&w=3840&q=100)
Earth to exhaust carbon budget for 1.5-deg C limit in 3 years: Scientists
The carbon budget refers to the total amount of carbon dioxide the planet can emit while still having a good chance of staying below a certain temperature threshold. In this case, the limit is 1.5 degrees Celsius, which countries agreed to at the Paris climate conference in 2015.
Exceeding the carbon budget does not mean the 1.5-degree limit will be crossed immediately. It means the world is on course to surpass it very soon unless emissions are drastically cut.
The latest "Indicators of Global Climate Change" study, published in the journal Earth System Science Data, also found that the carbon budget for 2 degrees Celsius could be exceeded by 2048 if current levels of CO2 emissions continue.
Scientists said human activities have led to the release of around 53 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (Gt CO2e) into the atmosphere every year over the past decade. This is mainly due to increasing emissions from burning fossil fuels and deforestation.
In the last 10 years (2015 to 2024), the Earth's temperature was 1.24 degrees Celsius higher than it was before the industrial era began. Scientists say 1.22 degrees Celsius of this warming was caused by human activities.
The year 2024 was the hottest on record and marked the first calendar year with a global average temperature more than 1.5 degrees Celsius above the 18501900 baseline, the period before human activities such as fossil fuel use began significantly affecting the climate.
A permanent breach of the 1.5-degree Celsius target in the Paris Agreement refers to sustained warming over a 20 to 30-year period.
In 2022, the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said the world must cut greenhouse gas emissions by 43 per cent by 2030, compared to 2019 levels, to keep the temperature rise within 1.5 degrees Celsius since the Industrial Revolution.
Last month, the World Meteorological Organization said there is a 70 per cent chance that the average global temperature between 2025 and 2029 will exceed pre-industrial levels by more than 1.5 degrees Celsius.
However, IPCC Chair Jim Skea told PTI in an interview in March that the 43 per cent reduction target is now outdate due to a lack of action, meaning the actual reduction needed is even higher.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
8 hours 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.


Indian Express
a day 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.


New Indian Express
a day ago
- New Indian Express
Onset of monsoon defers cloud seeding trial, new date to be announced later
NEW DELHI: The Delhi government has postponed its much-anticipated cloud seeding experiment, initially scheduled for early July, citing the early and active onset of the monsoon. Officials confirmed that the trial, which was intended to test the feasibility of artificial rain as an air pollution mitigation strategy, will now be deferred to a later period, most likely after the monsoon and winter pollution season. The trial, originally planned between July 4 and 11, required specific atmospheric conditions, including adequate cloud presence and low rainfall to allow effective seeding. However, with monsoon conditions fully active over Delhi since June 29, the required weather window has closed. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has forecast continuing rainfall over the coming weeks, making it unfeasible to conduct the experiment at this stage. 'We had applied for permission to conduct this between July 4 and 11, but since the monsoon has started, we have requested a second window from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) post monsoon. We will try to conduct a trial in the outer areas near Narela and Bawana around December in a small cluster to ensure that there are no ill effects,' said Environment Minister Manjinder Singh Sirsa. The cloud seeding project, developed in collaboration with IIT Kanpur and other scientific partners, aims to use aircraft to spray hygroscopic substances into clouds to trigger rainfall. The method has been explored in various parts of the world as a way to artificially induce rain and improve air quality, particularly during severe smog episodes. Forecasts for the coming days indicate temperatures will hover between 31-34 degrees Celsius, with light rainfall likely across all districts of Delhi-NCR till July 6. No heat wave conditions are expected during this period, said IMD.