Climate Analytics: Scientists caution no guarantees when it comes to overshooting 1.5C
https://climateanalytics.org/press-releases/scientists-caution-no-guarantees-when-it-comes-to-overshooting-1-5-c9 October, 2024
Scientists caution no guarantees when it comes to overshooting 1.5°C
New paper published in
Nature analyses future scenarios in which we temporarily exceed 1.5°C and bring temperatures back down in the long run. It finds overshoot comes with irreversible consequences and rapid near-term emissions reductions are essential to reducing climate risks.
New paper published in
Nature from 30 scientists analyses future scenarios in which we temporarily exceed 1.5°C and bring temperatures back down in the long run.
- The authors stress that such an overshoot comes with irreversible consequences and rapid near-term emissions reductions are essential to reducing climate risks
- Bringing temperatures down again will limit long-term damages from impacts like sea level rise
- Environmentally sustainable carbon removal capacity is needed to hedge against the climate system warming more than expected
Even if it is possible to reverse the rise of global temperatures after a temporary overshoot of 1.5°C, some climate damages triggered at peak warming, including rising sea levels, will be irreversible, according to
a new study published today in
Nature.
The study is the culmination of a three-and-a-half-year project, backed by the European innovation fund HORIZON2020, looking at so-called overshoot scenarios, where temperatures temporarily exceed the Paris Agreements 1.5°C limit, before descending again by achieving net-negative CO2 emissions.
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08020-9