| 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 roundup FOOD OFF THE MENU: COP30 wrapped up in the Brazilian Amazon city of BelĂ©m, with several new announcements for forest protection, but with experts saying that food systems were seemingly âerasedâ from official negotiations, Carbon Brief reported. Other observers told the Independent that the lack of mention of food in some of the main negotiated outcomes was âsurprisingâ and âdeeply disappointingâ. The outlet noted that smallholder farmers spend an âestimated 20 to 40% of their annual income on adaptive measuresâŠdespite having done next to nothing to contribute to the climate crisisâ. âBITTERSWEETâ: Meanwhile, Reuters said that the summitâs outcomes for trees and Indigenous peoples were âunprecedentedâ, but âbittersweetâ. It noted that countries had âunlocked billions in new funds for forestsâ through the Tropical Forest Forever Facility. (For more on that fund, see Carbon Briefâs explainer.) However, the newswire added, ânations failed to agree on a plan to keep trees standing as they have repeatedly promised to do in recent summitsâ. Mongabay noted that pledges to the new forest fund totalled âless than a quarter of the $25bn initially required for a full-scale rolloutâ. âMIXED OUTCOMESâ: A separate piece in Mongabay said that COP30 âdelivered mixed outcomesâ for Indigenous peoples. One positive outcome was a âhistoric pledge to recognise Indigenous land tenure rights over 160m hectaresâ of tropical forest land, the outlet said. This was accompanied by a monetary pledge of $1.8bn to support âIndigenous peoples, local and Afro-descendant communities in securing land rights over the next five yearsâ, it added. However, Mongabay wrote, there were some âmajor disappointmentsâ around the summitâs outcomes, particularly around the absence of mention of critical minerals and fossil-fuel phaseout in the final texts. Africa on edge SOMALIA DROUGHT: Somalia officially declared a drought emergency last month âafter four consecutive failed rainy seasons left millions at risk of hunger and displacementâ, allAfrica reported, with 130,000 people in âimmediate life-threatening needâ. According to Al Jazeera, more than 4.5 million people âface starvationâ, as âfailed rains and heat devastatedâ the country, with displaced communities also âescaping fightingâ in their villages and aid cuts impacting relief. Down to Earth, meanwhile, covered an Amnesty International report that demonstrated that Somalia failed to âimplement a functional social-security system for the marginalised, particularly those negatively affected by droughtâ. COCOA CRASH: Ivory Coastâs main cocoa harvest is expected to âdecline sharply for [the] third consecutive yearâ due to erratic rainfall, crop disease, ageing farms and poor investment, Reuters reported. Africa Sustainability Matters observed that the delayed implementation of the EUâs deforestation law â announced last week â could impact two million smallholder farmers, who may see âdelays in certification processes ripple through payment cycles and export volumesâ. Meanwhile, SwissInfo reported that the âdisconnect between high global cocoa prices and the price paid to farmersâ is leading to âunprecedented cocoa smugglingâ in Ghana. âFERTILISER CRISISâ: Nyasa Times reported that, âfor the first timeâ, Malawian president Peter Mutharika admitted that the country is âfacing a planting seasonâŠfor which his government is dangerously unpreparedâ. According to the paper, Mutharika acknowledged that the country is âheading into the rains without adequate fertiliser and with procurement dangerously behind scheduleâ at a meeting with the International Monetary Fundâs Africa director. âWe are struggling with supplies⊠We are not yet ready in terms of fertiliser,â Mutharika is quoted as saying, with the paper adding that his administration is âoverwhelmedâ by a fertiliser crisis. News and views PLANT TALKS COLLAPSE: âDecade-longâ talks aimed at negotiating new rules for seed-sharing âcollapsedâ after week-long negotiations in Lima, Euractiv reported. The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture allows âany actor to access seed samples of 64 major food crops stored in public gene banksâ, but âvirtually no money flows back to countries that conserve and share seed diversityâ, the outlet said. Observers âcriticised the closed-door nature of the final talksâ, which attempted to postpone a decision on payments until 2027, it added. UNSUSTAINABLE: The UK food system is driving nature loss and deepening climate change, according to a new WWF report. The report analysed the impacts on nature, climate and people of 10 UK retailers representing 90% of the domestic grocery