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  • For Brazilians, the barriers to COP30 participation are overwhelming

For Brazilians, the barriers to COP30 participation are overwhelming

11 August 2025

We are witnessing a hosting vs. participating disconnect, as young Brazilians are being priced out of COP30. By Júlia Gouveia, Climate Change and Emergencies Specialist, Plan International Brazil.

A sun setting over tree tops.
Sun setting over hills and Amazon rainforest in Maranhao, north-eastern Brazil. © Plan International  

When I first learned that the 30th United Nations Climate Change Conference, or COP30, would be held in Brazil, in the heart of the Amazon, I was hopeful. After years of following climate negotiations from a distance, this felt like a moment where young people like me — and the girls I work with —might finally have a seat at the table.

But just months before the event, the barriers to participation are overwhelming. For most young people, even those who live in Brazil, getting to Belém, the COP30 host city, feels nearly impossible. It’s not for lack of interest or experience. It’s because of cost, logistics, and a lack of meaningful access to decision-making spaces.

As a young Brazilian woman working directly with girls and traditional communities affected by climate crises, I see the effects of exclusion every day.
While droughts, floods, displacement, and school disruptions are part of daily life for the young people I work with in Brazil, the systems in place to address the climate crisis still don’t make room for their voices. They know exactly what’s at stake as they are already facing this crisis — and they have ideas on how to adapt, which they could share if only they had a seat at the table.

“There’s still time to make COP30 more inclusive — but it requires urgent action.”

Júlia Gouveia

The real cost of ‘inclusion’

For many young climate advocates across Brazil, COP30 was meant to be a turning point — a chance to participate in a major climate summit without needing a passport or a major donor behind them. Hotel prices have surged since the announcement, with some rooms now listed at starting prices of $2,000 and above. Even budget hostels that once charged $15 are now asking for hundreds — often with concerns about basic safety standards.

Accommodation offers for youth groups also often involve shared dorms with multiple beds, which raises serious safety and security concerns, especially for girls and young women. Meanwhile, the process for securing accreditation remains opaque and limited. Even if you can physically get to Belém, there’s no guarantee you’ll get through the gates.

A local summit with global barriers

Hosting COP30 in Brazil should have been an opportunity to break down barriers to participation —especially for Indigenous youth, Afro-descendant communities, and girls whose lives are already profoundly impacted by the climate crisis. Instead, they are being priced out. This isn’t just a matter of fairness. It undermines the legitimacy of the summit and weakens the decisions that will emerge from it.

Participation from affected communities isn’t a symbolic gesture; it’s a practical necessity. If girls and young people aren’t in the room, the solutions being proposed will fail to reflect their realities.

“If girls and young people aren’t in the room, the solutions being proposed will fail to reflect their realities.”

Júlia Gouveia

What equitable participation at COP30 really looks like

There’s still time to make COP30 more inclusive — but it requires urgent action. Governments, donors, and the institutions running the summit need to act now to remove the financial and structural barriers. That means funding safe and accessible accommodation, especially for young women and girls. It means offering subsidised travel for Brazilian youth and delegates from low-income countries.

It also means simplifying the accreditation process so that grassroots groups and youth-led movements can attend without unnecessary bureaucracy. And above all, it means ensuring these young people aren’t just visible — they are included in the core decision-making spaces that shape global climate policy.

Climate justice means shared power

Organising a global summit is complex — especially in regions with limited infrastructure. But complexity should not be an excuse for exclusion. Equity is not a detail to be addressed at the end of the planning process. It must be designed into the process from the start.

It is urgent that governments, international institutions, and COP organisers take action to ensure: safe and affordable accommodation, with financial support for those unable to pay; mobility programmes and subsidised flights for Brazilian youth and for delegates from the most threatened and socioeconomically vulnerable countries; broad and fair access to U.N. credentials for grassroots organisations, youth-led groups, and representatives of traditional peoples and local communities; and real spaces for listening, influence, and decision-making, with active participation from girls, youth, and community leaders.

To address this issue specifically for COP30, the presidency could implement a set of urgent measures aimed at ensuring equitable access. First, it could temporarily regulate maximum hotel prices by introducing emergency price control mechanisms based on Brazil’s Consumer Protection Code and economic emergency legislation. This would involve setting a price ceiling for hotels and guesthouses officially registered to operate during the summit, using the United Nations Daily Subsistence Allowance as a benchmark to ensure fair and reasonable pricing.

