logo
Rise In Greenhouse Gas Release Causing More Extreme Weather, Scientists Warn

Rise In Greenhouse Gas Release Causing More Extreme Weather, Scientists Warn

NDTV20-06-2025
Washington:
Humans are on track to release so much greenhouse gas in less than three years that a key threshold for limiting global warming will be nearly unavoidable, according to a study to be released Thursday.
The report predicts that society will have emitted enough carbon dioxide by early 2028 that crossing an important long-term temperature boundary will be more likely than not. The scientists calculate that by that point there will be enough of the heat-trapping gas in the atmosphere to create a 50-50 chance or greater that the world will be locked in to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) of long-term warming since preindustrial times. That level of gas accumulation, which comes from the burning of fuels like gasoline, oil and coal, is sooner than the same group of 60 international scientists calculated in a study last year.
"Things aren't just getting worse. They're getting worse faster," said study co-author Zeke Hausfather of the tech firm Stripe and the climate monitoring group Berkeley Earth. "We're actively moving in the wrong direction in a critical period of time that we would need to meet our most ambitious climate goals. Some reports, there's a silver lining. I don't think there really is one in this one."
That 1.5 goal, first set in the 2015 Paris agreement, has been a cornerstone of international efforts to curb worsening climate change. Scientists say crossing that limit would mean worse heat waves and droughts, bigger storms and sea-level rise that could imperil small island nations. Over the last 150 years, scientists have established a direct correlation between the release of certain levels of carbon dioxide, along with other greenhouse gases like methane, and specific increases in global temperatures.
In Thursday's Indicators of Global Climate Change report, researchers calculated that society can spew only 143 billion more tons (130 billion metric tons) of carbon dioxide before the 1.5 limit becomes technically inevitable. The world is producing 46 billion tons (42 billion metric tons) a year, so that inevitability should hit around February 2028 because the report is measured from the start of this year, the scientists wrote. The world now stands at about 1.24 degrees Celsius (2.23 degrees Fahrenheit) of long-term warming since preindustrial times, the report said.
Earth's energy imbalance
The report, which was published in the journal Earth System Science Data, shows that the rate of human-caused warming per decade has increased to nearly half a degree (0.27 degrees Celsius) per decade, Hausfather said. And the imbalance between the heat Earth absorbs from the sun and the amount it radiates out to space, a key climate change signal, is accelerating, the report said.
"It's quite a depressing picture unfortunately, where if you look across the indicators, we find that records are really being broken everywhere," said lead author Piers Forster, director of the Priestley Centre for Climate Futures at the University of Leeds in England. "I can't conceive of a situation where we can really avoid passing 1.5 degrees of very long-term temperature change."
The increase in emissions from fossil-fuel burning is the main driver. But reduced particle pollution, which includes soot and smog, is another factor because those particles had a cooling effect that masked even more warming from appearing, scientists said. Changes in clouds also factor in. That all shows up in Earth's energy imbalance, which is now 25% higher than it was just a decade or so ago, Forster said.
Earth's energy imbalance "is the most important measure of the amount of heat being trapped in the system," Hausfather said.
Earth keeps absorbing more and more heat than it releases. "It is very clearly accelerating. It's worrisome," he said.
Crossing the temperature limit
The planet temporarily passed the key 1.5 limit last year. The world hit 1.52 degrees Celsius (2.74 degrees Fahrenheit) of warming since preindustrial times for an entire year in 2024, but the Paris threshold is meant to be measured over a longer period, usually considered 20 years. Still, the globe could reach that long-term threshold in the next few years even if individual years haven't consistently hit that mark, because of how the Earth's carbon cycle works.
That 1.5 is "a clear limit, a political limit for which countries have decided that beyond which the impact of climate change would be unacceptable to their societies," said study co-author Joeri Rogelj, a climate scientist at Imperial College London.
The mark is so important because once it is crossed, many small island nations could eventually disappear because of sea level rise, and scientific evidence shows that the impacts become particularly extreme beyond that level, especially hurting poor and vulnerable populations, he said. He added that efforts to curb emissions and the impacts of climate change must continue even if the 1.5 degree threshold is exceeded.
Crossing the threshold "means increasingly more frequent and severe climate extremes of the type we are now seeing all too often in the U.S. and around the world - unprecedented heat waves, extreme hot drought, extreme rainfall events, and bigger storms," said University of Michigan environment school dean Jonathan Overpeck, who wasn't part of the study.
Andrew Dessler, a Texas A&M University climate scientist who wasn't part of the study, said the 1.5 goal was aspirational and not realistic, so people shouldn't focus on that particular threshold.
"Missing it does not mean the end of the world," Dessler said in an email, though he agreed that "each tenth of a degree of warming will bring increasingly worse impacts."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Aligning RE with development goals can lift 193 mn from poverty: UNDP Study
Aligning RE with development goals can lift 193 mn from poverty: UNDP Study

