In the Blue Zone of COP30, the Global Renewables Alliance (GRA) and the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) is hosting the Global Renewables Hub – a platform for collaboration, innovation, and delivery.
Over 40 events across two weeks will spotlight solutions and action to achieve the global target to ‘Double Down, Triple Up‘ by 2030. Bringing together governments, industry, investors, and civil society, the Hub is turning ambition into implementation.
President of Palau
Commissioner for Energy and Housing at European Commission
Minister of Sustainable Development, Environment and Climate Action and Constituency Empowerment, Government of St Kitts and Nevis
Minister of Environment and Sustainable Development, Director General at National Environmental Licensing Authority, Colombia
Director-General of the International Renewable Energy Agency
Vice Chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
Assistant Minister of Climate Change and Energy, Australia
Director General for Energy of the European Commission (DG ENER)
Director of leading global climate diplomacy and policy initiatives (UNFCCC)
CEO of the Global Renewables Alliance
CEO at the Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC)
Vice President at European Investment Bank
Leading companies active in Brazil supporting COP30 Energy Envoy Elbia Gannoum and advising on national priorities to scale up renewables and accelerate the transition
Coalition of leading companies and industry associations committed to fast-tracking renewable energy implementation and supporting ambitious outcomes at COP30
Private sector call to action outlining seven key measures for governments to accelerate renewable energy deployment and support the COP30 Action Agenda
At the Pre-COP Ministerial in Brasília, the Global Renewables Alliance brought energy and ambition to the table – rallying leaders from Brazil and beyond behind the Jobs, Security, Growth campaign, amplifying the renewables message in the media, and unveiling a milestone report to unlock the renewables era.
In partnership with the COP30 Presidency and the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), GRA launched a joint report tracking global progress towards the energy goals set at COP28. The findings spotlight what’s working, what’s not, and what needs to happen next to close the gap – setting a clear course for COP30.
At the GRA-IRENA 3xRenewables reception, government, industry, and international partners joined forces to drive collaboration ahead of the climate summit – strengthening alliances, sharing solutions, and showcasing Brazil’s growing leadership in renewable energy.
On June 5, the Global Renewables Alliance (GRA) convened leading voices from Brazil’s renewable energy sector and international investors to launch a bold new platform ahead of COP30, including:
Brazil, a global renewable powerhouse and host of COP30, is uniquely positioned to drive the energy transition both domestically and internationally. This launch marks the beginning of a coordinated effort to align corporate ambition, policy action, and public engagement on the road to Belém and to showcase a unified private sector voice calling for ambitious, actionable outcomes at COP30.
The launch was welcomed by Ambassador André Corrêa do Lago, COP30 President, Thiago Barral, National Secretary of Energy Transition, Ministry of Mines and Energy, Francesco La Camera, Director-General, International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), Rodrigo Rollemberg, Secretary of Green Economy, Decarbonisation and Bio Industry, MDIC, and Elbia Gannoum, Special Envoy for Energy to COP30 and President of the Brazilian Wind Energy Association (ABEEólica).
Chaired by Elbia Gannoum, Energy Envoy to the COP30 Presidency, the Brazilian Renewable Energy Mobilisation Committee convenes CEOs and senior executives from leading companies and industry associations active in Brazil. The committee identifies solutions that strengthen the private sector’s role in international climate negotiations and provides strategic, technical and policy input to the COP30 Presidency and the Brazilian government.