Colombia and the Netherlands, which co-hosted the first conference the first conference on transitioning away from fossil fuels earlier this year, say they have held ‘constructive’ discussions on bringing the meeting’s outcomes to the COP31 climate summit. Speaking on the sidelines of London Climate Action Week, the outgoing Colombian environment minister and Dutch climate policy minister, said COP31 presidencies Australia and Türkiye were ‘open’ to suggestions on how to reflect the discussions in Santa Marta on transitioning away from coal, oil and gas at the end-of-year summit. What format this might take, ‘we don’t know yet,’ said Colombian minister Irene Vélez Torres. ‘We had this very interesting conversation with COP31 and they were clearly open for suggestions about what is needed in the discussion in Türkiye, and we were explicit about the need to engage with the phasing out of fossil fuels,’ she said. Jun 18, 2026 News Bonn climate talks end in ‘gridlock’ on adaptation and emissions-cutting Splits between developed and developing countries over finance and science held back progress on key areas of climate action, leaving disappointment and much work for COP31 Read more Jun 18, 2026 Comment The UN climate process was built for negotiation – now it must support implementation Consultations are underway on reforms to streamline the talks, which take too long to produce outcomes that are often not adequate to tackle the scale of the climate crisis Read more Australia and Türkiye will jointly preside over the COP31 climate conference, which is taking place in the Turkish resort city of Antalya in November. Türkiye will lead on the action agenda, referring to initiatives that lie outside of the formal negotiations, while Australia will chair the negotiations. Dutch minister Stientje van Veldhoven said the outcomes of the Santa Marta conference could be part of COP31’s action agenda, ‘We are here to facilitate action on one particular part of what COP has agreed to do, namely transitioning away fossil fuels so there is a very logical connection to the COP process, and we will make sure that we continue to bring this coalition of the willing, this coalition of the doers back into the COP process,’ she said. At the event in London, UN secretary-general António Guterres urged countries to reduce their fossil fuel dependencies, arguing that ‘economies based on renewables are much more secure than economies based on the imports of fossil fuels’. He added that the transition to renewables is ‘unstoppable’. European, island states seek clear future for global roadmap to cut fossil fuels Including the fossil fuel transition in UN climate negotiations, rather than the action agenda, is likely to be controversial among governments. While nations agreed to transition away from fossil fuels at COP28, at COP30 last year Saudi Arabia, Russia and others successfully opposed a push to agree for a roadmap to be drawn up on how to meet this goal. Despite the lack of agreement, the Brazilian government which presided over COP30, is drawing up a global roadmap. But the Russian government has said it opposes this roadmap being referenced in UN climate talks. Finding agreement on referencing the Santa Marta process in UN climate talks is also likely to be difficult. Last week in Bonn, the chair of the African Group of Negotiators, Antwi-Boasiako Amoah from Ghana, criticised ‘minilateral initiatives and coalitions of the willing’ as distracting political attention and lacking the legitimacy that comes from multilateral climate negotiations, where any country can veto anything. Strengthening the COP process The Santa Marta conference kick-started a diplomatic process outside of the formal UN climate negotiations to offer a space for governments to make progress and find solutions to wean their economies away from fossil fuels. Around 60 countries, including many large fossil-fuel producers attended the meeting after being frustrated by failed attempts to get UN climate talks to sign off on the global roadmap away from fossil fuels. They agreed to work towards voluntary national roadmaps away from fossil fuels. A 170-page report summarising the outcome of the conference published on Tuesday says that the Santa Marta coalition of countries will seek to influence the formal UN negotiations. The report says Colombia proposed to build ‘a strong coalition to bring these discussions to the second Global Stocktake’, a process in which countries will review climate progress and agree on measures forward at COP33 in 2028. A sign shows the logo and themes of the First Conference on Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels in Santa Marta, Colombia, April 2026 (Photo: Colombian Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development) Colombia also suggested organizing ‘a high-level event during the next COP presidency’ to discuss Santa Marta outcomes, while Italy proposed an event during the UN General Assembly. ‘We will make sure that Santa Marta conference is not a separate, parallel process to the COP’ but ‘strengthens’ the negotiations without becoming a formal part of them, said van Veldhoven, adding that the process will remain ‘a conversation’ to demonstrate that transforming economies away from fossil fuels is possible. COP30 CEO Ana Toni from Brazil told a separate event in London that the response to the second Global Stocktake ‘will probably need several pages’ to deliver an agreed commitment to transition away from fossil fuels. The Santa Marta report says that Brazil’s global roadmap should also be included in the response. Colombian election signals u-turn Colombia, which has been one of the most proactive countries promoting a global transition away from fossil fuels, is likely to reverse course after the election of right-wing candidate Abelardo de la Espriella as the country’s new president at a general election on Sunday. The newly elected president has branded himself as an ally of US president Donald Trump, and has promised to reverse a current halt on new coal, oil and gas licenses, as well as venture into ‘responsible fracking’ without overlapping with protected areas or high-mountain páramo ecosystems. Vélez Torres said the current Colombian government has already ‘delivered to the international community and to our sub-national forces, social forces, movements, academia’ a process to keep the energy transition moving forward. She told Climate Home News she hoped the work the government had done could be picked up by social movements in Colombia to demand change from the incoming government. ‘What we did cannot be erased, and we have had our voices heard, and we have been as radical as any other government could have been.’ The minister said the elections have left the country facing a ‘dark night’ that ‘can really shift the politics in terms of energy transition and environmental protection’, but said she is certain that their ‘legacy will continue being there’. The post COP31 presidency ‘open’ to reflecting Santa Marta in UN climate process, ministers say appeared first on Climate Home News.

Read original article