IDH at COP30

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The 30th UN climate conference will take place from 10-21 November 2025 in Belém, Brazil.

It will bring together world leaders, non-governmental organisations, and civil society to discuss priority actions to tackle climate change. 

To inspire change, IDH, together with its partners, will share, during different events and meetings, existing best-practice programs on climate adaptation and mitigation from commodity sectors around the world. 

Examples include:

Brazil beef

IDH has been working in Brazil to promote the sustainable use of land, fostering the production of deforestation-free food crops, initiatives for the restoration of degraded areas and the inclusion of smallholders in value chains. Through a landscape strategy in different regions of Brazil, IDH is bringing together actors from the government, civil society, the private and productive sectors. Allied to this is a program focused on transforming the livestock chain with results in territorial sustainability, business practices at sector level and innovation at farm level.  

Vietnam coffee & spices

 A decade-long effort has created a more resilient landscape that scales regenerative agriculture, protects forests, and delivers measurable and EUDR compliant carbon reductions across hundreds of thousands of farms. This working model is already inspiring replication in India, Indonesia and Uganda.   

Colombia coffee

Since 2020, this multistakeholder landscape approach in Colombia’s largest coffee-producing region has successfully set joint long-term commitments on sustainable production, environmental protection, and social inclusion. In 2025, an additional study has been conducted to operationalise a supply shed insetting approach that channels climate finance directly into coffee-producing landscapes.  

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India cotton & food crops

 The Regenerative Production Landscape (RPL) Collaborative is an innovative jurisdictional model being implemented in Madhya Pradesh, India to foster agricultural ecosystems that conserve and enhance natural resources and build community resilience whilst enabling businesses to source responsibly. 

Uganda coffee

Building capacity for compliance in the coffee sector. In 2024, IDH collaborated with key partners in the Ugandan coffee industry to prepare for compliance. Partnering with the Uganda Coffee Development Authority and Café Africa, IDH helped design a national action plan aligned with EUDR and CSDDD requirements. Efforts include awareness campaigns and the integration of advanced traceability technology into existing farmer networks, such as the Uganda Coffee Farmers Alliance (UCFA).  

Malaysia palm oil

IDH is working in collaboration with the Ministry of Plantation and Commodities and the Malaysian Palm Oil Board to meet EUDR requirements. In 2024, a program was piloted to build mapping efforts and improve traceability for smallholders through the National Initiatives for Sustainable and Climate-smart Oil Palm Smallholders. Leveraging the mandatory Malaysian Sustainable Palm Oil (MSPO) certification framework, the project works towards building smallholder inclusion models with assurance by MSPO on deforestation and legality compliance at a landscape level. Once successfully piloted, the project aims to expand the model to all 162 Sustainable Palm Oil Clusters managed by the Malaysian Palm Oil Board nationwide, ensuring long-term compliance and resilience in the palm oil sector. 

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Where are we?

10 November - Solving the decarbonisation challenge: Collective Action for decarbonisation of commodity supply chains  

  • 10 November, 11h20 - 12h35
  • AgriZone; Auditório A2 | Auditorium A2  
  • No badge zone, free entry

Climate change is already reshaping many landscapes. For example, up to 50% of suitable coffee land could be lost by 2050 if urgent action is not taken. Brazil, home to the Amazon and one of the world’s most important agricultural regions, is projected to experience 214 more days of heat waves per year by the 2090s, threatening production and livelihoods.

Across the tropics, the consequences are already visible: erratic rainfall, soil degradation, and declining yields are undermining farmer incomes and threatening supply security. For global companies, this means that climate resilience has become a business issue, not just a sustainability one. 

Companies must mainstream sustainability across every part of the value chain. Not as a cost centre, but as a foundation for long-term security, compliance, and growth. Industry leaders reaffirmed this at London Climate Action Week and more recently during New York Climate Week, highlighting several key insights that now shape how the sector approaches collective climate action.

At COP30, IDH brings this topic to the agenda. Together with coffee sector leaders to demonstrate how taking action at supply shed scale on climate adaptation and scope 3 decarbonisation can become a driver of shared prosperity and landscape resilience.   

20 November - Beyond Supply: Building value chains through landscape partnerships 

  • 20 November, 15h20 - 16h35
  • AgriZone; Auditório A1 | Auditorium A1
  • No badge zone, free entry 

Croplands and grazing lands cover a third of the earth’s land surface. A landscape approach is fundamental to sustainability and food security, as it integrates food production with the territory, local culture and environmental preservation. This approach considers not only production itself, but also the connection between food, people and the nature in which it is produced, promoting more resilient and just food systems. It is important because it recognises the complexity and interdependence of food systems, seeking solutions that integrate environmental, social and economic dimensions. 

To address challenges, several joint investments in production landscapes have been made over the last few decades, providing a model for achieving significant transformation at the landscape level through collaboration between value chains. Large companies are already committed to sustainable sourcing, but the challenges of transforming commodity production in a way that supports positive outcomes for people, nature and the climate remain. 

To inspire change, IDH, together with its partners, will share existing programs around the globe on food production under the landscapes approach, covering 18 landscapes in 11 countries across 3 different continents. IDH’s goal is to protect and restore 5 million hectares of vulnerable landscapes by 2030 through integrated solutions to global challenges. We do this by addressing landscape degradation through local livelihoods, targeting activities in producing countries as well as at the global market level. 

During the session, we will demonstrate how the landscape approach to food production is effective by considering the participation of diverse actors, including farmers, governments and companies. These partners are building fairer, healthier and more sustainable food systems by recognising the complexity of landscapes, seeking solutions that integrate environmental, social and economic dimensions. 

Unlocking agri-finance for climate-resilient food systems 

Climate change is disrupting food systems and threatening agribusiness resilience globally, while demand for food continues to rise. Addressing this challenge requires scaling climate-smart and inclusive agribusiness models—yet the global agri-finance gap remains immense, with USD 450 billion in unmet financing needs for smallholder farmers. 

The session aims to provide practitioners, investors, and policymakers with a clear understanding of how blended finance can unlock systemic change in food systems—translating into greater climate resilience, farmer income, and sustainable supply chains. For Brazil, this is also an opportunity to spotlight agribusiness finance approaches that can attract both private sector and donor investment. 

This panel will showcase tested approaches that mobilize private capital through innovative blended finance and catalytic partnerships. FMO and IDH will present examples such as: 

  • IDH Farmfit Fund, a €100M blended finance facility de-risking smallholder value chain investments, reaching over 1 million farmers to date.
  • LATTE Platform (IDH Colombia), which finances climate-resilient coffee production through fintech and ecosystem services incentives.