Plant-for-the-Planet at COP 30

Follow our delegation as we advocate for impactful climate action on the ground in Belém
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Stay updated on the latest developments in forest restoration, conservation, and youth empowerment and participation.

Plant-for-the-Planet team at COP 29.
Plant-for-the-Planet team at COP 26.
Plant-for-the-Planet team at COP 27.
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Plant-for-the-Planet team at COP 28.
Mohammed Rabiu Dannakabu at COP 15 by Plant for the Planet
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Meet us in Belém

At COP 30 in Belém, Plant-for-the-Planet’s global delegation is advocating for forest protection, restoration, youth empowerment for climate action, and climate justice — bringing youth voices and action to the negotiations.

Join Our Side Events

Children & youth

Climate Empowerment: Achieving Children’s Rights and Youth Leadership for Just Climate Action

To amplify the central role of children and young people as rights-holders and leaders in climate action, and to explore how meaningful empowerment through education, participation, and access to knowledge and resources can accelerate just, effective, and equitable climate solutions.
15th Nov 2025, 11:30am-1:00pm UTC/GMT-3 • Side Event Room 7
In collaboration with
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Children & youth

Beyond Commitments: Making NDCs Children and Youth-Sensitive. 

The session hopes to encourage parties and relevant stakeholders the inclusion of children and youth sensitive approaches in climate policies, promoting children’s rights and intergenerational equity in national and regional strategies for a fairer and more inclusive response to the climate crisis.

18th Nov 2025, 4:15pm-5:15pm UTC/GMT-3 • Brazilian Pavilion Zona Azul Cumaru

In collaboration with
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RESTORATION & CONSERVATION

Amazon in Focus: Climate Action Plan and Finance for Justice in the Forest

The event will showcase Climate Action Plans built by Indigenous Peoples, traditional communities, youth and women in the Brazilian Amazon, highlighting their role in implementing Brazil’s NDCs and accessing direct climate finance for just solutions.

13th Nov 2025, 3:00pm-4:30pm UTC/GMT-3 • Side Event Room 8

In collaboration with
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Children & youth

We Are Generation Restoration: Empowering African Youth through the Great Green Wall Initiative

A dynamic dialogue on intergenerational partnership, empowerment, and youth leadership in advancing ecosystem restoration across Africa’s drylands. The event highlights innovative youth-led restoration solutions, showcases success stories from the Great Green Wall, and explores how collaboration can accelerate a resilient and restored Africa by 2034.
14th of Nov 2025, 2:50pm-3:35pm UTC/GMT-3 • Children and Youth Pavilion
In collaboration with
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Children & youth

COP30 as a legacy for children and youth in climate policies

In this side event, children, youth, Parties, and the UN Special Rapporteur will discuss together how to mainstream child rights into the UNFCCC.
13th of Nov 2025, 4:45pm-6:15pm UTC/GMT-3 • Side Event Room 6
In collaboration with
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    Our Activities for Forests and Children

    How we’re Amplifying
    Children’s Voices at COP 30

    We’re ensuring the children are heard in the climate negotiations by leading self-organized dialogues across the Global North and South. These conversations feed into the Global Ethical Stocktake (GES) a new COP 30 initiative highlighting the moral dimensions of the climate crisis. Insights from children in countries such as Brazil, Chile, India, and Nigeria will be brought to Belém, where Climate Justice Ambassadors trained by Plant-for-the-Planet will represent their peers.
    Our Global Consultations
    Listen to their stories
    Ambassadors holding posters by Plant for the Planet
    Beta
    At Plant-for-the-Planet, we developed a tool that tracks investments and payouts within Tropical Forest Forever Fund that helps to prevent deforestation and degradation of forests
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    THE CHANGE

    CHOCOLATE

    Dear COP 30 Delegates,

    Since COP 19, we have been delivering messages from children to you through this chocolate. Protecting the the world's forests has always been one of their top priorities. Four years ago in Glasgow, 140 countries agreed to halt and reverse deforestation and land degradation by 2030 -an essential goal to achieve the Paris Goals. Yet, halfway to 2030 we’ve not nearly made the progress we need. In 17 of the 20 countries with the most primary forest, primary forest loss has increased since 2021. Parties can’t leave the Amazon without changing course.

    One contribution is to fully fund the Tropical Forest Forever Facility, the most ambitious effort yet to protect our rainforests. Track investments and potential payouts at tfffwatch.org.

    Best regards,
    Plant-for-the-Planet

    This chocolate is locally produced in Brazil in collaboration with AMMA Chocolate Organico, supporting sustainable cocoa cultivation and forest-friendly livelihoods.
    Rainforest Chocolate by Plant for the Planet
    Rainforest Chocolate by Plant for the Planet

    Stories from COP 30

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    At COP 30 in the Amazon: What We Saw, What We Did, and What Comes Next

    Read Article
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    When Children Enter COP 30: How Their Voices Changed the Room

    Read Article
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    Statement on Germany’s Investment in the Tropical Forest Forever Facility

    Read Article
    See All
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    Contact me for statements and media requests from our delegation.

