COP31 is the 31st Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). It will be held in Antalya, Türkiye, from 9 to 20 November 2026.
It will include:
- COP31 under the UNFCCC
- CMP21 under the Kyoto Protocol
- CMA8 under the Paris Agreement
- SBSTA65 and SBI65 technical sessions
Host and Presidency Arrangement
COP31 became diplomatically significant because both Australia and Türkiye wanted to host the summit.
Australia wanted to host it with Pacific Island countries, highlighting climate vulnerability of small island states. Türkiye wanted to host it in Antalya, presenting itself as a bridge between developed and developing countries.
A compromise was later reached:
- Türkiye will host COP31 in Antalya
- Australia will lead the negotiation process
- A Pacific pre-COP meeting is expected to highlight Pacific climate concerns
This arrangement is unusual because the hosting and negotiation leadership roles are being shared. Reuters reported that Türkiye would host COP31 while Australia would lead negotiations, after both countries reached a formal agreement.
Why Antalya Matters
Antalya is a coastal city in Türkiye located on the Mediterranean coast.
Its selection is important because Türkiye is positioning itself as a climate diplomacy bridge between:
- Europe
- West Asia
- Mediterranean region
- developing economies
- energy-transition debates
Türkiye’s role is also sensitive because it is an emerging economy with significant energy needs and continuing fossil-fuel dependence, while also trying to expand renewable energy and climate diplomacy.
Expected Focus Areas
COP31 is expected to focus on implementation of climate commitments after COP30 and the updated 2025 round of Nationally Determined Contributions.
Important themes may include:
- climate finance for developing countries
- adaptation and loss and damage
- implementation of new NDCs
- fossil fuel transition
- renewable energy expansion
- climate resilience of small island states
- technology transfer
- carbon markets under Article 6
- just transition
Türkiye has already proposed a global target for electricity to supply 35% of world energy demand by 2035, aiming to accelerate electrification and reduce dependence on fossil fuels. The proposal is voluntary, not legally binding.
Significance for Developing Countries
COP31 will be important for developing countries because many climate negotiations now revolve around finance, equity and implementation.
Developing countries argue that they need:
- predictable climate finance
- technology transfer
- adaptation support
- loss and damage funding
- fair carbon market rules
- policy space for development
- recognition of historical responsibility
For Pacific Island countries, COP31 is especially important because Australia’s negotiation leadership is expected to keep their concerns visible, even though the summit itself will be hosted in Türkiye.
India’s Relevance
COP31 will be relevant for India because it will take place after countries submit updated climate pledges under the Paris Agreement cycle.
India’s key concerns are likely to include:
- climate finance from developed countries
- equity and common but differentiated responsibilities
- adaptation funding
- technology transfer
- carbon market rules
- energy transition without hurting development needs
- protection of policy space for coal-dependent and developing economies
India is also likely to emphasise that climate action must be linked with sustainable development, energy security and affordable finance.
Conclusion
COP31 will be held in Antalya, Türkiye, from 9–20 November 2026.
Its importance lies not only in climate negotiations, but also in the unusual diplomatic arrangement where Türkiye hosts the summit and Australia leads the negotiations.
The summit will be important for climate finance, NDC implementation, adaptation, loss and damage, energy transition and the concerns of vulnerable countries, especially Pacific Island states.



