What do you hope will come out of this COP?
This COP should be a tipping point for integrating nature-based solutions and biodiversity into the global climate framework. It is clear there is momentum to achieve this in the lead up to COP30 in Brazil. However, the foundation of this work begins in earnest at COP29.
My greatest hope is to see enhanced financial commitments toward impactful, scalable projects in vulnerable regions, in a way that does not make them even more heavily indebted. Lastly, after 3 years of working on Article 6 as a negotiator, it must be implemented in a transparent, inclusive manner that enables fair and accountable climate action through cooperative approaches.
We need commitments that translate directly into action, where pledges become projects, and where climate and biodiversity agendas are seamlessly aligned.
What will be your role at COP?
Four words: Funding Nature, Fuelling Impact. I’ll be championing sustainable nature finance mechanisms that integrate nature into our climate solutions, specifically through the integrity of Article 6 negotiations and the advancement of nature. I’ll be advocating for nature to be recognised as our greatest asset, and essential to addressing the climate crisis. This means ensuring natural ecosystems are not just conserved but valued within global financing mechanisms. I’ll work with stakeholders from Africa and around the world to embed these principles into sustainable finance, ensuring that investment flows support the full scope of nature’s value, driving both economic and environmental resilience.
What do you think are the most pressing issues that will be discussed?
This COP will address several urgent issues: financing climate action, particularly for countries most vulnerable to climate change and in the face of macroeconomic barriers; creating a transparent and equitable carbon market under Article 6; and the role of the next cycle of NDCs in addressing our most pressing climate challenges. The climate-health nexus, plastic pollution, and the urgency of nature-based solutions are also gaining prominence. Each of these areas is vital to ensuring that global climate action is both holistic and impactful.
What are the dangers we hope to avoid will happen in negotiations?
One of the greatest dangers is that the New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) for climate finance falls short due to global political dynamics, risking non-materialisation of essential commitments. These negotiations don’t occur in isolation, they’re deeply influenced by the global landscape, including economic pressures and geopolitical tensions. We’re at risk if climate finance commitments are diluted, overly reliant on complex private sector mechanisms, or sidetracked by debates over who should contribute.
There’s also a real danger in Article 6 negotiations if standards for integrity and accountability are compromised. Without stringent measures to value and protect nature within carbon markets, we risk seeing nature-based credits that lack real environmental benefit, undermining the credibility of these markets and failing to deliver genuine carbon reductions. The NCQG should be structured to genuinely meet the priorities of developing countries, ensuring the finance they receive is not only predictable but also concessional and grants-based rather than debt-heavy.
Lastly, we want to avoid a fragmented outcome that leaves gaps in finance for adaptation, loss, and damage, which are crucial for vulnerable communities. If the NCQG remains ambiguous or is perceived as unrealistic, it could erode trust and reduce the political will needed to drive effective climate action.
How do you think civil society that is not physically attending COP can best contribute to put pressure on politicians?
Civil society is the driving force for progress and accountability in the climate agenda. Even from afar, they lead powerful movements by leveraging the digital world we live in to amplify their voices and demands, holding politicians directly accountable, and ensuring every commitment is transparent. CSOs and community leaders can also distil key takeaways from COP, creating accessible insights for their communities and mobilising local action. In this way, civil society doesn't just add pressure, they become the architects of accountability, sustaining momentum and making it difficult for leaders to step back from the commitments that our world needs.