“Complexity should not be an excuse for exclusion.”

Júlia Gouveia

In addition, the government could subsidise domestic travel for civil society delegations by establishing a public emergency fund to cover travel expenses for Brazilian participants. This fund should prioritise youth, Indigenous peoples, Quilombola communities, women, and human rights defenders, who are often excluded due to financial constraints. The presidency should also negotiate social fare agreements with major airlines, encouraging them to offer reduced or capped fares for flights to Belém between October and December. These measures would help prevent economic barriers to participation.

Also, to guarantee transparency and accountability, the government could introduce formal reporting mechanisms to identify and address cases of economic exploitation or price gouging. These mechanisms would ensure that service providers uphold the public interest and respect the principles of fairness and accessibility in the context of a globally significant climate summit.

The Amazon is one of the most critical ecosystems on the planet. The people who live there —including youth and girls — are some of the most knowledgeable and resilient players in the climate space. If they are not meaningfully included in COP30, the world will miss a vital opportunity to learn from them, and to act in partnership rather than paternalism.

COP30 still has the potential to be a turning point. But only if it opens the doors to the people whose futures are most at stake.

Categories: Emergencies, Youth empowerment Tags: Activism, Civic engagement, Climate change, Climate change activism, girls' leadership

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Power in our hands: Youth driving humanitarian change

Dear Plan International leaders, humanitarians and colleagues,

As we mark International Youth Day and World Humanitarian Day this month, we speak not as passive recipients of aid, but as first responders, innovators and leaders in humanitarian action.

The theme Youth Participation in Humanitarian Action is not a token gesture. It is a demand for transformation. It is a call to recognise, respect and resource the leadership of young people in shaping humanitarian responses that are just, inclusive and effective. 

On 7 August, young voices from across the globe came together in a powerful webinar to share lived experiences, bold ideas and urgent calls to action. We are writing this letter to amplify those voices and ensure they echo far beyond the event. 

What’s wrong with the current system? 

Too often, youth are tokenised, sidelined or invited into spaces without power. Young people are often excluded from decision-making, underfunded and given superficial roles in humanitarian spaces.

We face systemic barriers, especially those in rural areas, girls and young women, youth with disabilities and marginalised communities. Yet, we continue to lead, respond, and rebuild—often without recognition or support. Our lived experiences are undervalued and our innovations are overlooked. This must change. 

Our vision for humanitarian action 

We envision a system where: 

  • Youth-led initiatives are funded directly, with flexible compliance requirements. 
  • Young people chair and facilitate high-level events, not just attend them. 
  • Protection mechanisms ensure safe and meaningful participation. 
  • Girls and young women’s leadership is prioritised and supported. 
  • Youth from rural areas are actively included and represented. 
  • Training, mentorship and networking empower youth to build careers in humanitarian work. 
  • Technology and local platforms bridge gaps in access and amplify diverse voices. 

Our demands 

We call on Plan International to: 

  1. Invest in youth-led responses with flexible, sustained funding. 
  2. Include youth in decision-making platforms at all levels. 
  3. Create safe spaces for youth participation, especially for those with disabilities. 
  4. Expand engagement to rural areas and underrepresented groups. 
  5. Establish youth volunteering programmes that build skills and careers. 
  6. Support mentorship and education programmes tailored to humanitarian work. 
  7. Commit to accountability mechanisms that track youth inclusion and impact. 
  8. Engage youth from the start in design, implementation and evaluation. 
  9. Ensure visibility and access to global platforms. 

These actions must begin now, not tomorrow. 

Our message is clear 

  • More than being just beneficiaries, youth must be actively engaged and represented in leadership, decision-making and entrepreneurship. 
  • When young people are meaningfully involved in humanitarian work, they become powerful agents of recovery and economic empowerment. 
  • We are not waiting for permission. We are already responding. Now it’s time for the system to catch up. 
  • Our involvement is not just about participation; it is a testament to innovation.   
  • Nothing for us without us, our globe is being shaped by young people. 
  • Investing in our skills and innovative solutions will unequivocally lead to successful social transformation. 

We urge you to act now. Partner with us, fund us and stand beside us, not behind us.

Prepared by: 

Wedasemariam Telahune and panelists of World Humanitarian Day & International Youth Day: Meaningful Youth Participation in Humanitarian Settings Webinar

Signed by: 

Global Young Influencers Group

Nhial Jock

Hamdiatu Batieha Alhassan