COP30 in Belém: The Cost of "Misgovernance" and the Displeasure of Blocked Sustainable Engineering
- Elétrica Sustentável Automatizada

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The 30th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP30), hosted in Belém, Pará, should have been a beacon of environmental progress and a testament to Brazil's capacity to lead the global debate. Instead, the event was marked by controversial spending, logistical disorganization, and a profound displeasure among both the general public and industry professionals. For many, the acronym COP30 was quickly replaced by the pejorative term "Flop30."

The Financial Engineering of Waste: Excessive Spending and Social Contrast
One of the most sensitive and criticized aspects of COP30's organization was the financial management of the preparations. For the Engineering field, which deals with resource optimization and project efficiency, the figures presented were, at the very least, alarming.
Main Criticisms:
Questionable Infrastructure: Millions were invested in urban infrastructure works and temporary installations. While improvements to the city's road network and water system are fundamental, the speed, quality, and, above all, the transparency of some bids raised serious doubts. Projects that should have been models of Sustainable Engineering were perceived as mere short-term solutions for a 15-day event, with the potential for waste after the conference ended.
Logistics and Luxury: Spending on delegation reception, security, and accommodation sharply contrasted with the socioeconomic reality of the Pará state capital. The luxury of certain temporary structures and the hiring of services at high prices fueled the perception that the focus was not just on the climate agenda, but on a high-cost political-media spectacle.
The core of the engineering criticism here is the lack of long-term planning. Large investments should be conceived as urban sustainability legacies—perennial works that benefit the local community and incorporate low-carbon solutions—not as ephemeral expenses for an elite event.
The Displeasure of Blocked Sustainable Engineering
The feeling of displeasure and frustration was particularly strong among professionals and academics in Environmental and Sustainable Engineering. The expectation was that COP30 would be a showcase for Brazilian green engineering solutions, such as bioeconomy technologies, waste management in sensitive biomes, and resilient infrastructure.
The Technicians' Frustration:
Focus on Politics, Not Technicality: Instead of sessions focused on material innovation, carbon mitigation techniques, and climate adaptation projects, the event was dominated by political stalemates and empty rhetoric. Technology and science—the pillars of engineering—took a back seat, obscured by the "misgovernance" of agendas and priorities.
Exclusion of the Technical Community: Many engineers, architects, and urban planners in the region felt marginalized from the planning process. The centralized management model for the works and the conference ignored the essential local know-how needed to ensure that investments were truly adapted to the Amazon biome and the needs of the population. The result is the feeling that Sustainable Engineering was blocked by bureaucracy and political inefficiency.

The Voice of the Street: Protests and the Legitimacy Crisis
Dissatisfaction with the event's management and the perception of a COP disconnected from reality resulted in significant protests.
The Catalyst for Demonstrations:
Indigenous and Local Protests: Indigenous groups, riverine communities, and traditional communities—who should have been the heart of the Amazon-hosted event—protested against the slow pace of land demarcation, the invasion of their territories, and the lack of effective participation in decision-making. Their voices, which represent the wisdom of co-existence engineering with the biome, were often suppressed.
Logistical and Social Criticism: Beyond the central environmental themes, the protests also addressed the misallocation of public resources. The population criticized the use of large sums of money for the event, while basic services like health, sanitation, and education remained precarious. The COP stage, which should have been a symbol of unity, became a catalyst for criticism of "misgovernance" in different spheres.

What Does "Flop30" Mean?
The term "Flop30" emerged on social media and in the press, solidifying the perception of failure on multiple levels.
Aspect | Definition | Implication |
Etymology | A portmanteau of "COP30" and the English word "flop," meaning failure, fiasco, or lack of success. | Signals a generalized breakdown of expectations. |
Connotation | Encompasses the failure to reach ambitious agreements, poor logistical management, lack of transparency in spending, and the clash between rhetoric and execution. | Symbolizes the frustration with the inability to use the event to drive a real legacy of sustainable development and efficient engineering in Belém. |
The Legacy That Cannot Be Wasted
COP30 in Belém served as a painful case study for the Engineering field. It exposed how administrative incompetence and "misgovernance" can block the potential of Sustainable Engineering projects.

The real challenge now is not just accounting for the spending, but ensuring that the post-conference legacy is not just a set of superficial works. Engineering has the crucial role of overseeing and ensuring that invested resources generate lasting socio-environmental return. It is time to transform the "Flop30" frustration into a demand for rigorous technical planning, transparency, and a real commitment to the sustainable infrastructure that the Amazon and Brazil deserve.
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