Letter from Azerbaijan: COP half-full, or COP half-empty?
The agreement by the parties to raise at least $300b/yr for developing countries by 2035 was derided as a betrayal by the Global South, but the UN urged pragmatism
Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, seems the right place to hold an energy summit. Ranks of nodding donkey rigs by the side of the roads, the smell of hydrocarbons in the air and the ubiquitous logo—in national colours—of state-owned oil firm SOCAR all stand testimony to the country’s long and fruitful association with the oil industry, going back to the first ever machine-drilled well in 1846. But is it the right place to stage a climate change conference, as it did with the UN’s COP29 extravaganza? That depends on whether you believe fossil fuels are the root of all environmental evil and must be removed from the global fuel mix immediately, or whether hydrocarbons will have an essential rol

Also in this section
24 July 2025
Green hydrogen developer advances mega projects in Australia and Oman as key shareholders Shell and BP remain invested
23 July 2025
Electrolysis seen as most leakage-prone production pathway as study warns of sharp increase through 2030 and beyond
22 July 2025
The gas-hungry sector is set for rapid growth, and oil majors and some of the world’s largest LNG firms are investing in ammonia production and export facilities, though much depends on regulatory support
16 July 2025
Major manufacturer cancels rollout of new hydrogen-powered vans and strengthens focus on battery electric and hybrid markets