| | | Extreme Temperature Diary- Tuesday November 11th, 2025/Main Topic: UN Climate Chief: Refusal to Halt Planetary Destruction Will ‘Never, Ever Be Forgiven’ – Guy On Climate
Dear Diary. Many messengers by this point in time are urging, even begging for change concerning the direction where our climate is going. Here is a summary of what the United Nations climate chief is saying at COP30 in Brazil from Common Dreams:
UN Climate Chief: Refusal to Halt Planetary Destruction Will ‘Never, Ever Be Forgiven’ | Common Dreams
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell delivers a speech during the UN Climate Change Conference opening ceremony in Belém, Brazil on November 10, 2025. (Photo by Pablo Porciuncula/AFP via Getty Images)
UN Climate Chief: Refusal to Halt Planetary Destruction Will ‘Never, Ever Be Forgiven’“We must move much, much, faster on both reductions of emissions and strengthening resilience,” Simon Stiell said at COP30 in Brazil. Jessica Corbett
Nov 10, 2025
At the opening of the United Nations summit known as COP30 on Monday, UN Framework Convention on Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell warned those gathered in Brazil of the “indisputable” dangers of inaction.
“Ten years ago in Paris, we were designing the future—a future that would clearly see the curve of emissions bend downwards,” he said, referring to the interntaionl agreement to reduce planet-heating pollution in hopes of keeping temperature rise this century at 1.5°C, relative to preindustrial levels. The global average temperature last year was above that limit.
“The emissions curve has been bent downwards. Because of what was agreed in halls like this, with governments legislating, and markets responding. But I am not sugar-coating it. We have so much more work to do,” Stiell stressed. “We must move much, much, faster on both reductions of emissions and strengthening resilience.”
“The science is clear: We can and must bring temperatures back down to 1.5°C after any temporary overshoot,” he continued. A UN assessment from last week found that under Paris Agreement countries’ recently submitted plans, or Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), the global temperature could soar to 2.3-2.5°C.
Stiell said: “We find ourselves here in Belém, at the mouth of the Amazon. And we can learn a lot from this mighty river. The Amazon isn’t a single entity, rather a vast river system supported and powered by over a thousand tributaries. To accelerate implementation, the COP process must be supported in the same way—powered by the many streams of international cooperation.”
“We don’t need to wait for late NDCs to slowly trickle in, to spot the gap and design the innovations necessary to tackle it,” he noted. “To falter whilst megadroughts wreck national harvests, sending food prices soaring, makes zero sense, economically or politically. To squabble while famines take hold, forcing millions to flee their homelands, this will never be forgotten, as conflicts spread.”
“While climate disasters decimate the lives of millions, when we already have the solutions, this will never, ever be forgiven,” he argued. “The economics of this transition are as indisputable as the costs of inaction. Solar and wind are now the lowest-cost power in 90% of the world. Renewables overtook coal this year as the world’s top energy source. Investment in clean energy and infrastructure will hit another record high this year.”
Highlighting a previous agreement to deliver at least $300 billion in climate finance, with developed countries taking the lead, Stiell called for moving toward $1.3 trillion, along with progress on adaptation and inclusive and just transitions. He declared, “In this arena of COP30, your job here is not to fight one another—your job here is to fight this climate crisis, together.”
UN Secretary-General António Guterres and Brazilian leaders, including President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, also emphasized the importance of collaboration at the summit to take on the fossil fuel-driven climate emergency.
According to the Associated Press:
André Corrêa do Lago, president of this year’s conference, emphasized that negotiators must engage in “mutirão,” derived from a local Indigenous word that refers to a group uniting for a task.
Complicating those calls is the United States, where President Donald Trump has long denied the existence of climate change. His administration did not send high-level negotiators and is withdrawing for the second time from the 10-year-old Paris Agreement, the first global pact to fight climate change.
As Common Dreams reported last week, Amnesty International secretary general Agnès Callamard urged all governments attending COP30 “to resist aligning with the Trump administration’s denial of the accelerating climate crisis and instead demonstrate true climate leadership.”