Business Standard

time20 hours ago

  • Business Standard

Aligning RE with development goals can lift 193 mn from poverty: UNDP Study

A new study by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has revealed that aligning renewable energy goals with broader development policies could lift 193 million people out of extreme poverty by 2060, while unlocking $20.4 trillion in cumulative savings for the global economy. The study, conducted by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), University of Denver's Pardee Institute and Octopus Energy, was set up to explore how time-bound renewable energy targets, backed by coherent policies and financing mechanisms, could unlock triple wins: cutting emissions, boosting economies and delivering real social benefits. The report simulated three scenarios to assess outcomes for emissions, economic growth, and social progress. In a business-as-usual scenario, the global energy system remains dependent on fossil fuels, accounting for over 50 per cent of primary energy by 2060. This trajectory would push global warming to 2.6C, exacerbating poverty, malnutrition and lack of access to essential services like electricity, safe water and sanitation. The second scenario considers accelerated renewable energy deployment aligned with the first Global Stocktake's call to triple renewable energy and double energy efficiency. In this future, fossil fuels would make up just 12 per cent of the energy mix by 2060, helping to limit global temperature rise to below 2 degrees Celsius. But it is the third and most ambitious scenario - where renewables are accelerated alongside investments in health, education, water and food systems - that yields the most transformative outcomes. In this pathway, universal access to electricity and clean cooking is achieved, 142 million people are saved from malnutrition, and 550 million more people gain access to clean water and sanitation. This study shows us that a clean energy future is possible - but we must choose to embed renewable ambition into climate plans linked to inclusive development policies, said Cassie Flynn, UNDP's Global Director of Climate Change. In addition to its social impact, the study estimates the third scenario would generate $8.9 trillion in energy efficiency savings and $11.5 trillion from declining renewable costs, while boosting global GDP by 21 per cent and raising per capita income by $6,000 by 2060. Octopus Energy founder Greg Jackson highlighted the growth potential that clean energy can unlock. Renewables can offer the chance to bring electricity to hundreds of millions of people, improving lives and driving growth, he said. With renewable power capacity reaching 4,448 GW in 2025, accounting for over 90 per cent of new power additions and clean energy investments projected to hit a record $2.2 trillion, the momentum is strong. Yet, fossil fuels still dominate, comprising over 70 per cent of the global supply. In 2024 alone, fossil fuels accounted for more than half of the 2.2 per cent rise in energy demand, and energy efficiency growth halved from previous decades. The imperative now falls to global leaders to embrace these strategies and act, said Jonathan Moyer, Director of the Pardee Institute. This research shows it is possible to balance global development with environmental protection while managing the inherent trade-offs, Moyer said.

Whisky aging to maze-solving slime mold: 10 science experiments aboard the ISS
Whisky aging to maze-solving slime mold: 10 science experiments aboard the ISS

