The planet is dangerously close to breaching 1.5°C warming. Scientists warn of severe impacts — can urgent global action still prevent irreversible damage?

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Warming Forecasts

The WMO projects a 70% chance global temperatures exceed 1.5°C between 2025–2029, marking a dangerous milestone for humanity.

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Record Year 2024

2024 became the first full year to surpass 1.5°C warming, showing climate tipping points are no longer distant predictions but unfolding realities.

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Polar Melting

Arctic and Antarctic ice melt is accelerating, fueling global sea-level rise and threatening coastal cities and island nations.

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Extreme Events Surge

Heatwaves, droughts, storms, and floods are intensifying, hitting vulnerable communities with devastating force.

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Global Risks

Health risks, food shortages, and ecosystem collapse rise sharply once 1.5°C is crossed, increasing the cost of inaction.

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Policy Updates

Australia pledged a 62-70% emission cut by 2035, but experts say it’s far from sufficient to meet Paris goals.

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Brazil’s Step

Brazil became the first to invest in the Global Forest Fund, signaling urgency for rainforest protection.

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Fossil Fuels Persist

Coal, oil, and gas emissions remain high; without a peak by 2025, the world risks warming of 3°C this century.

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Nature’s Loss

Coral bleaching and glacier retreat endanger marine life, fisheries, and freshwater supplies worldwide.

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Solutions Ahead

Rapid transition to renewables, forest protection, climate finance, and early warning systems are key steps forward.

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Inaction Costs

More wildfires, forced migration, and millions at risk loom if climate action lags further.

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COP30 Opportunity

COP30 in Brazil this November may decide if warnings translate into meaningful global action.

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