Only two
years left of world’s carbon budget to meet 1.5C target, scientists warn
Breaching
threshold would ramp up catastrophic weather events, further increasing human
suffering
Damian
Carrington Environment editor
Wed 18 Jun
2025 23.01 BST
The planet’s
remaining carbon budget to meet the international target of 1.5C has just two
years left at the current rate of emissions, scientists have warned, showing
how deep into the climate crisis the world has fallen.
Breaching
the target would ramp up the extreme weather already devastating communities
around the world. It would also require carbon dioxide to be sucked from the
atmosphere in future to restore the stable climate in which the whole of
civilisation developed over the past 10,000 years.
The carbon
budget is how much planet-heating CO2 can still be emitted by humanity while
leaving a reasonable chance that the temperature target is not blown. The
latest assessment by leading climate scientists found that in order to achieve
a 66% chance of keeping below the 1.5C target, emissions from 2025 onwards must
be limited to 80bn tonnes of CO2. That is 80% lower than it was in 2020.
Emissions
reached a new record high in 2024: at that rate the 80bn tonne budget would be
exhausted within two years. Lags in the climate system mean the 1.5C limit,
which is measured as a multi-year average, would inevitably be passed a few
years later, the scientists said.
Scientists
have been warning for some time that breaching the 1.5C limit is increasingly
unavoidable as emissions from the burning of fossil fuels continue to rise. The
latest analysis shows global emissions would have to plummet towards zero
within just a few years to have any decent chance of keeping to the target.
That appears extremely unlikely, given that emissions in 2024 rose yet again.
However, the
scientists emphasised every fraction of a degree of global heating increases
human suffering, so efforts to cut emissions must ramp up as fast as possible.
Currently,
the world is on track for 2.7C of global heating, which would be a truly
catastrophic rise. The analysis shows, for example, that limiting the rise to
1.7C is more achievable: the carbon budget for a 66% chance of keeping below
1.7C is 390bn tonnes, which is about nine years at the current rate of
emissions.
“The
remaining carbon budgets are declining rapidly and the main reason is the
world’s failure to curb global CO2 emissions,” said Prof Joeri Rogelj, at
Imperial College London, UK. “Under any course of action now, there is a very
high chance we will reach and even exceed 1.5C and even higher levels of
warming.”
“The best
moment to have started serious climate action was 1992, when the UN [climate]
convention was adopted,” he said. “But now every year is the best year to start
being serious about emissions reduction. That is because every fraction of
warming we can avoid will result in less harm and suffering, particularly for
poor and vulnerable populations, and in less challenges to living the lives we
desire.”
Rogelj said
it was crucial that countries commit to big emissions cuts at the UN Cop30
climate summit in November.
The hottest
year on record was 2024, fuelled by increasing coal and gas burning, and
setting an annual average of 1.5C for the first time. There is no sign yet of
the transition away from fossil fuels promised by the world’s nations at Cop28
in Dubai in December 2023.
Solar and
wind energy production is increasing rapidly and has precluded previous
worst-case scenarios of 4-5C of global heating. But energy demand is rising
even faster, leading to more fossil fuel burning and turbo-charging extreme
weather disasters.
The
analysis, produced by an international team of 60 leading climate scientists,
is an update of the critical indicators of climate change and is published in
the journal Earth System Science Data. It aims to provide an authoritative
assessment, based on the methods of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, but published annually unlike the intermittent IPCC reports, the most
recent of which was 2021.
The study
found that the Earth’s energy imbalance – the excess heat trapped by the
greenhouse effect – has risen by 25% when comparing the past decade with the
decade before.
“That’s a
really large and very worrying number,” said Prof Piers Forster, at the
University of Leeds, UK, and lead author of the study. “I tend to be an
optimistic person. But things are not only moving in the wrong direction, we’re
seeing some unprecedented changes and acceleration of the heating of the Earth
and sea level rise.”
Sea level
rise has doubled in the past 10 years, compared with the period 1971-2018, the
analysis found, rising to 4mm per year. The flooding of coasts will become
unmanageable at 1.5C of global heating and lead to “catastrophic inland
migration”, a study in May found.
Sea level is
rising because about 90% of global heating is absorbed by the oceans, making
the water expand, and because the climate crisis is melting glaciers and ice
caps.
Dr Karina
Von Schuckmann, at Mercator Ocean International, said: “Warmer waters also lead
to intensified weather extremes, and can have devastating impacts on marine
ecosystems and the communities that rely on them. In 2024, the ocean reached
record values globally.”
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