Think it’s hot now? The next five years will smash records, UN says.

cigaretteman

All-Conference
May 29, 2001
2,759
3,440
113
In the next five years, the Earth is overwhelmingly likely to surge again and again past the international climate threshold set as safe and shatter its hottest-year record along the way, according to new United Nations climate projections.


The World Meteorological Organization also forecasts an overheating Arctic that warms nearly 3 degrees Fahrenheit between now and 2030 and a dangerous drought with potential wildfires for the Amazon, a crucial part of Earth’s natural defenses to lessen human-caused climate change. A hotter globe from the burning of coal, oil and gas means more extreme weather including floods, droughts and heat waves, scientists said.


The projections by the U.N. climate agency and the United Kingdom’s Meteorological Office said there’s a 75% chance that the average global temperature between 2026 and 2030 will be more than 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) higher compared to pre-industrial times. That threshold is the agreed-upon limit of warming — averaged over 20 years — set in 2015 by the Paris climate agreement.


A U.N. science report a few years later detailed how exceeding that 1.5 mark means more likely death, danger and species loss. Even though it’s only a few tenths of a degree, some of the planet’s ecosystems, such as coral and glaciers, can’t handle the strain.



Passing warming limit has consequences, but no cliff​


There’s a 91% chance that at least one of the next five years will shoot past the 1.5 degree threshold and an 86% chance that one of those years will smash the record for Earth’s hottest year set in 2024, the WMO report said. The WMO projects each year between now and 2030 to be between 2.3 degrees Fahrenheit and 1.9 degrees Celsius (3.4 degrees Fahrenheit) since the late 1800s.


“It’s important to note that (1.5) is not kind of a cliff edge that we’re going to fall off,” said report co-author Melissa Seabrook, a climate scientist at the U.K. Meteorological Office. “Every kind of 0.1 of a degree has more and more severe impact.”


She pointed to unprecedented May heat in Europe this week.


An entire year or more above the 1.5 degree mark “means a whole range of extreme weather events, probably many so hot/wet/dry that it exceeds anything we’ve experienced in the past and thus crucially, anything our city planning, agriculture etc. has anticipated,” Imperial College of London climate scientist Friederike Otto, who wasn’t part of the report, said in an email. “This will mean many people will lose their lives, we are in for a lot of food price shocks, and more intense wildfires.”


Nearly all the shorter-term forecasts call for a strong El Nino — a natural warming of parts of the central Pacific that alters weather worldwide and spikes global temperatures — to form soon. The WMO report said it could stretch all the way to 2028. Because of that, Seabrook said 2027 will likely break the 2024 heat record.


And if the next five years do average more than 1.5 degrees Celsius since pre-industrial times, that means Earth will have warmed a quarter of a degree Celsius (0.45 degrees Fahrenheit) in a decade, which is faster than the previous rates of warming. Those were closer to two-tenths of a degree Celsius per decade.


Climate scientists are debating whether global warming is accelerating, “which obviously is quite scary,” and if these projections come true it would give additional evidence to those who see a speeded up rate of change, Seabrook said.



Accelerating warmth forecast in the Arctic​


The projections, based on the averaging of about 200 runs of computer simulations using 13 different climate models from various countries, show warming in the Arctic rising 3.5 times faster than the rest of the globe, because there’s less ice and snow that had been reflecting solar radiation to space, Seabrook said. It becomes a vicious cycle.


“As the temperature warms, more sea ice melts, the worse this makes it,” Seabrook said.


Winters in the Arctic from 2020 to 2025 on average were 2.1 degrees Fahrenheit (1.2 degrees Celsius) warmer than the 1991-2020 average. The WMO projects the next five winters will average 5.1 degrees Fahrenheit (2.8 degrees Celsius) warmer than that recent normal, Seabrook said.


The report also forecasts Arctic sea ice to continue to shrink in the summer.



Amazon may get drier, sparking fire worries​


The report calls for even warmer and unusually dry conditions in the Amazon basin, and that could be devastating for both local residents and the planet as a whole, Seabrook said.


People rely on the Amazon for water and the hotter, drier conditions should increase wildfire risk, Seabrook said, threatening to turn the Amazon, which now sucks heat-trapping carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere, into a region that worsens the problem.


Africa’s Sahel area, which has been extra dry, is likely to get more than normal rain and that could lead to flooding, Seabrook said.



“Despite the progress of recent years, it’s clear that global heating is still outpacing global efforts to contain it, and the baking temperatures in Europe, India and elsewhere show yet again the brutal human and economic impacts of humanity still burning colossal amounts of coal, oil and gas,” U.N. climate chief Simon Stiell said about the WMO report.


“Whether it’s extreme heat, mega-storms, floods, massive wildfires or droughts hitting food supply and prices,” he said, “every nation is already paying a huge price from this global climate crisis.”

 

GesterHawk

Heisman
Jan 3, 2023
18,772
37,010
113
Sarcastic Season 9 GIF by The Office
 

Towlie

Redshirt
May 27, 2026
5
12
3
Will all the white men die first.... like the Polar bear?
Will the Mexicans still be wearing long sleeves?
What will happen to us towels?
You guys wanna get high?
 

BelemNole

Heisman
Mar 29, 2002
36,859
10,292
113
Wife and I are looking at spending a month up near portland this summer just to get away from the heat. I think it's going to be a BAD summer here.
 
  • Like
Reactions: cigaretteman
Jun 16, 2025
3,524
7,663
113
Wife and I are looking at spending a month up near portland this summer just to get away from the heat. I think it's going to be a BAD summer here.
We were in Portland in July a few years ago and it was hot as fug in the city. 15-20 degrees cooler in the mountains. CSB.
 

Scrubby

Heisman
Jul 2, 2025
8,776
11,549
113
The far left is still clinging to their climate hysteria I see 😂😂

Only a few years past al gore's doomsday predictions and shockingly sea level rise is still not an existential crisis.
 
  • Like
Reactions: PapaGanoush

OnlyTheObscure

All-Conference
Jul 3, 2025
2,937
4,222
113
When only republicans fly for pleasure, have toys that burn gas, and drive gas guzzlers there might be a point to this.

also, who is going to tell the developing world “it was ok for us to burn fossil fuels to develop as countries but you can’t “

also China has more coal plants the the rest of the planet combined. They also are 90% of new construction coal plants.

Dealing with it is where we are going.
 

BelemNole

Heisman
Mar 29, 2002
36,859
10,292
113
When only republicans fly for pleasure, have toys that burn gas, and drive gas guzzlers there might be a point to this.

also, who is going to tell the developing world “it was ok for us to burn fossil fuels to develop as countries but you can’t “

also China has more coal plants the the rest of the planet combined. They also are 90% of new construction coal plants.

Dealing with it is where we are going.
China leads the world in renewable energy.
That could have been us.
But we insist on voting for people who are bought by the fossil fuel industry.

Comments about action being useless unless all individuals who support action limit all travel are lazy and pointless.