It was an intense day at the 2026 June Climate Meetings, as the Chairs of the Subsidiary Bodies (SBs) had given a hard deadline for negotiations on a number of agenda items to conclude, with no space to accommodate additional sessions the next day.
Want to dig deeper into today's talks? Read the full Earth Negotiations Bulletin daily report.
On many issues, including support for developing country reporting, delegates did not manage to sort out remaining divergences. As a result, they could not even agree on procedural conclusions that forward some form of text to serve as a basis for discussions at the next session. In essence, this means much of the progress achieved in Bonn is lost and discussions at the November session in Türkiye will start with a broad exchange and repetition of views—thus “wasting valuable negotiation time,” as many pointed out.
Discussions on the Global Goal on Adaptation, which many view as a critical topic, proved especially heated. Delegates refused to further engage on the basis of the Co-Facilitators’ latest text, with developed and developing countries disagreeing on finance-related references. The Co-Facilitators will consult the SB Chairs on the way forward.
On other issues, delegates will have another chance to make progress on the penultimate day of the meeting. These include:
- the mitigation work programme;
- research and systematic observation;
- just transition;
- capacity-building; and
- arrangements for intergovernmental meetings.
To receive free coverage of global environmental events delivered to your inbox, subscribe to the ENB Update newsletter.
All ENB photos are free to use with attribution. For SB64 please use: Photo by IISD/ENB - Kiara Worth
Dialogue on the Global Stocktake informing Nationally Determined Contributions
Civil Society Actions
Members of civil society demonstrate in the corridors, calling for more finance to address loss and damage and to 'make rich polluters pay'
Members of civil society raise awareness about the plight of environmental defenders, calling to 'free them all'