
BELEM, Brazil (AP) — With a spotlight on the Brazilian Amazon, where agriculture drives a significant chunk of deforestation and planet-warming emissions, many of the activists, scientists and government leaders at United Nations climate talks have a beef. They want more to be done to transform the world's food system.
Protesters gathered outside a new space at the talks, the industry-sponsored “Agrizone,” to call for a transition toward a more grassroots food system, even as hundreds of lobbyists for big agriculture companies are attending the talks.
Though agriculture contributes about a third of Earth-warming emissions worldwide, most of the money dedicated to fighting climate change goes to causes other than agriculture, according to the U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization.
The FAO didn't offer any single answer as to how that spending should be shifted, or on what foods people should be eating.
“All the countries are coming together. I don’t think we can impose on them one specific worldview,” said Kaveh Zahedi, director of the organization's Office of Climate Change, Biodiversity and Environment.
Research has generally shown that a plant-based diet can be better for health and the planet. But many people in poverty around the world who are hardest hit by climate change depend on animal sources of protein for survival. People in higher-income countries have more options for a healthy diet without meat. But those people still tend to contribute more to climate change with their dietary choices.
"We have to be very, very aware and conscious of those nuances, those differences that exist,” Zahedi said.
An alternative universe at COP for agriculture
When world leaders gather every year to try to address climate change, they spend much of their time in a giant, artificial world that typically gets built up just for the conference.
One corner of COP30, as this year's conference is known, featured the alternative universe of AgriZone, where visitors could step into a world of immersive videos and exhibits with live plants and food products. Those included a research farm that Brazilian national agricultural research corporation Embrapa built to showcase what they call low-carbon farming methods for raising cattle, and growing crops like corn and soy as well as ways to integrate cover crops like legumes or trees like teak and eucalyptus.
Ana Euler, executive director of innovation, business and technology transfer at Embrapa, said her industry can offer solutions needed especially in the Global South where climate change is hitting hardest.
"We need to be part of the discussions in terms of climate funds," Euler said. "We researchers, we speak loud, but nobody listens.”
AgriZone was averaging about 2,000 visitors a day during COP30's two-week run, said Gabriel Faria, an Embrapa spokesman. That included tours for Queen Mary of Denmark, COP President André Corrêa do Lago and other Brazilian state and local officials.
But while the AgriZone seeks to spread a message of lower-carbon agriculture possibilities, industrial agriculture retains a big influence at the climate talks. The climate-focused news site DeSmog reported that more than 300 industrial agriculture lobbyists are attending COP30.
In the face of big industry, some call for a voice for smallholder farmers
On a humid evening at COP30's opening, a group of activists gathered on the grassy center of a busy roundabout in front of the AgriZone to call for food systems that prioritize good working conditions and sustainability and for industry lobbyists to not be allowed at the talks.
Those with the most sway are "not the smallholder food producers, ... not the peasants, and ... definitely not all these people in the Global South that are experiencing the brunt of the crisis," said Pang Delgra, an activist with the Asian People’s Movement on Debt and Development who was among the protesters. “It’s this industrial agriculture and corporate lobbyists that are shifting the narrative inside COPs.”
As Indigenous people pushed to be heard at a COP that was supposed to be about them, some also called for countries to honor their knowledge of land stewardship.
“We have to decolonize our thoughts. It’s not just about changing to a different food,” said Sara Omi, from the Embera people of Panama and president of the Coordination of Territorial Leaders of the Mesoamerican Alliance of Peoples and Forests.
“The agro-industrial systems are not the solution," she added. "The solution is our own ancestral systems that we maintain as Indigenous peoples."
___
Follow Melina Walling on X @MelinaWalling and Bluesky @melinawalling.bsky.social. Follow Joshua A. Bickel on Instagram, Bluesky and X @joshuabickel.
___
The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Snow Man岩本照、ハプニングに咄嗟の対応「ボディガードの役やってるので」紳士的な対応に会場から感嘆の声(モデルプレス) - 2
来季から「長嶋茂雄賞」新設、NPB理事会で承認 走攻守で顕著な活躍かつファン魅了した野手選出(日刊スポーツ) - 3
柄本時生&さとうほなみが結婚発表「感謝と初心を忘れず、ふたりで歩んで参ります」じゃれ合う2ショット披露 36歳同学年カップル(スポーツ報知) - 4
Figure out how to Keep up with Your Dental Inserts for Long haul Achievement - 5
Family Matters: Tips and Guidance for Effective Nurturing and Everyday Life
日本ハム松本剛がFA権行使の意思伝える「他球団の評価聞いてみたい」 13日から全球団との交渉スタート(スポニチアネックス)
夏の五輪競技、冬移行も 肥大化でIOC本格検討へ(共同通信)
A mom stopped giving her kids snacks — and sparked a debate about eating habits
Step by step instructions to Guarantee the Strength and Life span of Your Pre-assembled Home
Track down Your Optimal Conservative Vehicle: Famous Brands to Consider
The most effective method to Plan an Incineration Administration: A Bit by bit Guide.
山本モナ49歳 司法試験合格を報告「『やればできる』という言葉は、本当です(笑)」19年に第3子出産(スポーツ報知)
40代で大人の恋愛模様を彩る役で目を引く中村ゆり。『終幕のロンド』ヒロインで見せる切なさと美しさ #エキスパートトピ(斉藤貴志) - エキスパート - Yahoo!ニュース
2025年の「ハンバーガー店」倒産が年間最多を更新 2,000円超の高級品と手頃な大手チェーン店の二極化が進行(東京商工リサーチ)