Indian Express

timea day ago

  • Indian Express

Whisky aging to maze-solving slime mold: 10 science experiments aboard the ISS

The International Space Station (ISS) serves as a global laboratory for experiments ranging from life sciences to physics and technology to Earth observation. Since its launch in 1998, various space agencies – including NASA, Russia's Roscosmos, European Space Agency, and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, among others – and private players have conducted studies on this space laboratory. According to NASA, more than 3,000 experiments have been conducted aboard the ISS. Here are a few: Suntory, a leading Japanese company in aged whiskies, collaborated with JAXA in 2015 to study the aging patterns of liquor in microgravity. Samples of five different types of whiskey, along with a bottle of ethanol, were sent to the space station for this experiment. The Cold Atom Laboratory was launched to the ISS in 2018 to study quantum properties of atoms in microgravity by creating Bose-Einstein condensates – a fifth state of matter. The condensates are created by chilling a cloud of atoms close to absolute zero (-271 degrees Celsius) using lasers or magnets. The compact lab, about the size of a small refrigerator, is operated remotely by a team with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California. A plasmodial slime mold, capable of solving mazes by finding the shortest path between food sources, was sent to the ISS under an experiment conducted by the ESA, French National Centre for Space Studies (CNES) and Airbus ICE Cubes Facility. The organism, despite lacking a brain, showed primitive learning capability. NASA and European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in May 2011 started the largest and longest-running astrophysics experiments focused on topics like Cosmic rays, dark matter and antimatter. Vegetable Production System, known as Veggie, is a plant growth unit developed by NASA in 2014 to study the germination in microgravity and add fresh food to the astronauts' diet. Zinnias and red romaine lettuce are among the plants grown. This experiment was aimed at studying the genetic, cognitive, immune, and microbiome changes in twins. Scott Kelly spent a year in orbit while mark Mark Kelly was on Earth. Spiders were sent to the ISS to study how they build webs in microgravity. BioServe Space Technologies and NASA studied the result and found that spiders adapted to the conditions. The experiment lasted four years. Marking a collaboration between NASA and ROSCOSMOS, this experiment aims at studying the growth of mold in microgravity. Various fungal species identified, including Aspergillus niger and others, can thrive in the space environment and survive high levels of radiation. The experiment is still ongoing. Research aboard the ISS is advancing bioprinting, a process which uses living cells to 3D print human tissues and potentially entire organs. Bioprinting requires a scaffold or other type of structure to support tissues, but in the near-weightlessness of the space station's orbit, tissues grow in three dimensions without such support, according to NASA. Redwire's BioFabrication Facility, which leads the initiative, has won Popular Science's 2023 Best of What's New Award in the Health Category. In another combined effort, NASA and Roscosmos are studying the effects of how fluids shift to the upper body in space and how this phenomenon causes changes in vision. According to NASA, this research will help prepare for a human journey to Mars.

NASA's exoplanet hunting spacecraft discovers a ‘cool' new alien world that's bigger than Jupiter
NASA's exoplanet hunting spacecraft discovers a ‘cool' new alien world that's bigger than Jupiter

Indian Express

time2 days ago

  • Indian Express

NASA's exoplanet hunting spacecraft discovers a ‘cool' new alien world that's bigger than Jupiter

NASA's exoplanet-hunting spacecraft – the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS for short) and citizen scientists have discovered a new alien world that's 'cool', both literally and figuratively. The exoplanet, called TOI-4465 b, is a gas giant located almost 400 light years from Earth. With a mass six times and a width 1.25 times that of Jupiter, the exoplanet circles a star in an elliptical orbit at less than half the distance between Earth and the Sun. Due to its proximity to the star, the exoplanet has temperatures ranging between 93 to 204 degrees Celsius and takes just 102 Earth days to complete one rotation around the star. Compared to other gas giant exoplanets that are close to their stars, TOI-4465 b is cooler, given its massive size and density. Exoplanet scientists find TOI-4465 b particularly interesting because it acts as a bridge between scorching gas giants and ice giants like Neptune. In a statement to Zahra Essack, a researcher at the University of Mexico, says, 'This discovery is important because long-period exoplanets, defined as having orbital periods longer than 100 days, are difficult to detect and confirm due to limited observational opportunities and resources. As a result, they are underrepresented in our current catalog of exoplanets.' NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) detects planets when they cross between their parent star and Earth, causing a small dip in the light that's received from their system's star. To give you a quick recap, exoplanets are planets that orbit other stars and are beyond our solar system. While TOI-4465 b was spotted during one such event, astronomers needed one more transit event before they could study it. Esseck says that these 'observational windows are extremely limited' and that 'each transit lasts about 12 hours, but it is incredibly rare to get 12 full hours of dark, clear skies in one location.' To overcome these challenges, astronomers turned to 24 amateur citizen scientists from 10 countries who are part of the Unistellar Citizen Science Network, who used their telescopes to observe TOI-4465 b.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store