- We are getting measurably closer to temporarily reaching the lower target of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.
- “For as long as we continue to emit greenhouse gases, temperatures will continue to rise.”
- There’s a 93% chance that the five years from 2022 to 2026 will be the hottest on record.
The Earth has a 50-50 chance of temporarily reaching a global warming threshold by 2026, a new report finds.
“This study shows – with a high level of scientific skill – that we are getting measurably closer to temporarily reaching the lower target of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change,” said World Meteorological Organization Secretary-General Petteri Taalas in a statement.
Specifically, there’s a 48% chance that the globe will reach a yearly average of 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels of the late 1800s at least once between now and 2026.
“The 1.5 degree C figure is not some random statistic,” Taalas said. “It is rather an indicator of the point at which climate impacts will become increasingly harmful for people and indeed the entire planet.
The report was prepared by a team of 11 different forecast centers, including the United Kingdom’s Meteorological Office, for the World Meteorological Organization on Monday.
The Paris Agreement sets long-term goals to guide all of the world’s nations to substantially reduce global greenhouse gas emissions to limit the planet’s temperature increase in this century to 2 degrees C while pursuing efforts to limit the increase even further to 1.5 degrees C.
“For as long as we continue to emit greenhouse gases, temperatures will continue to rise,” Taalas said. “And alongside that, our oceans will continue to become warmer and more acidic, sea ice and glaciers will continue to melt, sea level will continue to rise, and our weather will become more extreme.”
the United Kingdom’s Meteorological Office said there is a 93% chance that the world will set a record for hottest year by the end of 2026. It also said there’s a 93% chance that the five years from 2022 to 2026 will be the hottest on record.
“Our latest climate predictions show that continued global temperature rise will continue, with an even chance that one of the years between 2022 and 2026 will exceed 1.5 degrees C above pre-industrial levels,” said UK Met Office senior scientist Leon Hermanson, who coordinated the report.
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“A single year of exceedance above 1.5 degree C does not mean we have breached the iconic threshold of the Paris Agreement, but it does reveal that we are edging ever closer to a situation where 1.5 degrees C could be exceeded for an extended period,” Hermanson said.
Back-to-back La Niña events at the start and end of 2021 had a cooling effect on global temperatures, but this is only temporary and does not reverse the long-term global warming trend, the report said. Any development of an El Niño event would immediately fuel temperatures, as it did in 2016, which is until now the warmest year on record.
NASA top climate scientist Gavin Schmidt said the figures in this report are “a little warmer” than what the US NASA and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration use.
“Regardless of what is predicted here, we are very likely to exceed 1.5 degrees C in the next decade or so, but it doesn’t necessarily mean that we are committed to this in the long term – or that working to reduce further change is not worthwhile,” Schmidt said.
Contributing: The Associated Press
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George is Digismak’s reported cum editor with 13 years of experience in Journalism