COP at 30, Paris at 10, Trump at 2: What Future for Climate Multilateralism?
- Date: Wednesday 2 July 2025
- Location: University campus
- Cost: Free
Call for Expressions of Interest for a one-day workshop, University of Leeds, UK, Wednesday 2 July 2025
2025 marks both the 30th anniversary of the first meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COP) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), and the 10th anniversary of the Paris Agreement. Yet recent COPs have seen deep divisions over the key issues associated with tackling climate change, across mitigation, adaptation, finance, and loss and damage. For some, COP is ‘the only game in town’, the necessary if imperfect forum for coordinated global action on climate. Yet COP29 saw regression or stalemate on many key issues as well as a bitter conclusion, with India and other G77 states denouncing both developed states and the COP Presidency for ‘stage managing’ conference outcomes. And beyond this there are more longstanding questions about the adequacy of the UN climate regime and its processes, with former UNFCCC head Christiana Figueres, among others, calling for thoroughgoing COP reform, and critics such as Greta Thunberg dismissing the annual gatherings as little more than fossil fuelled greenwashing.
The COP30 and ‘Paris at 10’ anniversaries will clearly generate wide-ranging debate on these issues – and all the more so given that they now coincide with the Trump administration’s wide-ranging attacks on existing international frameworks and institutions, and a fraught, rapidly changing geopolitical conjuncture. This one-day workshop at the University of Leeds seeks to contribute to this debate by bringing together researchers and practitioners with a diversity of perspectives and expertise to reflect on the past, present and future of climate multilateralism. This will include contributions on:
- Recent COP and anticipated COP30 dynamics specifically;
- UNFCCC and Paris agreement processes more broadly;
- Specific sectors and agenda items under the UNFCCC and Paris frameworks;
- Multilateral coordination outside of UNFCCC fora;
- Climate clubs and climate ‘minilateralism’;
- Political, geopolitical and interest group contexts and drivers;
- Contrasting national, negotiation bloc and civil society perspectives; and
- Insights drawn from other multilateral fora (eg the Convention on Biological Diversity, and the Global Plastics Treaty negotiations).
The workshop’s central objective will be to facilitate learning, discussion and future research and research-practice collaborations; no immediate outputs or outcomes are planned (though it is intended that there will be follow-up events to this one in the run-up to COP30 and beyond). Hence the day will be organised around a single plenary conversation, with short individual contributions, and plenty of time for exchange.
To apply to participate in the workshop, please submit an Expression of Interest (Eol) comprising:
- an abstract of your potential contribution of no more than 200 words, which should summarise your perspective(s) on the past, present and/or future of climate multilateralism or any of the specific issues above; and
- a biography of no more than 100 words.
EoIs should be submitted to Climate.politics@leeds.ac.uk by Friday 16 May 2025.
While some funds are available to support this event, these will be targeted at early career researchers and others particularly in need of financial support.
This event is convened by the Climate Politics Group, the School of Politics and International Studies, University of Leeds.