There is a 70% chance that the 2025-2029 period will be more than 1.5C hotter than pre-industrial times, World Meteorological Organization (WMO) forecasters predicted in a report on Wednesday.

The 1.5C threshold is symbolically important, as all governments agreed in the 2015 Paris climate agreement to try to limit global warming to that level. Since then, diplomats presiding over climate talks have described the temperature goal as the world’s “North Star” and pledged to “keep 1.5 alive”.

The WMO’s forecasters argue that, if average global temperatures in the years from 2025-2029 are more than 1.5C hotter than the pre-industrial period of 1850-1900, this does not necessarily mean that the Paris Agreement goal would be breached. They and scientists working with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) say temperature rises should be measured in 20-year not five-year averages.

Heading for 1.5C

Nonetheless, Adam Scaife, a British physicist who worked on the latest WMO “annual to decadal climate prediction” update, told reporters that keeping warming below 1.5C – even over a longer time-frame – “would require a fortuitous intervention of natural climate variability”.

This could include, he said, a La Niña weather phenomenon or negative Arctic Oscillation leading to Eurasian winter cooling. But “it’s very unlikely that natural variability is going to come to our aid in that particular manner,” he added.

Brazil seeks early deals on two stalled issues at Bonn climate talks

Scaife’s colleague Leon Hermanson, from the British Met Office, added that a volcanic eruption “would change the forecast quite a lot”. Volcanic eruptions release sulphur dioxide which reflects sunlight from the earth, causing a large but temporary drop in global temperatures.

In the Paris Agreement, all governments signed up to limiting global temperature rise to “well below 2C above pre-industrial levels” and to “pursuing efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, recognizing that this would signficantly reduce the risks and impacts of climate change”.

Governments never agreed how to define a 1.5C rise in global temperatures, but the influential IPCC scientists said it should be measured as an average over a 20-year period.

Twenty-year average

To assess this with real-world observations would mean waiting ten years from any particular year to gather enough data to know if the average had surpassed 1.5C in that year. So instead the WMO’s forecasters estimate the 20-year average by using observations for the past ten years combined with predictions for the next ten years.

Using this way of calculating the 20-year average for 2024, they found that last year the world was 1.44C hotter than pre-industrial levels – even though 2024 taken alone was 1.55C above pre-industrial levels. “We are still


Read More