COP30: Key Demands for the Western Balkans and Türkiye

CAN Europe Positions
The Western Balkans must use the new NDC cycle to set ambition high enough to reach decarbonisation by 2050 including economy-wide absolute targets. NDCs should go beyond mitigation, guiding sustainable development, national investment, and just transition pathways. They must be coherent, transparent, and actionable, aligned with the Global Stocktake and the 1.5°C goal.
Coal still dominates the region’s energy mix. Governments must present credible energy transition plans to ensure net-zero electricity generation by 2040 – and stop subsidising new coal, oil, or gas projects. Public funds should be redirected to renewables, energy efficiency, and retraining programs, demonstrating that climate ambition is matched by tangible action.
Climate, energy, and development planning must be coherent and aligned. NDCs 3.0 offer a 10 year perspective and must connect with National Energy and Climate Plans (NECPs) and long-term climate strategies, mapping clear, credible pathways for decarbonisation across all sectors. Coherence ensures ambition is translated into implementable policies.
Western Balkans are a climate and other natural hazard hotspot within Europe, so NDCs must deliver ambition on adaptation and resilience. Countries should ensure coherence with National Adaptation Plans where applicable or address the lack of NAPs and other adaptation strategies. Given the interconnected nature of the region’s climate and landscape, NDCs should reflect a regional adaptation perspective.
A credible NDC process must be inclusive, participatory, and transparent. Governments must engage women, youth, and vulnerable groups, protect environmental defenders, and embed gender and social equity in all policies. Transparent tracking and reporting ensures that high ambition is matched by accountability and progress. The energy transition must work for and with citizens. Credible NDCs should embed citizen-driven solutions, such as community and citizen energy projects, as a central pillar.
Given the limited domestic resources and investment needs, the Western Balkan Six should provide an assessment of the economic and financial costs and benefits of achieving the NDCs targets. They need to present financing strategies to meet the targets and identify potential domestic funding sources, or accompanying policy reforms. Western Balkans NDCs should also plan the access to international climate finance.
Türkiye must adopt 2035 emission reduction targets aligned with the 1.5°C goal and its 2053 net-zero pathway. Targets should be transparent, realistic, and sector-specific, covering energy, transport, industry, agriculture, and forestry.
Türkiye must announce coal phase-out dates for electricity and industry, end fossil fuel subsidies by 2030, and halt new coal, gas, and oil investments. Public funds should be redirected to renewables, energy efficiency, and grid upgrades, including the capacity to integrate 120 GW of wind and solar energy.
A Just Transition Mechanism must be established by 2030 to support workers, households, and vulnerable communities. Measures should include labour transition in fossil fuel sectors, green local economies, energy poverty reduction, and policies ensuring no one is left behind in the shift to a low-carbon economy.
Türkiye’s NDC must include climate adaptation measures, such as improving urban water retention, flood and drought management, heatwave mitigation, and ecosystem-based solutions. Health, agriculture, and forestry measures should be quantifiable and monitored, ensuring the country is prepared for climate impacts that are already occurring.
The NDC must set ambitious nature-based targets, including protecting 30 per cent of land and marine areas, restoring degraded ecosystems, and promoting agro ecology and regenerative agriculture. Forest management and wildfire preparedness must be strengthened with updated inventories, training, and equipment, ensuring ecosystems are resilient to climate change.
The NDC must include clear finance mechanisms to ensure access for vulnerable communities, as well as for businesses with transparent management of carbon pricing revenues. Regulations must support corporate sustainability disclosure, phase out fossil fuel subsidies, and ensure funding supports both mitigation and adaptation priorities.