By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Azemedia new logo
  • Home
  • COP29
  • Opinion
  • News
    • Economy
    • Energy
    • Climate and Ecology
  • Culture
  • Diaspora
  • Interview
  • Science
  • Logistics-Transport
  • Gender
  • History
  • Defense
  • Karabakh
Aze.MediaAze.Media
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • News
  • Economy
  • Climate and Ecology
  • Energy
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Gender
  • Interview
  • Science
  • Logistics-Transport
  • History
  • Defense
  • Karabakh
  • Diaspora
  • Who we are
Follow US
© 2021 Aze.Media – Daily Digest
Aze.Media > COP29 > The Great Reset Agenda and COP29 in Baku
COP29

The Great Reset Agenda and COP29 in Baku

COP29 in Baku sparked widespread debate. Critics labeled it a failure, lamenting unmet climate finance goals, while others noted its role in deferring critical fossil fuel extraction issues to COP30. Azerbaijan's president described oil and gas as "gifts from God," triggering media backlash. Meanwhile, global elites recalibrate agendas, navigating challenges to "inclusive capitalism" and shifting narratives toward reindustrialization.

AzeMedia
By AzeMedia Published November 28, 2024 1.7k Views 15 Min Read
01jcj1xezv14k256n54eht0ntg E1732781298602 1536x840
President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev at the opening of COP29, Baku, November 10, 2024.

COP29 in Baku has concluded, and leftists of all stripes have begun lamenting that “COP29 was a failure.” Local civil society activists of a left-liberal orientation echoed this sentiment, lamenting: “Ah, we couldn’t live up to the white man’s hopes for a project of universal happiness for humanity!”

For instance, the World Socialist Website, the mouthpiece of the Fourth International Committee, writes: “COP29 ends with empty deal, as 2024 set to be warmest year on human record.” This statement is particularly ironic, given that this mantra has become the subject of ridicule and memes worldwide, with people witnessing unusually prolonged cooling this year and exposing the manipulation of temperature data by meteorological agencies in their countries.

“Was COP29 in Azerbaijan a failure?” asks the elitist Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) and concludes: “The UN climate summit in Baku, Azerbaijan, was poorly organized, fell far short of goals for climate finance, and raised doubts about the ability of the COP process to halt alarming global warming trends.”

On the other hand, India and Nigeria accused Azerbaijan’s leadership of improperly imposing a last-minute deal. Meanwhile, Canada’s Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Steven Guilbeault, described Baku’s “lack of ambition” as “deplorable.”

A Shift in Neo-Globalist Agendas

However, the truth is that the “modest results” of COP29 have nothing to do with Azerbaijan.

They are tied to an overarching agreement—a consensus reached last year between the industrial and neo-globalist segments of the world’s ruling superclass in Davos. Specifically, this consensus recognized the need to detoxify the neo-globalist reconstruction project known as “The Great Reset,” which was launched under the guise of the pandemic in June 2020. The agreement called for slowing down the woke narrative, the “new normal,” and both the green and pandemic agendas.

In essence, the entire programmatic complex of so-called “inclusive capitalism”—a new post-capitalist formation aiming to transfer all state powers to alliances of transnational corporations—has been put on hold. This is the long-standing dream of left-leaning globalist oligarchs, discussed since the 1960s on all major globalist platforms.

Thus, at this year’s January session of the World Economic Forum (WEF), which functions as the politburo of this grand reconstruction, the superclass arrived in their private jets with a pre-agreed consensus decision regarding Trump’s candidacy for the presidency and the industrialist forces supporting him.

Public and Economic Pushback

There are two primary reasons for the adjustment to the neo-globalist course.

Firstly, the public rejected the “inclusive capitalism” architects’ proposed social contract, recognizing the unsavory motives hidden beneath the positive rhetorical facade (the UN Sustainable Development Agenda) and the construction of a global totalitarian system of social credit. Some of the so-called “useful idiots” began to realize that the extraction of energy from the economy was essentially about dismantling capitalist systems.

Under these conditions, a decision was made to intensify propaganda efforts, leading to the launch of the “Great Narrative” program. By 2022, during the next WEF session, the superclass began to express concern, with speakers from the podium admitting that, unfortunately, the public was not buying into the climate agenda. They proposed shifting to Plan B with a narrative about water scarcity: “This is a more understandable and relatable issue for everyone.” Yet, this also failed.

In 2023, the WEF reported that research indicated a sharp decline in public trust in government institutions, making it impossible to build a “happy future” (happytalism) under such conditions. Finally, in 2024, the WEF launched a mitigation plan called “Rebuilding Trust,” which signaled a retreat from the madness of the so-called “new normal.”

