COP30

Press Conference: Indigenous Peoples' Caucus to Provide Update on Negotiations

Friday, November 21, 2025

PDF - English

Who: IIPFCC - International Indigenous Peoples Forum on Climate Change
When: Friday, November 21, 2025 |16:30-17:00 BRT
Where: Press Conference Room 2, Area D, Blue Zone, COP30 Belém

About this Press Conference: On the final scheduled day of COP30, this press conference will bring Indigenous voices from around the world to share critical updates on the current state of negotiations. Reflections and outstanding demands will be shared on the main negotiation items, highlighting how the rights of Indigenous Peoples and our role in climate action are being left behind in what is claimed to be “the Indigenous COP”.

Speakers:

  • Taily Terena (Moderator)

  • Sara Olsvig (Arctic Region)

  • Bina Laprem (Asian Region)

  • Larissa Baldwin (Pacific Region)

  • Gustavo Ulcué Campo (Latin America & the Caribbean)

  • Anthony Williams (Africa Region) 

About IIPFCC: The International Indigenous Peoples Forum on Climate Change (IIPFCC) was established in 2008, as the caucus for Indigenous Peoples participating in the UNFCCC processes. It represents the collective positions of Indigenous Peoples from all seven socio-cultural regions. www.iipfcc.org

Media contact:

Kera Sherwood-O’Regan

Email: kera.oregan@gmail.com

Signal/ WhatsApp: +64 210410932



Supported by IITC - International Indian Treaty Council 

https://www.iitc.org/ 

Opening Statement COP30

We celebrate this first COP held in the Amazon. However, the lack of commitment and ambition from Parties has brought us to irreversible tipping points.

The Presidency calls it the COP of implementation, yet we are still experiencing colonization in our territories, with the expansion of fossil fuels including in the Amazon, mining for transition minerals, carbon trading, the agribusiness industry, nuclear energy and uranium extraction, geoengineering, and large-scale renewable energy infrastructure. This perpetuates conflict, displacement, destruction, and contamination of our sacred places, as well as persecution, criminalization, and murder of our relatives.

We demand that all climate action must be carried out with full respect for the rights of Indigenous Peoples, including our right to self-determination, Free, Prior and Inform Consent, and the protection of lands, waters, and territories.

We therefore make the following recommendations:

  • The Just Transition Work Programme must uphold international human rights standards, including UNDRIP, explicitly protect Indigenous Peoples in Voluntary Isolation and Initial Contact, and redress the impacts of the extractive model.

  • Ensure direct, flexible, and culturally appropriate access to all forms of climate finance, considering our own financial mechanisms.

  • Ensure full and effective representation and participation in all decision-making processes, legal security of our territories, governance structures, and knowledge systems, especially in this COP, in NDCs and NAPs.

  • Acknowledge Indigenous women, youth, and persons with disabilities’ contributions to climate action, and ensure their meaningful participation.

This is an Indigenous COP, and we are distinct right-holders and protectors of our knowledge. We need actionable results that include our wisdom and science. This is not optional; it is critical to our collective survival.

IIPFCC Statement in Solidarity of Local Demonstrations in Belem

Declaração da IIPFCC em solidariedade às manifestações locais em Belém | Declaración de la FIPICC en solidaridad con las manifestaciones locales en Belém | Déclaration du FIPACC en solidarité avec les manifestations locales à Belém | Заявление IIPFCC в знак солидарности с местными демонстрациями в Белеме