Blue NDC Challenge at COP30
- 22 Nov 2025
In News:
At COP30 in Belém, 17 countriesincluding France, Brazil, Belgium, Canada, and Singaporejoined the Blue NDC Challenge, signalling a global push to integrate ocean-based climate solutions into national climate plans under the Paris Agreement.
What is the Blue NDC Challenge?
- A global voluntary initiative encouraging countries to embed ocean-related mitigation and adaptation actions into their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs).
- Seeks to close the “ocean opportunity gap”, as oceansdespite covering ~70% of Earthreceive <1% of global climate finance and are underrepresented in mitigation plans.
Key Features
- Expanded Membership: Coalition now includes 17 countries, with recent entrants such as Belgium, Canada, Indonesia and Singapore.
- Ocean Taskforce: Supported by France and Brazil to assist governments in integrating ocean solutions into updated 2030 NDCs and translating commitments into policy and implementation.
- Blue Package: A coordinated action framework across five Ocean Breakthrough sectors:
- Marine conservation
- Ocean (aquatic) food systems
- Offshore renewable energy
- Shipping decarbonisation
- Coastal tourism
- Mitigation & Adaptation Focus:Recognises oceans’ potential to deliver up to ~35% of global emission reductions required for the 1.5°C target.
- Blue Carbon Pathways: Integration of mangroves, seagrasses and salt marshes into national mitigation and adaptation strategies.
Why Oceans Matter for Climate Action
- High Mitigation Potential: Offshore renewables, low-carbon shipping, and sustainable fisheries can significantly cut emissions.
- Adaptation & Resilience: Coastal ecosystems protect shorelines, support livelihoods, and enhance food security.
- Underfunded Sector: Ocean-related actions account for <1% of global climate finance, despite large co-benefits.
Global Context
- A growing majority of countries now include ocean priorities in their NDCs, but adaptation dominates, while mitigation commitments remain limited.
- Conservation and blue carbon are most common; shipping decarbonisation, offshore renewables, and low-carbon aquatic food systems are underrepresented.
Significance of the Initiative
- Mainstreams the Ocean–Climate Nexus in national climate policy.
- Mobilises Finance & Technical Support through coordinated action and partnerships.
- Links Climate Action with Development: Job creation, clean energy expansion, biodiversity protection, and coastal community resilience.
- Supports Synergy across global environmental frameworks (climate, biodiversity, sustainable development).