Terence Jeyaretnam’s November roundup captures a sharp acceleration in global climate, sustainability and human-rights developments, with COP30 in Belém setting firmer expectations for Paris-aligned 2035 NDCs, just-transition integration and rising accountability, even as binding fossil-fuel phase-outs remain elusive. New science underscored escalating physical risks, from record fossil-fuel CO₂ and heat killing one person per minute, to quantified project-level harms from Scarborough gas and microplastic rain entering the water cycle. Regulatory and litigation pressures intensified: the CCPI downgraded the US, attribution science rendered climate damages increasingly foreseeable for directors, and greenwashing cases such as the JBS complaint signalled tightening enforcement. Meanwhile, corporate climate commitments showed signs of quiet retreat, and the IEA’s WEO 2025 flagged surging electrification amid uncertain oil-demand peaks. This article underscores rapidly evolving transition, liability and physical-risk exposures; the importance of scrutinising real-economy capex and emissions rather than pledges, and the growing centrality of health, justice and nature impacts in investment, governance and risk assessment.
Sustainable Finance Roundup November 2025: Transition Turning Points and Rising Accountability
This month’s sustainable-finance roundup highlights faster transition momentum, rising physical risks and a tightening focus on accountability. COP30 reinforced expectations for stronger 2035 targets, while national actions underscored diverging paths toward decarbonisation. Markets continued shifting toward clean energy and resilience, and new science made climate harms more visible. With regulatory scrutiny and litigation increasing, transition credibility and real-economy resilience are becoming core drivers of financial risk and investment decisions.
AUTHORS
Each month, we gather standout sustainable finance articles from our favourite writers. This curated selection brings together the most engaging ideas, timely analyses, and fresh perspectives published over the past month, so you can catch up on what mattered most.
Photo by Aline Massuca/COP30 on Flickr