market. Most of the retailers committed in 2021 to halving the environmental impact of the UK grocery market by 2030. However, the report found that the retailers are âa long way offâ on reducing their emissions and sourcing products from deforestation-free areas. GREY CARBON: A âflurryâ of carbon-credit deals âcovering millions of hectares of landmassâ across Africa struck by United Arab Emirates-based firm Blue Carbon on the sidelines of COP28 âhave gone nowhereâ, according to a joint investigation by Agence-France Presse and Code for Africa. In Zimbabwe â where the deal included âabout 20% of the countryâs landmassâ â national climate change authorities said that the UAE companyâs memorandum of understanding âlapsed without any actionâ. AFP attempted multiple ways to contact Blue Carbon, but received no reply. Meanwhile, research covered by New Scientist found that Africaâs forests âare now emitting more CO2 than they absorbâ. UK NATURE: The UK government released an updated âenvironmental improvement planâ to help England âmeet numerous legally binding goalsâ for environmental restoration, BusinessGreen reported. The outlet added that it included measures such as creating âwildlife-rich habitatsâ and boosting tree-planting. Elsewhere, a study covered by the Times found that England and Wales lost âalmost a third of their grasslandsâ in the past 90 years. The main causes of grassland decline were âincreased mechanisation on farms, new agrochemicals and crop-growingâ, the Times said. IN DANGER: The Trump administration proposed changes to the US Endangered Species Act that âcould clear the way for more oil drilling, logging and miningâ in key species habitats, reported the New York Times. This act is the âbedrock environmental law intended to prevent animal and plant extinctionsâ, the newspaper said, adding that one of the proposals could make it harder to protect species from future threats, such as the effects of climate change. It added: âEnvironmental groups are expected to challenge the proposals in court once they are finalised.â âALREADY OVERSTRETCHEDâ: Producing enough food to feed the worldâs growing population by 2050 âwill place additional pressure on the worldâs already overstretchedâ resources, according to the latest âstate of the worldâs land and water resourcesâ report from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. The report said that degradation of agricultural lands is âcreating unprecedented pressure on the worldâs agrifood systemsâ. It also found that urban areas have âmore than doubled in size in just two decadesâ, consuming 24m hectares âof some of the most fertile croplandsâ in the process. Spotlight Saudi minister interviewed During the second week of COP30 in BelĂ©m, Carbon Briefâs Daisy Dunne conducted a rare interview with a Saudi Arabian minister. Dr Osama Faqeeha is deputy environment minister for Saudi Arabia and chief adviser to the COP16 presidency on desertification. Carbon Brief: Thank you very much for agreeing to this interview. You represent the Saudi Arabia COP16 presidency on desertification. What are your priorities for linking desertification, biodiversity and climate change at COP30? Dr Osama Faqeeha: First of all, our priority is to really highlight the linkages â the natural linkage â between land, climate and biodiversity. These are all interconnected, natural pillars for Earth. We need to pursue actions on the three together. In this way, we can achieve multiple goals. We can achieve climate resilience, we can protect biodiversity and we can stop land degradation. And this will really give us multiple benefits â food security, water security, climate resilience, biodiversity and social goals. CB: Observers have accused Saudi Arabia, acting on behalf of the Arab group, of blocking an ambitious outcome on a text on synergies between climate change and biodiversity loss, under the item on cooperation with international organisations. [See Carbon Briefâs full explanation.] What is your response? OF: We support synergies in the action plans. We support synergies in the financial flows. We support synergies in the political [outcome]. What we donât support is trying to reduce all of the conventions. We donât support dissolving the conventions. We need a climate convention, we need a biodiversity convention and we need a desertification convention. There was this incident, but the discussion continued after that and has been clarified. We support synergies. We oppose dissolution. This way we dilute the issues. No. This is a challenge. But we donât have to address them separately. We need to address them in a comprehensive way so that we can really have a win-win situation. CB: But as the president