
Webinar: From Santa Marta to Bonn – where next for the fossil fuel transition? – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Unsplash)
Communities facing rising seas, extreme heat, and disrupted livelihoods now have a clearer signal that governments are willing to confront the root cause of those threats. A coalition of around 60 countries emerged from the Santa Marta summit with a shared commitment to accelerate the shift away from fossil fuels. Their work will feed directly into the voluntary energy-transition roadmap that Brazil is preparing ahead of COP30, creating a bridge between informal diplomacy and the formal UN process.
Breaking Through Longstanding Deadlocks
The Santa Marta gathering succeeded where previous UN sessions had stalled by focusing on practical cooperation rather than binding treaty language. Host countries emphasized that the outcomes would strengthen the roadmap Brazil plans to present before COP31. This approach allowed participants to discuss finance, technology transfer, and just-transition measures without triggering the usual procedural blocks inside the UNFCCC.
By keeping the conversation outside the formal negotiating track for now, the coalition avoided the familiar pattern of last-minute compromises that often dilute ambition. The result is a growing network of governments ready to align national policies with the goal of phasing down fossil fuels. Observers note that this informal momentum could prove decisive when the same issues reach the official agenda in Bonn.
Key Moments on the Road to June
June’s mid-year climate talks in Bonn will serve as the first major test of whether the Santa Marta coalition can translate its broad agreement into concrete proposals. London Climate Action Week immediately afterward offers a parallel platform for civil society and business voices to weigh in. Together these events will determine how quickly the voluntary roadmap can gain traction among the wider group of nations.
Negotiators will also confront the persistent reality that fossil fuels still lack a formal slot on the UNFCCC agenda. Without that dedicated space, progress depends on side events, bilateral meetings, and pressure from the coalition to keep the issue visible. The coming weeks will reveal whether this informal route can deliver measurable commitments before the next full conference.
What to Watch in the Negotiations and Beyond
Participants at the Bonn session will track several developments that could shape the pace of the energy transition:
- Whether the Santa Marta coalition expands its membership or secures new financial pledges.
- How Brazil incorporates feedback from Bonn into its draft roadmap.
- The extent to which major fossil-fuel producers engage constructively or remain on the sidelines.
- Signals from finance ministries on scaling up support for countries that choose to retire coal, oil, and gas assets early.
Each of these threads will influence whether the voluntary process can deliver results fast enough to match the urgency expressed by vulnerable nations.
The Human Stakes Behind the Diplomatic Calendar
Behind every negotiating session lie real-world consequences for workers, families, and ecosystems tied to fossil-fuel economies. A successful transition roadmap could unlock new jobs in renewables and efficiency while protecting those most exposed to climate shocks. Yet the absence of a formal UNFCCC mandate means that progress still hinges on political will rather than legal obligation.
As the calendar moves from Santa Marta through Bonn and onward, the test will be whether the coalition’s early momentum can survive the pressures of national interests and competing priorities. The outcome will shape not only future climate agreements but also the daily realities of communities already living with the costs of inaction.