The world may miss the 1.5-degree climate target. How can we prevent catastrophic impacts?

The United Nations warns that global plans to reduce greenhouse gas emissions fall far short, putting the planet on track for a 3-degree Celsius rise, well above the Paris Agreement’s 1.5-degree target.

Jenni Doering reports for Living on Earth.


In short:

  • UN projections show current policies would lead to 3 degrees Celsius of warming, intensifying climate threats such as storms, heatwaves and sea level rise.
  • To meet the Paris target, annual emissions cuts of 7.5% are required, yet current global commitments average only a 2.6% reduction.
  • Some countries, particularly in Europe, are closer to their goals, while others lag, with little consensus on how to close the gap.

Key quote:

"The annual reductions needed now are about 7.5% a year, and we're very far away from that. And each year that it doesn't drop, that percentage cut gets bigger and bigger, so we're sort of slipping away."

— Bob Berwyn, Inside Climate News

Why this matters:

Without urgent action, the global temperature could increase to dangerous levels, amplifying extreme weather, biodiversity loss and public health risks. Achieving the 1.5-degree target requires sustained, large-scale emissions reductions, yet many governments struggle to make the necessary changes.

Read more: Earth stays above 1.5°C warming for a year

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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