Email digest for the Global Conservation Forum (ConsDistList) egroup.
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 1. Blog: Highlights from COP30 – Culture Check-in

 2. Seminar: Lichens, Biofilms, and Stone

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1.From: adrian hernandez
 Posted: Tuesday February 17, 2026  4:27 AM
 Subject: Blog: Highlights from COP30 – Culture Check-in
 Message: 

February 17, 2026

Highlights from COP30 – Culture Check-in

We are off to another busy year and continue to look back on global climate 
conversations. We recognize that the news moves at full speed, given the many 
local and global changes taking place. In the frenzy, you may have missed 
happenings at COP30, which took place November 10 to 21, 2025, in Belém, 
Brazil. In recent years, many have written off the COP (Conference of the 
Parties), since it has been inundated with fossil fuel lobbyists and inaction 
from world leadership. However, culture has demanded a seat at the table and is 
starting to be heard. We'll share some big wins and some disappointments from 
the proceedings to catch up on how the convention progressed.

Wins for Culture

Last year, visitors witnessed the first inclusion of culture in the COP Action 
Agenda, the part of the COP framework that mobilizes voluntary action from 
civil society, businesses, cities, states, and countries. An open letter 
<https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/news/2025/open-letter-to-cop30-use-storytelling-to-fight-climate-crisis?ref=urgecollective.com>
 was introduced for the creative arts to be meaningfully involved in climate 
policy, representing an overdue acknowledgement of how cultural work shapes 
beliefs and behaviors. The letter's call to action begins "We, the undersigned, 
call for the United Nations and its member states to meaningfully involve the 
creative arts in developing climate change policy and action in the following 
ways," listing ways that governments can invest in better futures through 
creative means. This year has also seen the first-ever Culture Day as part of 
its themed days, signaling that culture is moving from margin to mainstream.

Ahead of COP30 were two major gatherings in other Brazilian cities: the Culture 
and Climate Summit held in Rio and the Global Artivism conference in Salvador. 
Julie's Bicycle introduced We Make Tomorrow (WMT), "a global campaign bringing 
together artists and artivists, creatives, designers, cultural knowledge and 
heritage keepers, united in climate action." According to Julie's Bicycle, a 
key aim of WMT is to "build culture into the Global Stocktake (GST), the 
five-yearly process that assesses global progress on climate action." Culture 
would be involved as a core part of closing the emissions gap, "enabling a just 
transition, and safeguarding heritage to sustain thriving communities."

Indigenous Representation

This year marked the largest-ever participation of Indigenous Peoples in COP 
history, with over 3,000 Indigenous Peoples' representatives. Therefore, it was 
branded as the "Indigenous COP," as it aimed to highlight the guardians of 
biodiversity. However, a disappointingly low number of secured passes, only 
360, were provided to access the main negotiating zone, compared to 1,600 
delegates linked to the fossil fuel industry. Indigenous groups were unable to 
vote or attend closed-door meetings. Indigenous delegates were given individual 
tickets to enter the multilateral spaces, "only to be placed last on the list 
and told we could speak only if there's time." The irony of hosting a 
conference in the Amazon that cost hundreds of millions of dollars in a region 
where many still lack basic amenities is not lost on the public.

However, there is positive movement among Pacific Island nations. In mid-July 
2025, The International Court of Justice (ICJ) issued a landmark ruling that 
climate harm violates international law. This decision opens the door for 
"countries like Vanuatu to seek reparations from some of the world's biggest 
polluters." Island nations have had to flee their traditional lands due to 
landslides and rising seas and have filed a case alongside 130 other countries 
to discuss legal obligations to reparations. The Pacific advocates who were at 
COP30 are demanding global leaders to follow the ICJ's ruling by phasing out 
fossil fuels and funding climate disaster recovery projects. Many are also 
calling for Indigenous peoples and traditional ecological knowledge to be 
included in climate decision-making and are pushing back on efforts to 
sacrifice Pacific seabeds for lucrative transition mineral mining operations. 
They argue the next COP should be held in Australia, where they hope to better
 convey how climate change is impacting their lands and waters.

Notable Commitments for a Just Transition

The launch of the Tropical Forest Forever (TFF) fund aims to curb deforestation 
by rewarding countries that keep their forests intact, with an initial 
investment of $5.5 billion. The governor of the state of Pará, where Belém is 
located, committed to tagging all 20 million cattle in the region to track 
deforestation. South Korea operates the world's seventh-largest fleet of coal 
plants. At COP30, it committed to closing all 40 plants by 2040 and build no 
new unabated plants. Colombia and the Netherlands announced the first 
International Conference on the Just Transition Away from Fossil Fuels, to be 
held in Colombia in April 2026.

Disaster at COP

On Thursday November 20th, the second to last day of COP30, a fire broke out 
inside the convention hall, prompting an evacuation of the blue zone and 
pausing delegates' negotiations. Climate journalist Kathrine Hayhoe reported 
that the fire was brought under control within minutes and no one was seriously 
injured. She also quoted climate scientist Michael Mann who described the fire 
"a disturbingly apt metaphor." In addition, the conference venue suffered leaks 
from heavy rainfall and faulty air conditioning, a struggle that will only get 
worse as the planet continues to warm.

A Disappointing End

The same day of the fire, at least 29 nations supporting a phase-out of fossil 
fuels at the climate summit lit another flame by sending a letter to the 
Brazilian COP presidency threatening to block any agreement that did not 
include such a commitment. The letter demanded that the roadmap be included in 
the outcome of the talks. Quoted in The Guardian, Irene Vélez Torres, the 
environment minister of Colombia noted, "Adopting a weak or empty text would 
signal a failure of climate multilateralism and a failure to future 
generations, who deserve a livable planet." The Guardian reports that "for the 
second year in a row, the United Nations climate conference ended without a 
consensus declaration that tackling global warming requires transitioning away 
from fossil fuels." 