Secondly, there is an economic reason. Despite printing trillions of currency over the past few years, the reserves proved insufficient to fully deploy the grand reconstruction project for implementing a new global system (“The Great Reset”). According to the superclass, this issue can be addressed through reindustrialization, which would allow resources to be accumulated for the next big push.

As a result of this high-level consensus, various ESG indicators collapsed like a house of cards, and transnational corporations began withdrawing from DEI sectors and obligations to fund the “new ethics.”

Simultaneously, scientists who had been banned from media and social platforms in recent years for allegedly spreading “disinformation” about pandemic mandates and management methods were now being awarded medals for their “intellectual courage.” Parliamentary investigations into the legitimacy of pandemic measures and the reasons behind ongoing excess mortality in many countries following widespread vaccination campaigns also began. Key technocratic figures were quietly retired, and, finally, the declaration was derailed during the summer of this year.

In short, the global elite decided to “restore public trust” in governmental institutions, which had plummeted to rock bottom over the past four years of reconstruction. They also aimed to accumulate resources for reindustrialization—essentially extending capitalism. The “happy future for all humanity” is now to be introduced gradually, without abrupt moves, unlike what was attempted in 2020.

It is within the context of this broader shift in global agendas that the outcomes of COP29 should be evaluated.

COP29: The Baku Perspective

The main declaration of COP29 was the “Baku Financial Goal”—a commitment by developed countries to allocate $300 billion annually to developing nations by 2035, with plans to increase this amount to $1.35 trillion through public and private funding sources. For comparison, the United States spent $4 trillion on “fighting COVID-19.” It’s also worth noting that, by some estimates, the “green transition” could cost $34 trillion.

Third-world countries, initially hoping for $2.5 trillion, had to temper their expectations and leave dissatisfied with the “insufficient” $300 billion commitment. For example, the special representative of the Marshall Islands expressed disappointment, warning that “if global warming rises to 2°C, the Marshall Islands will simply disappear underwater as sea levels continue to rise,” attempting to frighten the global public.

This raises the question: why do developing countries flock to the “green agenda” like bees to honey? Don’t they understand that the true aim of financial mechanisms like “net-zero emissions” and the “green transition” is to issue loans to third-world nations, which transnational corporations can then leverage to seize full control over these countries’ natural resources and infrastructure?

Of course, they understand. However, the “green transition” creates financial incentives for technocrats and parasites in both governmental and non-governmental sectors. It offers opportunities to secure loans, subsidies, and “aid,” to embezzle budgets, consume grants, and establish an extensive shadow—or semi-legitimate—economy.

COP summits under the aegis of the United Nations are essentially executive structures of “inclusive capitalism,” a post-capitalist socio-economic formation. Their primary goal is to empower alliances of transnational corporations with state-level authority over the ownership, control, and distribution of resources. Crucially, this includes the ability to shape societal relationships through so-called digital transformation and artificial intelligence.

The core mission of these summits is to find new ways to speculate on carbon emissions via “carbon credits” and “climate finance,” all cloaked in the rhetoric of co-opted leftist ideals.

In this context, Baku played its part quite successfully, as usual balancing between two dominant global agendas, maintaining communication channels with different camps, and establishing platforms within the country.

Firstly, Baku achieved what has already been called a “carbon coup”—the establishment of rules for the global carbon market. Nations were given the choice to either accept or reject an operational framework for trading and crediting carbon emissions between countries.

Secondly, nations with large energy markets backed Baku’s ambitious commitment to energy storage, aimed at a sixfold increase in global capacity by 2030.

However, neo-globalists (leftists of all stripes) lament that Baku successfully deflected the issue of fossil fuel extraction control to the next COP30 in Brazil. The Fourth International is in hysterics: “The fight against climate change, a global problem requiring global solutions, is at odds with the financial and geopolitical interests of the capitalist class… Mass deaths caused by global warming, and even greater scales of death to come, are merely the costs of doing business for this parasitic and outdated social stratum.”

One might be tempted to respond: first, address the mass deaths resulting from your so-called vaccine technologies, and then perhaps slow down the “natural disasters” induced by your climate technologies.

Amid expectations that the new administration might withdraw the United States from various neo-globalist climate negotiations and platforms, neo-globalists among COP29 participants, including U.S. climate advisor John Podesta, advocated for their favored China to take the lead in the “fight against climate change.”

