Blaze disrupts COP30 Summit in Brazil, 13 hospitalized for smoke inhalation

In this image taken from a video provided by Kevin Munyoli, flames sweep through the pavilions at the COP30 United Nations climate summit, Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025, in Belém   -  
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Kevin Munyoli/AP

A fire briefly spread through pavilions used for U.N. climate talks in Brazil, prompting evacuations on the next-to-last day of the conference, and officials said 13 people were treated for smoke inhalation.

Organizers said the fire was brought under control in about 6 minutes. Fire officials ordered the evacuation of the entire conference site, known as COP30, and the venue remained closed for about 7 hours following the fire.

Attendees trickled back into the COP30 venue after it reopened. Some posed for pictures in the nighttime glow of the entrance signage. Others returned to rooms farther from the pavilions to resume negotiations or retrieve belongings left behind. Security staff were stationed behind metal barricades to keep people out of the pavilions, and a curtain veiled off the area that the blaze had destroyed.

Brazil's Tourism Minister Celso Sabino told journalists at the scene that the fire started near the China Pavilion, one of several pavilions set up for events on the sidelines of the climate talks. Video footage showed the blaze starting along a wall near a cluster of many of the Africa pavilions and the Climate Live Entertainment + Culture Pavilion.

The fire quickly spread to neighboring pavilions, said Samuel Rubin, one of the people in charge of the Climate Live pavilion.

The video showed huge flames in one of the pavilions, which are reinforced-canvas or fabric structures typically with three walls and a floor.

Para state Gov. Helder Barbalho told local news outlet G1 that a generator failure or a short circuit in a booth may have started the fire.

Much of the summit venue in Belem was still under construction right up until the conference opened, with exposed beams, open plywood floors, and metal-meshed corridors leading nowhere outside the convention center. During a pre-summit event, drilling and jackhammering could be heard as world leaders delivered speeches, and scores of workers in hard hats scurried around unfinished pavilions shrouded in plastic.

Gabi Andrade, a volunteer with COP30 from the host city Belem, said she has been working on accreditations at the conference for the last three weeks. Thursday was her first free afternoon, and she'd just gotten off her lunch break and was exploring the Singapore pavilion when the fire broke out.

She said she saw black smoke. A security guard grabbed her hand and led her to the exit as she cried, "Fire!"

Beneath the shock of the situation, she worried about what this would mean for Brazil's reputation as host of the talks. "It's so sad for us," she said. "We all worked so hard."

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