever Facility Brazilâs tropical forest fund â arguably the biggest forest announcement from this yearâs climate talks â was hailed by WWF and others as a âgamechangerâ upon its launch almost two weeks ago. Since then, the fund has raised $5.5bn â far below even Brazilâs reduced target of $10bn by next year. Norway, Brazil, Indonesia, Portugal, France and the Netherlands have all committed to pay into the fund, while Germany has said it will announce its contribution soon. The UK and China, on the other hand, do not plan to pay in. Intergovernmental Land Tenure Commitment This new âlandmarkâ commitment aimed to ârecognise and strengthenâ the land rights on 160m hectares of Indigenous peoples and local community land by 2030, according to the Forest & Climate Leadersâ Partnership. It has been backed by 14 countries, including Brazil, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Indonesia and the UK.  Relatedly, $1.8bn has been pledged from public and private funding to help secure land rights for Indigenous peoples, local communities and Afro-descendent communities in forests and other ecosystems. BelĂ©m Declaration on Hunger, Poverty and People-Centered Climate Action Signatories of this declaration committed to a number of actions aiming to address the âunequal distribution of climate impactsâ, including expanding social protection systems and supporting climate adaptation for small farmers. It was adopted by 43 countries and the EU. A German minister described it as a âpioneering step in linking climate action, social protection and food securityâ. BelĂ©m 4X This initiative aimed to gather high-level support to quadruple the production and use of âsustainable fuelsâ, such as hydrogen and biofuels, by 2035. It was launched by Brazil and has been backed by 23 countries so far, including Canada, Italy, Japan and the Netherlands. However, the pledge has been ârejectedâ by some NGOs, including Climate Action Network and Greenpeace, who criticised the environmental impact of biofuels. Watch, read, listen FOOD CHAT: Bite the Talk, a podcast by the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition, explored the âcritical intersection of climate change and nutritionâ. TRUE SAVIOURS: On Instagram, the Washington Post published a list of 50 plant and animal species that âhave enriched and even saved human livesâ. NO MORE WASTE: A comment piece by the founder of Londonâs Community Kitchen in the Independent addressed the relevance of food waste to the climate agenda. FOREST FRENZY: The Financial Times spoke to Amazon climate scientist Prof Carlos Nobre about tipping points and his âzeal for saving the rainforestâ. New science Floods led to a 4.3% global reduction in annual rice yield over 1980-2015, with crop losses accelerating after the year 2000 â âcoinciding with a climate change-induced uptick in the frequency and severityâ of floods | Science Advances Loss of African montane forests led to local âmicroclimateâ warming of 2.0-5.6C over 2003-22, diminishing the âtemperature-buffering capacityâ of the forests | Communications Earth & Environment âProlongedâ drought is linked to an increase in conflict between humans and wildlife â especially carnivores | Science Advances In the diary 10-21 November: COP30 UN climate summit | BelĂ©m, Brazil 22-23 November: G20 leadersâ summit | Johannesburg, South Africa 24-29 November: 11th session of the governing body of the international treaty on plant genetic resources for food and agriculture | Lima, Peru 1-5 December: XIX World Water Congress | Marrakech, Morocco Cropped is researched and written by Dr Giuliana Viglione, Aruna Chandrasekhar, Daisy Dunne, Orla Dwyer and Yanine Quiroz. Ayesha Tandon also contributed to this issue. Please send tips and feedback to [email protected] Cropped 5 November 2025: Nature finance at COP30; Storms devastate crops; Brazilian deforestation decline Cropped | 05.11.25 Cropped 22 October 2025: Global forest loss dips; Bird species in peril; Climate impact on Thai trees Cropped | 22.10.25 Cropped 8 October 2025: US government shutdown; EU loses green space; Migratory species extinction threat Cropped | 08.10.25 Cropped 24 September 2025: High Seas Treaty milestone; âErraticâ water cycle; Family food at COP30 Cropped | 24.09.25 The post Cropped 19 November 2025: COP30 edition appeared first on Carbon Brief. |