We recall that in Dubai in December 2023, the president of COP28, Sultan Al Jaber (UAE Minister of Industry), stated: “Please help me, show me the roadmap for a phase-out of fossil fuel that will allow for sustainable socioeconomic development, unless you want to take the world back into caves.” He continued: “There is no science out there, or no scenario out there, that says that the phase-out of fossil fuel is what’s going to achieve 1.5C.”

There were no such bold statements at Baku’s COP29. However, for some reason, the neo-globalist media became agitated over an innocent remark by Azerbaijan’s president, who said, “Oil and gas are gifts from God.”

I once wrote that Azerbaijan could serve as a prime example for other small states of how to skillfully adopt a passive-aggressive approach. Perhaps it is no coincidence that the Shirvanshah State, located on the territory of modern Azerbaijan, managed to survive in a super-toxic neighborhood with regional powers from the 9th to the 16th century.

Aytan Gahramanova

Caspian

You Might Also Like

COP29 President on climate goals, Caspian Sea, deeper trust between countries

Parliamentary Commission: Int’l NGOs campaign against Azerbaijan, prepare biased reports

Azerbaijan supports the global environmental agenda hosting COP29

Outcomes of COP29: financial commitments and missed opportunities

COP29 host Azerbaijan faces unfair accusations

AzeMedia November 28, 2024 November 28, 2024

New articles

F641cc3e ee8f 4ec0 be97 73cf3910fcb2
Azerbaijan between Türkiye, Iran, and Israel: strategic balance in a changing regional environment
Opinion March 7, 2026
Photo 2026 03 06 21 43
Azerbaijan says it foiled Iranian terror attacks on synagogue, Israeli embassy
News March 7, 2026
Iran war us israel
The price of a strategic miscalculation: Tehran is forcing its neighbors to unite against it
Opinion March 6, 2026
Posolstvo AZ
Azerbaijan recalls its diplomats from Iran
News March 6, 2026
Pua 1024x683
What the attack on Nakhchivan airport revealed
Opinion March 6, 2026
GettyImages 2147784914 scaled
Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry: Iran sent four drones toward Nakhchivan
Defense March 5, 2026
17727126852740152815 1200x630
Aliyev: Azerbaijan puts armed forces on combat readiness No.1
News March 5, 2026
0d86c1906425a2712f1b5bb059ef8b1d
Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry: Iranian acts of aggression will not go unanswered
News March 5, 2026
GettyImages 2147784914 scaled
Drones over Nakhchivan: an incident or a dangerous signal?
Opinion March 5, 2026
Photo 2025 06 25 09.47.40
Iranian strike on Azerbaijan… what next?
Opinion March 5, 2026

You Might Also Like

Img 8063 1 scaled

COP29 President on climate goals, Caspian Sea, deeper trust between countries

July 2, 2025 9 Min Read
Trend Cop29baku 291024 2

Parliamentary Commission: Int’l NGOs campaign against Azerbaijan, prepare biased reports

December 23, 2024 3 Min Read
Trend Cop29baku 291024 2

Azerbaijan supports the global environmental agenda hosting COP29

December 3, 2024 7 Min Read
170663 800 0

Outcomes of COP29: financial commitments and missed opportunities

November 28, 2024 4 Min Read
Cop29 Countdown Clock

COP29 host Azerbaijan faces unfair accusations

November 26, 2024 9 Min Read
Joe Biden China

Biden congratulates Azerbaijan on the successful conclusion of COP29 in Baku

November 24, 2024 2 Min Read
Trend Cop Baglanish 2 E1732422668656

Final session of COP29: key outcomes

November 24, 2024 9 Min Read
1732379193491096244 1200x630

COP29 presidency announces breakthrough in carbon market negotiations under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement

November 23, 2024 4 Min Read

Useful links

426082d1 a9e4 4ac5 95d4 4e84024eb314 pojkz91103g6zqfh8kiacu662b2tn9znit7ssu9ekg
Ab65ed96 2f4a 4220 91ac f70a6daaf659 pojkz67iflcc0wjkp1aencvsa5gq06ogif9cd0dl34
96e40a2b 5fed 4332 83c6 60e4a89fd4d0 pojkz836t9ewo4gue23nscepgx7gfkvx6okbbkasqo
759bde00 a375 4fa1 bedc f8e9580ceeca pq8mvb9kwubqf6bcadpkq5mz16nayr162k3j2084cg
aze-media-logo-ag1

We are a unique political and socio-cultural digest offering exclusive materials, translations from Azerbaijani media, and reprints of articles from around the world about Azerbaijan.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Cookies Policy

Email: editor@aze.media

© 2021 Aze.Media – Daily Digest
aze-media-logo1 aze-media-logo-ag1
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?