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Climate change is accelerating and intensifying across every region of the planet, bringing with it increases in rainfall, flooding, drought, heatwaves, and sealevels that are already having significant implications for economies around the world.
These indicators, including but not limited to carbon dioxide, methane, oceanacidification, tropical forest loss, population, GDP, water use, and transportation, have reached the point past natural variation, showing indisputably that the Earth is in a different state than before. . Resilience Thinking and Sustainability.
To limit globalwarming to a peak of 1.5C, which the impacts we are experiencing at 1.35°C °C warming (based on an average of the last 10 years) make clear is a higher than desirable goal. The challenge. gigatons of CO2 annually (GtCO2/year).
Taking immediate action to slash emissions towards net zero by 2050 could make a monumental difference to the level, frequency, and breadth of growing climate impacts, the scientists emphasise. The stark fact is that if we keep warming to 1.5?C C we are still facing half a metre of sealevelrise.
Previous studies have quantified the share of increasing average temperatures, risingsealevels , and oceanacidification attributable to major industrial emitters. This latest study extends that analysis to the realm of wildfires.
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