COP31 Presidency calls for global push on electrification and climate finance at Copenhagen Climate Ministerial
By: Nana
Appiah Acquaye
COP31 President-Designate,
Murat Kurum has called for a coordinated global effort to accelerate
electrification, scale up climate finance, and strengthen implementation of
national climate roadmaps, during the opening session of the Copenhagen Climate
Ministerial held on 20 May 2026.
In his keynote address,
Kurum said electrification has emerged as a central theme across recent
international climate engagements, including meetings in Berlin, Paris, Santa
Marta and Baku, and should now become the focus of a broader global
conversation on energy transition.

He noted that electricity
currently accounts for about 20 percent of final energy consumption globally,
stressing the need to significantly increase this share while simultaneously
decarbonising electricity generation and expanding access to clean energy
technologies across all sectors of society.
Kurum emphasized that the
COP31 Presidency’s Action Agenda will prioritise clean energy, clean cooking,
resilient cities and industrial decarbonisation as key pillars for delivering
measurable climate progress.
He highlighted ongoing
collaboration with international partners including the International Energy
Agency, the International Renewable Energy Agency and the Global Renewables
Alliance, while stressing that successful climate action requires engagement beyond
institutions to include governments, private sector actors and civil society.
The COP31
President-Designate also underscored the importance of creating inclusive
platforms under the Global Climate Action Agenda to facilitate dialogue,
trust-building and the translation of ideas into practical solutions, while
respecting the Party-driven nature of the UN climate process.
On climate finance, Kurum
reiterated the need to scale up funding for developing countries, including
through mechanisms such as the Global Implementation Accelerator and the
Baku-to-Belém Roadmap, as well as increased participation from international private-sector
actors.

He called for accountability
in delivering on the 300-billion-dollar Baku Finance Goal, urging developed
countries to clearly outline how they will meet their commitments and ensure
predictable financial support for adaptation, resilience and loss and damage.
Kurum also stressed the
importance of strengthening multilateral climate funds, including efforts to
triple funding by 2030 and secure the upcoming replenishment of the Green
Climate Fund.
He further noted the need to
anchor national roadmaps within the UN climate framework through Nationally
Determined Contributions and Biennial Transparency Reports, describing them as
essential to maintaining the integrity of the Paris Agreement system.
Concluding his address,
Kurum reiterated that climate promises must translate into action, urging
stakeholders to accelerate implementation and move from negotiation to delivery
as COP31 advances its agenda.