by Ian Angus
2024 was the warmest year since records began being 175 years ago. According to the World Meteorological Organization’s latest State of the Global Climate report:
- Each of the past ten years set a new global temperature record.
- Each of the past eight years set a new record for ocean heat content.
- The 18 lowest Arctic sea-ice extents on record were all in the past 18 years.
- The three lowest Antarctic ice extents were in the past three years.
- The largest three-year loss of glacier mass on record occurred in the past three years.
- The rate of sea level rise has doubled since satellite measurements began.[1]
There is no room for doubt: Earth is getting hotter. The question now is how hot will it get?
In 2015, at the United Nations climate conference (COP21) in Paris, 196 countries promised to “significantly reduce the risks and impacts of climate change” by “holding the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and pursuing efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels.”[2]
A May 2024 survey asked 380 leading climate scientists whether the 1.5°C goal will be achieved. Only 6% said yes. 77% believe that global temperatures will rise more than 2.5°C by 2100, and 42% think the increase will be over 3°C.[3]
Future Earth, the international agency that coordinates global change research, warns that “overshooting 1.5°C is fast becoming inevitable.”
“Decades of insufficient action for mitigating GHG emissions have set the world on the current trajectory to overshoot the internationally agreed target of limiting global warming to 1.5°C, enshrined in the Paris Agreement. National mitigation commitments are inadequate to even stay well below 2°C of global warming, creating unacceptable risks for human societies and ecosystems, with vast yet unequally distributed costs. This is a dangerous gamble that could lead to irreversible impacts for life on Earth, including devastating loss of biodiversity and a rising risk of triggering climate tipping points.”[4]
Under the Paris Agreement, each country decides its own targets, called National Determined Contributions. According to the UN, there a “massive gap” between the treaty’s objectives and the policies actually adopted by the largest polluters.
“Collectively the NDC targets of the G20 are far from the average global percentage reductions required to align with 2°C and 1.5°C scenarios….
“A continuation of the mitigation effort implied by current policies is estimated to limit global warming to a maximum of 3.1°C (range: 1.9–3.8) over the course of the century.”[5]
This isn’t just a matter for future concern. 2024 was the hottest year since preindustrial times, and the first full year in which the average temperature passed the 1.5°C target. Actually exceeding the Paris goal requires at least a decade, but 2024 is almost certainly an indicator of what is to come, especially if, as noted climate scientist James Hansen argues, global warming is speeding up.
“Therefore, we expect that global temperature will not fall much below +1.5°C level, instead oscillating near or above that level for the next few years, which will help confirm our interpretation of the sudden global warming. High sea surface temperatures and increasing ocean hotspots will continue, with harmful effects on coral reefs and other ocean life. The largest practical effect on humans today is increase of the frequency and severity of climate extremes. More powerful tropical storms, tornadoes, and thunderstorms, and thus more extreme floods, are driven by high sea surface temperature and a warmer atmosphere that holds more water vapor. Higher global temperature also increases the intensity of heat waves and—at the times and places of dry weather—high temperature increases drought intensity, including ‘flash droughts’ that develop rapidly, even in regions with adequate average rainfall.” [6]
It has become common in scientific reports to assert that it’s still “technically possible” to meet the Paris objectives. That’s just barely true, but unlikely. The United Nations Environment Program Emissions Gap Report tells us just what needs to be done:
“Specifically, if action in line with 2°C or 1.5°C pathways were to start in 2024, then global emissions would need to be reduced by an average of 4 and 7.5 per cent every year until 2035, respectively. If enhanced action … is delayed until 2030, then the required annual emission reductions rise to an average of 8 per cent and 15 per cent to limit warming to 2°C or 1.5°C, respectively.”[7]
No matter what you think of those numbers, the fact is that none of that is going to happen. Greenhouse gas emissions are going up, not down, and not one G20 government has shown any sign of willingness to even slow down the increase, let alone go into reverse. The United States has withdrawn from the UN climate process, and Trump has cancelled climate change programs. If other big emitters don’t take up the slack, or just fail to carry through on their Paris Agreement commitments, 3°C will be passed, probably sooner then the climate models project.
Andreas Malm and Wim Carton sum up where things stand today:
“Promises were, after all, just that, and most were not backed up by measures that could take them out of the realm of ‘blah blah blah’, to use Greta Thunberg’s phrase. When in 2023, eight years after Paris, one scratched away at the net zero façade and summated all the actual efforts—not promises —in place across the globe, the sobering result was that the world was on track for 2.7°C; or, rounding the number, 3°C, meaning a warming twice as large as that which the global South had insisted on to stay alive. And we know that the warming does not produce a linear rise in damages: 3°C would be something far worse than just a doubling of the impacts at 1.5°C. But deep into the Paris era, this is where the world was heading.”[8]
NOTES
[1] World Meteorological Organization, “WMO report documents spiralling weather and climate impacts,” (Press Release, March 18, 2025.
[2] Paris Agreement, https://shorturl.at/w0KbU
[3] Damian Carrington, “World’s top climate scientists expect global heating to blast past 1.5C target,” The Guardian, May 8, 2024.
[4] Future Earth, The Earth League, WCRP. 10 New Insights in Climate Science 2023/2024, (Stockholm, 2023)
[5] United Nations Environment Programme, Emissions Gap Report 2024, (Nairobi, April 2025), xii, xvii.
[6] James E. Hansen, et al., “Global Warming Has Accelerated: Are the United Nations and the Public Well-Informed?” Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development, February 2025.
[7] UNEP, Emissions Gap Report 2024, (Nairobi, April 2025), xv.
[8] Andreas Malm and Wim Carton, Overshoot: How the World Surrendered to Climate Breakdown, (Verso, 2024), 69.