    Meet our Delegation

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    Jens Waltermann
    Chairman of the Board
    Plant-for-the-Planet
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    Felix Finkbeiner
    Forest Restoration &
    Conservation
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    Sagar Aryal
    Chief Technology Officer
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    Helena Thiemeier
    Strategic Partnerships
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    Luciano Frontelle
    Executive Director
    Plant-for-the-Planet Brazil
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    Jule Schnakenberg
    Policy & Advocacy
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    Tamara Cibulkova
    Communications &
    Content
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    Pakhi Das
    Public Policy Advisor
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    Victoria Krumbeck
    PR Manager
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    Johann Eickenbrock
    Climate Justice Ambassador Representative
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    Fatou Jeng
    International Empowerment

    Advocating at COPs since 2011

    2011 COP17 Durban by Plant for the Planet
    2013 - COP19 WARSAW by Plant for the Planet
    2015 COP21 PARIS
    2016 -COP22 MARRAKESH by Plant for the Planet
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    2018 - COP24 KATOWICE by Plant for the Planet
    2019 - COP25 MADRID by Plant for the Planet
    2021 COP26 GLASGOW by Plant for the Planet
    2022 COP27 EGYPT by Plant for the Planet
    2023 COP28 DUBAI by Plant for the Planet
    2024 COP29 BAKU by Plant for the Planet

    2011 · COP17 Durban
    2013 · COP19 WARSAW
    2015 · COP21 PARIS
    2016 · COP22 MARRAKESH
    2017 · COP23 BONN

    2018 · COP23 BONN

    2019 · COP25 MADRID
    2021 · COP26 GLASGOW
    2022 · COP27 EGYPT
    2023 · COP28 DUBAI
    2024 · COP29 BAKU

    Plant-for-the-Planet’s Key Demands for COP 30

    Forest Restoration and Conservation

    Forests are among our most powerful allies in the fight against the climate crisis, absorbing carbon, protecting biodiversity, and sustaining the livelihoods of millions of people. Yet, deforestation and forest degradation continue at alarming rates, threatening global climate goals and ecosystem stability. 

    Through the 2021 Leaders Declaration at COP26 in Glasgow, 145 governments pledged to halt and reverse deforestation and forest degradation by 2030. And yet, with 30 million hectares of trees lost, forest loss reached a record high in 2024, with almost half of the loss attributed to fires at an unprecedented scale.

    Therefore, at COP 30, we urge parties to:

    1. Launch the Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF)

    Launch the Tropical Forest Forever Facility¹ (TFFF) with a fully funded junior-debt tranche by states of USD 25 billion.

    We urge the governments of Germany, Norway, UK, France, and UAE to announce specific investments in line with their pledges.

    Strengthen the Integrity and Accountability of the TFFF by advocating for robust improvements such as:

    • establishing a comprehensive and independently monitored Negative Exclusion List,
    • ensuring that financial return assumptions are transparent, evidence-based, and not overly optimistic,
    • guaranteeing additionality, so only disbursements to rainforest countries count toward the NCQG,
    • creating clear provisions for independent monitoring, transparency, and grievance mechanisms,
    • enshrining explicit human rights protections for Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities, including FPIC and fair benefit-sharing,
    • applying uniform USD 140 per-hectare penalties for all forms of forest degradation, not only those caused by fire.

     ¹ This Brazilian government initiative proposes an investment fund to support tropical rainforest conservation, moving away from relying on limited public funds. Investments by industrialized nations is essential to provide financial guarantees, making the facility attractive to large private investors. See tfffwatch.org

    2. Align National Plans for Forest Restoration and Conservation

    Publish comprehensive national plans to end forest destruction and drive forest conservation and restoration.

    These plans should incorporate harmonized guidance on National Adaptation Plans (NAPs), Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), and National Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans (NBSAPs), with clear implementation pathways, financing mechanisms, and monitoring frameworks to ensure measurable progress.

    3. Recognize and Protect the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities to Forests and Land

    Safeguard land and ownership rights, including rights of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities (IPLCs).

    Recognize the role of IPLCs in halting deforestation and biodiversity conservation.

    Guarantee meaningful participation of IPLCs in all climate action and policymaking.

    Children and Youth Empowerment

    As the climate crisis deepens, children and youth are among the most affected, and yet among the most excluded from the decisions that shape their future. Around the world, they are already leading powerful movements, advancing innovative solutions, and holding decision-makers to account. Children are not just victims of the climate crisis but effective agents of change.

    At COP 30, we must move beyond symbolic gestures and ensure meaningful, lasting empowerment of children and youth in all areas of climate action. Empowerment means more than participation. It means having access to climate education, the resources to lead change, and the right to be heard and to a healthy environment.

    Therefore, at COP 30, we urge parties to:

    1.  Recognize Children and Youth as Climate Leaders

    Reaffirm children and youth as rights-holders and essential actors in climate action, ensuring their official inclusion in decision-making structures such as national delegations, consultation bodies, and advisory roles.

    Recognize and empower children and youth, especially, but not only from the Global South, as key stakeholders in climate action by safeguarding their rights and well-being, ensuring their freedom of expression, and integrating their perspectives and lived experiences into all levels of climate decision-making.

    Create accessible, well-supported mechanisms for youth to engage, including youth-led consultations, capacity-building opportunities, and transparent channels for submitting inputs and recommendations that are taken into account in outcomes.

    2.Include Children and Youth in National Climate Policy

    Ensure meaningful participation of children and youth in COP 30 and further COPs as well as national climate decision-making by integrating the Universal NDC Youth Clause in the development of their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) and establishing permanent youth advisors in National Climate Change Departments.

    Remove barriers to participation by creating safe, inclusive, and accessible spaces that empower youth, especially but not only girls, Indigenous youth, and marginalized groups, at national and international levels.

    3. Guarantee Quality Climate Education

    Commit to strengthening the implementation of ACE by ensuring every child and young person has access to quality climate education that empowers informed, just and sustainable choices.

    Incorporate climate education in national school systems starting at an elementary school level to ensure early access to climate knowledge and skills.

    4. Scale Up Youth-Led Climate Solutions

    Dedicate accessible funding for youth-led climate action, prioritizing adaptation and loss & damage finance.

    Simplify funding for grassroots youth groups, including ACE stakeholders, focal points, the UNFCCC ACE team, and youth negotiators.

    List of position papers that we co-signed:
    German Climate Alliance