“In the face of President Trump’s rejection of science coupled with the intensified lobbying for fossil fuels, global leaders must redouble their efforts to take urgent climate action—with or without the US,” Callamard asserted.
An analysis of COP26-COP29 published Friday by Kick Big Polluters Out coalition found that “over 5,350 fossil fuel lobbyists have attended UN climate negotiations in just four years, with 90 of the corporations they represent responsible for nearly 60% of all global oil and gas production.”
“Three decades of climate negotiations have failed to justly end fossil fuels, scale up real solutions, and deliver climate action that centers people and the planet, not Big Polluters’ profits,” the coalition said. “Until the well-evidenced obstruction of the fossil fuel industry is addressed and strong, lasting protections are in place, COP30 and all future COPs are pre-destined to fail.”
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Jessica Corbett
Jessica Corbett is a senior editor and staff writer for Common Dreams.
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Here are some “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports
80+ Record lows today is a huge feat in our warmed climate.
US Autumn has warmed 2-5 F… the SE on the lower end. Still with the warmed baseline, this is now a very a rare event. — Jeff Berardelli (@weatherprof.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T16:45:02.236Z
Despite the lack of a planet-warming El Niño event this year, 2025 has been the 2nd-warmest year on record for the year-to-date period, and is on track to end up as the 2nd- or 3rd-warmest year on record, behind only the El Niño-warmed years of 2024 and 2023: — Dr. Jeff Masters (@drjeffmasters.bsky.social) 2025-11-10T16:12:39.148Z
Good COP or bad COP? I discussed the #COP30 climate summit in Brazil, what we need out of it, and what we can expect, with the great @ianmastersmedia.bsky.social on #BackgroundBriefing. Watch this space!
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/b... — Michael E. Mann (@michaelemann.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T18:21:03.894Z
"As Trump abdicates U.S. leadership on climate change, Asia is filling the void" | New op-ed by Benjamin Horton & myself for the @sfchronicle.com: www.sfchronicle.com/opinion/open... — Michael E. Mann (@michaelemann.bsky.social) 2025-10-23T13:14:26.487Z
Stunning News - even for polar bears - 84% of the East is below freezing now, including spots all the way south into North-Central Florida.
It’s… checks notes… November 11th.
Crazy. #winter #freeze #cold #florida — Jeff Berardelli (@weatherprof.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T12:04:27.507Z
Much needed: "Solar power is a way for Jamaica and other nations in one of the world’s most hurricane-prone regions to become more resilient to ever-intensifying storms.
Rooftop solar has grown significantly in Jamaica; renewable energy made up about 10% of Jamaica’s power generation in 2023." — Dr. Jeff Masters (@drjeffmasters.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T21:04:16.048Z
China’s CO2 emissions have been flat or falling for past 18 months, analysis finds
www.theguardian.com/world/2025/n... — Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T09:11:11.610Z
New UK energy plans is mostly good… renewextraweekly.blogspot.com/2025/11/new-... — Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T13:28:39.165Z
Differing trajectories - nuclear and solar. — Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T13:04:49.765Z
www.riverkeeper.org/our-work/cam... — Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T13:02:15.400Z
£130 million to build a new “stability island” to provide inertia, synchronisation and frequency regulation to maintain reliable grid.
www.thetimes.com/business-mon... — Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T10:32:27.676Z
Load vs logic – why #nuclear and #renewables aren’t a match
montelnews.com/news/1ea628e... — Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T10:53:59.494Z
Proliferation potential of SMRs small modular #nuclear reactors that require fuels using uranium enriched up to 20% U235—that is, fuels that contain the material known as high-assay low-enriched uranium (HALEU).
thebulletin.org/2025/11/decl... — Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T10:21:23.251Z
'Sizewell C #nuclear station is now predicted to cost £47 billion, with the govt acknowledging even this estimate may rise significantly. New nuclear means massive costs, a poisoned legacy to future generations, and whopping radioactive pollution.'
labouroutlook.org/2025/11/10/d... — Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T10:17:50.117Z
Holtec now allowed to dump tritiated water into the Hudson, with around 1.5 million gallons expected to enter the river in the next several years.
#nuclear
www.thecooldown.com/green-busine... — Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2025-11-11T10:29:12.178Z
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