Our live blog covering the conference on transitioning away from fossil fuels, held in Santa Marna, Colombia, from the 24th to 29th of April 2026. Chaos and confusion in the lead-up to adopting the Global Mutirao. Photo credit: Marcelino/COP30 via Flickr.

By Anders Lorenzen

A major international conference focused on accelerating the transition away from fossil fuels has opened today in Colombia, bringing together governments, industry leaders and climate advocates at a critical moment for global energy policy.

Running through to Wednesday 29 April, the summit is expected to address some of the most pressing questions facing the energy transition—from phasing out oil and gas production to scaling renewables, financing climate action and ensuring a just transition for developing economies.

The gathering comes amid growing tension between climate commitments and continued fossil fuel expansion, with recent shareholder revolts, policy shifts and market volatility highlighting the challenges of aligning economic and environmental priorities.

We’ll be providing live updates, analysis and key takeaways throughout the duration of the summit.

Latest

Saturday 25th of April 2026

16:30 GMT

Naidoo spoke as a new global scientific panel on the energy transition was launched in Santa Maria:

16:20 GMT

The former Greenpeace International Chief Executive, Kumi Naidoo, now with Fossil Fuel Treaty Initiative have laid out what he see as the clear path forward:

After 30 years of climate talks, we’re still avoiding the truth: fossil fuels = root of the crisis.In my interview with Público, I reflect on why this silence persists and how global politics continues to expose the link between fossil fuels, conflict, and instability.@fossiltreaty.bsky.social

Kumi Naidoo (@kuminaidoo.bsky.social) 2026-04-25T11:52:07.618Z

12:20 GMT

The conference in Colombia is happening in the shadow of the global energy crisis caused due to the conflict in the Middle East.

You can follow the latest developments and updates in our live blog below:

09:45 GMT

The conference which is jointly hosted by Colombia and the Netherlands have confirmed the below countries as participants, a list that could still increase:

  1. Angola
  2. Australia
  3. Austria
  4. Bangladesh
  5. Belgium
  6. Brazil
  7. Cambodia
  8. Cameroon
  9. Canada
  10. Chile
  11. Costa Rica
  12. Denmark
  13. Dominican Republic
  14. European Union
  15. Fiji
  16. Finland
  17. France
  18. Germany
  19. Ghana
  20. Guatemala
  21. Iceland
  22. Ireland
  23. Italy
  24. Jamaica
  25. Kiribati
  26. Luxembourg
  27. Maldives
  28. Marshall Islands
  29. Mauritius
  30. Mexico
  31. Mongolia
  32. Netherlands
  33. Nigeria
  34. Norway
  35. Palau
  36. Panama
  37. Papua New Guinea
  38. Philippines
  39. Portugal
  40. Senegal
  41. Singapore
  42. Slovenia
  43. Spain
  44. Sri Lanka
  45. Sweden
  46. Switzerland
  47. Trinidad and Tobago
  48. Türkiye
  49. Tuvalu
  50. United Kingdom
  51. Tanzania
  52. Uruguay
  53. Vanuatu
  54. Vietnam

09:30 GMT

While we are waiting for the first updates to come in from Colombia, over 50 countries are expected to join the discussions, in what resembles a movement that has continued to grow since it was fits announced during the closing days of COP30 last year.

Friday 24th of April 2026

23:00 GMT

The conference opening today in Santa Marta in Colombia brings together governments, international organisations and industry leaders to accelerate efforts to move the global economy away from coal, oil and gas.

It was announced in the backdrop of the COP30 summit amidst the frustration in uniting UN member countries to commit to the phasing out of fossil fuels.

While it is unlikely any agreements will be made in this first summit, but the ambition is to lay the guidelines and start to build the bridges to get commitments and build up momentum for phasing out fossil fuels.


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