of the COP16 talks on desertification, surely more close work on the three Rio conventions would be a priority for you? OF: First of all, we have to realise the convention is about land. Preventing land degradation and combating drought. These are the two major challenges. Dr Osama Faqeeha. Credit: Supplied CB: Weâre at COP30 now and weâre at a crucial point in the negotiations where a lot of countries have been calling for a roadmap away from fossil fuels. What is Saudi Arabiaâs position on agreeing to a roadmap away from fossil fuels? OF: I think the issue is the emissions, itâs not the fuel. And our position is that we have to cut emissions regardless. In Saudi Arabia, in our nationally determined contribution [NDC], we doubled [the 2030 emissions reductions target] â from 130MtCO2 to 278MtCO2 â on a voluntary basis. So we are very serious about cutting emissions. CB: The presidency said that some countries see the fossil-fuel roadmap as a red line. Is Saudi Arabia seeing a fossil-fuel roadmap as a red line for agreement in the negotiations? OF: I think people try to put pressure on the negotiation to go in one way or another. And I think we should avoid that because, trying to demonise a country, thatâs not good. Saudi Arabia is a signatory to the Paris Agreement. Saudi Arabia made the Paris Agreement possible. We are committed to the Paris Agreement. [Carbon Brief obtained the âinformal listâ of countries that opposed a fossil-fuel roadmap at COP30, which included Saudi Arabia.] CB: You mention that you feel sometimes the media demonises Saudi Arabia. So could you clarify, what do you hope to be Saudi Arabiaâs role in guiding the negotiations to conclusion here at this COP? OF: I think we have to realise that there is common but differentiated responsibilities. We have developed countries and developing countries. We have to realise that this is very well established in the convention. We can reach the same end point, but with different pathways. And this is what the negotiation is all about. Itâs not one size fits all. What works with a certain country may not work with another country. So, I think people misread the negotiations. We, as Saudi Arabia, officially announced that we will reach carbon neutrality by 2060 â and we are putting billions and billions of dollars to reach this goal. But it doesnât mean that we agree on everything. On every idea. We agree to so many things, you never hear that. Saudi Arabia agrees on one thousand points and we disagree on one point, then suddenly it becomes the news. Now, why does the media do that? Maybe that gives them more attention. I donât know. But all I can tell you is that Saudi Arabia is part of the process. Saudi Arabia is making the process work. This interview has been edited for length. Watch, read, listen NEW CHALLENGE: CNN discussed the environmental impacts of AI usage and how scientists are using it to conserve biodiversity. AMAZON COP: In the Conversation, researchers argued that hosting COP30 in the Amazon made the ârealities of climate and land-use change jarringly obviousâ and Indigenous voices âimpossible to ignoreâ. DUBIOUS CLAIMS: DeSmog investigated an EU-funded âcampaign blitzâ that âoverstated the environmental benefits of eating meat and dairy, while featuring bizarre and misleading claimsâ. WASPâS NEST: In a talk for the Leverhulme Centre for Nature Recovery, Prof Seirian Sumner explained the ânatural capitalâ of wasps and why it is important to âlove the unlovable parts of natureâ. New science Climate change can âexacerbateâ the abundance and impacts of plastic pollution on terrestrial, freshwater and marine ecosystems | Frontiers in Science The North Sea region accounts for more than 20% of peatland-related emissions within the EU, UK, Norway and Iceland, despite accounting for just 4% of the regionâs peatland area | Nature Communications Economic damages from climate-related disasters in the Brazilian Amazon rose 370% over 2000-22, with farming experiencing more than 60% of total losses | Nature Communications In the diary 1-5 December: Meeting of the implementation review committee of the UN desertification convention | Panama City 2-5 December: Meeting of the contracting parties to the Barcelona Convention on the protection of the Mediterranean Sea | Cairo 5 December: World soil day 8-12 December: International Water Association water and development congress and exhibition | Bangkok 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 19 November 2025: COP30 edition Cropped | 19.11.25 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 The post Cropped 3 December 2025: Extreme weather in Africa; COP30 roundup; Saudi minister interview appeared first on Carbon Brief. |