China has officially joined Brazil and South Africa to establish a new Global South Climate Alliance. This powerful diplomatic and negotiating bloc is aimed at fundamentally reshaping the rules governing climate finance, the structure of global carbon markets, and the mechanisms for climate technology transfers leading up to COP30 in Belém, Brazil. The alliance represents the collective interests of emerging economies, which consistently struggle with securing sufficient adaptation funding and gaining access to critical green technology needed for their clean energy transitions.
The alliance’s key priorities are focused on correcting historical imbalances in global climate action. These include advocating for a mandatory new loss-and-damage financing mechanism to provide immediate, tangible support for developing nations hit hardest by climate impacts. They are also demanding transparent technology-sharing frameworks for essential solutions like renewable energy infrastructure and climate-smart agriculture. Furthermore, the alliance intends to submit comprehensive reform proposals for the World Bank’s climate lending model to make capital more accessible and less burdened by debt.China is anticipated to be a major contributor of technology support to the alliance, leveraging its industrial capacity to supply EV infrastructure, solar manufacturing systems, and AI-based climate prediction tools. Diplomats view the formation of this unified group as a strategic move that significantly boosts China’s political capital and influence across the Global South. By consolidating the negotiating positions of these major economies, the alliance effectively reduces the long-standing dominance of G7 nations in setting the global climate agenda.