Where We Stand

Scientists report that exceeding 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial 
temperature has become inevitable. News in November of a 2.6°C warming 
trajectory should prompt immediate action, but it also offers an opportunity to 
imagine a new reality for society. Despite the many disappointments such as 
closing off of spaces where Indigenous voices belong, painful negotiations, and 
the constant threat of systems collapse, evident by the many dumpster fires 
throughout this COP, there is hope. Artists and activists are mobilizing, 
speaking their truths and demanding action. Where art and culture can 
proliferate, it will be a creative force for environmental justice.


 

To learn about what the Sustainability Committee has going on, check out the 
previous blog post 
<https://www.culturalheritage.org/blogs/adrian-hernandez/2025/12/22/sustainability-news-in-heritage-conservation-commi>,
 sent in December.


 




Justine Wuebold, Co-Chair Sustainability Committee




 

Reference Articles and Webpages:

"Culture at COP," (2026) UNESCO: 
https://www.unesco.org/en/articles/culture-cop30 
<https://www.unesco.org/en/articles/culture-cop30>

"We Make Tomorrow," (2025): https://www.wemaketomorrow.global/ 
<https://www.wemaketomorrow.global/>

"A Tale of Two COPs," (2025) Julie's Bicycle: 
https://juliesbicycle.org/news/coe p30-a-tale-of-two-cops/ 
<https://juliesbicycle.org/news/coe%20p30-a-tale-of-two-cops/>

"Cop30: five reasons the UN climate conference failed to deliver on its 
'people's summit' promise," (2025) The Conversation: 
https://theconversation.com/cop30-five-reasons-the-un-climate-conference-failed-to-deliver-on-its-peoples-summit-promise-269750
 
<https://theconversation.com/cop30-five-reasons-the-un-climate-conference-failed-to-deliver-on-its-peoples-summit-promise-269750>

"Despite Record Indigenous Presence at Brazil COP30 Climate Summit Sparks 
Frustration Over Exclusion," (2025) Cultural Survival: 
https://cs.org/news/despite-record-indigenous-presence-brazil-cop30-climate-summit-sparks-frustration-over
 
<https://cs.org/news/despite-record-indigenous-presence-brazil-cop30-climate-summit-sparks-frustration-over>

"How the world's highest court bolstered the fight for climate reparations," 
(2025) Grist: 
https://grist.org/global-indigenous-affairs-desk/the-worlds-highest-court-bolstered-the-fight-for-climate-reparations/
 
<https://grist.org/global-indigenous-affairs-desk/the-worlds-highest-court-bolstered-the-fight-for-climate-reparations/>

"What COP30 got right... and what it didn't," (2025) Kathrine Hayhoe: 
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/what-cop30-got-right-didnt-katharine-hayhoe-iiahc/
 
<https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/what-cop30-got-right-didnt-katharine-hayhoe-iiahc/>

"Cop30 draft text omits mention of fossil fuel phase-out roadmap," (2025) The 
Guardian: 
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/nov/21/cop30-countries-threaten-block-resolution-unless-roadmap-to-fossil-fuel-phase-out
 
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/nov/21/cop30-countries-threaten-block-resolution-unless-roadmap-to-fossil-fuel-phase-out>

"New climate pledges only slightly lower dangerous global warming projections," 
(2025) UN Environment Programme: 
https://www.unep.org/news-and-stories/press-release/new-climate-pledges-only-slightly-lower-dangerous-global-warming
 
<https://www.unep.org/news-and-stories/press-release/new-climate-pledges-only-slightly-lower-dangerous-global-warming>




#SustainabilityCommittee 
<https://www.culturalheritage.org/search?s=tags%3A%22Sustainability 
Committee%22&executesearch=true> #sustainability 
<https://www.culturalheritage.org/search?s=tags%3A%22sustainability%22&executesearch=true>
 #Sustainability 
<https://www.culturalheritage.org/search?s=%23Sustainability&executesearch=true>

This post can be referenced on our Sustainability Forum blog here:

https://www.culturalheritage.org/blogs/adrian-hernandez/2026/02/17/highlights-from-cop30-culture-check-in




------------------------------
adrian hernandez
Sustainability Committee Outreach Officer
------------------------------


2.From: Judy Jacob
 Posted: Monday February 16, 2026  3:15 PM
 Subject: Seminar: Lichens, Biofilms, and Stone
 Message: Seminar: Lichens, Biofilms, and Stone

Eagle Hill Institute

Steuben, Maine

June 28 - July 4, 2026

 

Maine's rocky shorelines and inland outcroppings are rich with diverse lichen 
and biofilm covers. Buildings and structures made with granite from local 
quarries host lichens and biofilms, as do grave markers of granite, marble, 
slate, and sandstone from other New England states and foreign countries. In 
this seminar, we will study the physical, chemical, and ecological 
relationships between lichens, biofilms, and stone. 

 

www.eaglehill.us/programs/sems-weeklong/flyers-weeklong-pdfs/2026-JacobSchmull.pdf
 
<http://www.eaglehill.us/programs/sems-weeklong/flyers-weeklong-pdfs/2026-JacobSchmull.pdf>

 

AIC members receive a 10% discount

 

For more details, contact:

Judy Jacob: [email protected] 

Eagle Hill Institute: [email protected]


------------------------------
Judy Jacob
Senior Conservator, retired
National Park Service
------------------------------




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