About COP31 Radar

Independent COP31 intelligence for practical preparation.

COP31 Radar is a free weekly briefing by SICI for organisations following and preparing for COP31.

It helps teams understand what is changing, why it matters and what may require action before arriving in Antalya.

Why it exists

Less noise. Better decisions.

COP31 will generate official updates, negotiation signals, access questions, visibility opportunities, local logistics and reputation risks.

COP31 Radar turns that noise into practical weekly signal so organisations can see what changed, why it matters and what may need preparation.

What it is

A briefing layer, not another news feed.

Each issue focuses on useful signal: official process, deadlines, negotiation context, participation questions, visibility considerations, credibility risks and Antalya notes.

The goal is not to cover everything. The goal is to help teams prepare better.

Prepared by SICI

The organisation behind COP31 Radar.

COP31 Radar is prepared by SICI — Social Institute of Change and Impact. SICI works at the intersection of civil society, environmental advocacy, institutional strategy, communications and practical implementation.

SICI prepares COP31 Radar as the free briefing layer and provides practical COP31 preparation support when organisations need to move from updates to decisions.

Briefing

Relevant COP31 developments in a format that helps teams understand what is changing and why it matters.

Preparation

Attention to participation routes, timelines, visibility opportunities, credibility risks, event possibilities and stakeholder engagement.

Support

Focused help when an update becomes a planning question for participation, delegation, communication, partnership or Antalya feasibility.

Independence

COP31 Radar is an independent initiative by SICI, prepared separately from official COP31, UNFCCC and host-country platforms.

NGOsCSOsCompaniesNetworksInternational organisationsDelegationsTeams preparing for COP31
Civil society leadership

Understanding of NGO, CSO, advocacy, network and stakeholder environments.

Environmental advocacy

Experience relevant to climate, environment, public credibility, campaigning and institutional positioning.

Strategy and communications

Work across organisational strategy, campaigns, messaging, visibility and reputation-sensitive public engagement.

Antalya feasibility

Local observation and practical awareness of mobility, accommodation, visitor flow, meetings and event feasibility.

Why trust this work

Experience without inflated claims.

SICI’s work is grounded in experience across civil society leadership, environmental advocacy, human rights, humanitarian response, institutional strategy, campaigns, communications and practical implementation.

For COP31, this experience is combined with Antalya-based observation and local feasibility thinking. The work brings together relevant perspectives rather than presenting itself as a formal large expert team.

How we work

Track, verify, filter, interpret.

COP31 Radar follows developments with a preparation lens. The briefing looks for what may affect participation, visibility, credibility, delegation planning, partnerships and local feasibility.

When information is uncertain, the briefing avoids over-claiming. When a development matters, it is translated into practical preparation questions.

Track

Follow official process, public signals, deadlines, access questions, negotiations and local preparation context.

Verify

Separate confirmed developments from speculation, noise and promotional claims.

Filter

Focus on what organisations may actually need to know before committing time, budget or visibility.

Interpret

Translate updates into preparation questions and practical next steps.

Global COP31 agenda

Negotiation context, official process, access questions and participation signals.

Institutional readiness

What organisations may need to decide, prepare, explain or avoid before COP31.

Credibility lens

Attention to reputation risks, over-claiming, greenwashing concerns and weak visibility strategies.

Local reality

Antalya-based feasibility questions around meetings, mobility, event plans and delegation preparation.

Antalya context

Local understanding without local hype.

Being based in Antalya helps COP31 Radar connect global developments with practical local questions. That does not replace official information; it adds a grounded preparation perspective.

The aim is to help organisations think earlier about what may be realistic, visible, credible and feasible before they arrive.

Have a COP31 preparation question?

Some organisations will only need to follow COP31 developments. Others may need to decide whether to engage, how to prepare, what kind of visibility is credible, or what is realistic in Antalya. When an update becomes a planning question, SICI can provide focused support.

COP31 Radar is independent. It is not an official COP31, UNFCCC or host-country platform.