Dear colleagues,

Amid growing geopolitical tensions and unprecedented challenges to
multilateralism, 2025 saw both setbacks and wins in global environmental
negotiations. While shared action on climate change, biodiversity loss,
land degradation, and pollution is not moving at the speed and scale
required, some advances are cause for hope.



The latest edition of IISD Earth Negotiation Bulletin’s *State of Global
Environmental Governance*
<https://www.iisd.org/publications/report/state-global-environmental-governance-2025>
report reviews outcomes from climate change negotiations in Belém for the
30th UN Climate Change Conference (COP 30); the stymied plastic pollution
treaty negotiations; the establishment of a new dedicated science body to
inform policy-making on chemicals, waste, and pollution; and other key
efforts to address the shared environmental crises of our times.



We invite your feedback—and the feedback of your students and peers—as our
team reflects on the progress and regress of 2025's environmental
negotiating rooms, consider what takeaways should guide our efforts in
2026, and preview the negotiations to watch in the coming year.



Read the report:
https://www.iisd.org/publications/report/state-global-environmental-governance-2025



 Best regards,

Lynn

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