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    Climate crossroads: a decade after the Paris Agreement

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    (Corrects wording in paragraphs 7-10 to ‌clarify the Global Carbon Budget report contains projections for 2025, not for 2027)

    By Canan ​Sevgili

    Feb 16 (Reuters) - Ten years after the Paris Agreement took effect, newly released climate datasets show the world warming at an accelerating pace, with 2025 ⁠ranking among the three hottest years ever recorded, and sea‑ice, ocean heat and sea levels crossing new thresholds. 

    Efforts to limit climate-damaging fossil fuels have not been enough and the world is on course to miss its climate goals. Data ​from some of the world's leading scientific agencies show global warming has sped up markedly since the mid‑2010s.  

    EMISSIONS: A WIDENING GAP 

    The World Meteorological ‌Organization's Global Atmosphere Watch network shows concentrations of carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide climbing to record highs, driving the temperature spike observed from 2023 to 2025, scientists say. 

    Global fossil fuel carbon dioxide emissions were projected to climb to a record ⁠38.1 billion tonnes in 2025, driven by rising coal, oil and gas use despite rapid growth ⁠in renewable energy, according to the latest Global Carbon Budget report. 

    The report - produced by an international team of more than 130 scientists - estimated global fossil fuel CO₂ emissions would rise 1.1% in 2025, pushing atmospheric CO₂ concentrations to roughly 52% above pre‑industrial levels.  

    Researchers warn there is only room for about 170 billion more tonnes of CO₂ - equivalent to roughly four years ‌of emissions at current rates - if the world wants to cap global warming at 1.5° Celsius above the pre-industrial ⁠average. 

    Regional trends are mixed: emissions were projected to increase in 2025 in China, India, the ‌United States and the European Union, while falling in Japan.

    TEMPERATURES: A DECADE ​OF ACCELERATION 

    NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies said the Earth's surface in 2025 was 1.19°C above the 1951–1980 average, effectively tying with 2023 as one of the warmest years ever measured.  

    The WMO's consolidated dataset places 2025 at 1.44°C above ‌pre‑industrial levels, ranking it among the top-three warmest years over the 176 years ​of recorded temperatures. [nasa.gov] [wmo.int] [berkeleyearth.org] 

    ARCTIC: RAPID COLLAPSE OF SEA ICE 

    The U.S. ⁠National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s 2025 Arctic Report Card confirmed that October 2024–September 2025 was ‌the warmest period since 1900, and the region continues to warm ⁠more than twice as fast as the global average.  

    Sea‑ice extent reached the lowest winter maximum ever recorded in March 2025, at about 14.47 million square kilometers, according to the U.S. National Ice Center.  

    OCEANS: HEAT AND RISING SEAS 

    The oceans absorbed record ​amounts of heat in 2025, setting ‌a new global high for upper‑ocean heat content, according to NOAA and Berkeley Earth.  

    Sea levels, measured by tide gauges and satellites, ⁠continue to rise. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change ​projects a 0.20–0.29 meter rise by 2050 relative to 1995–2014.

    (Reporting by Canan Sevgili, Vera Dvorakova, Lucie Barbier and ​Alessandro Parodi; Editing by Simon Jessop and David Holmes)

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