
As heatwave sweeps Europe, study warns of growing toll on household…
- The 1.5℃ limit
- Climate impacts and risks
- Adaptation
Press Releases
Focusing on the global ambition needed, as well as the results for 15 indicative countries, Climate Analytics’ brief provides an initial look at what global/national roadmaps need to show to align with the latest science and strictly minimise the magnitude and duration of overshoot beyond the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C limit
2025 was one of the top three hottest years on record, with global average surface temperatures at 1.44°C ±0.13°C above the 1850-1900 average, according to WMO’s consolidated analysis of eight datasets
After COP30, it is now up to national leaders to close the gap between promises and reality
Action on cutting emissions has been lagging behind for years. Despite commitments to the Global Methane Pledge, the Global Methane Status Report shows that action on methane has been sluggish against earlier forecasts
Ten years after the Paris Agreement, the world stands at a critical juncture in the fight against climate change, with little to no measurable progress in warming projections – for the fourth consecutive year, said the Climate Action Tracker in its global update, released at the climate talks in Belém, Brazil, today
The International Energy Agency shows what we’ve long known: continuing to back fossil fuels will make energy bills more expensive for everyday people. Investing in renewables means cheaper energy bills and is the fastest route to addressing energy poverty and overcoming energy insecurity
New research from Climate Analytics shows that major emitting sectors can fully eliminate fossil fuel use and reach real zero on tight timelines
A new Climate Analytics study shows that, even after years of insufficient action, the world can still return to well below 1.5°C of warming this century if countries pursue the “highest possible ambition” in climate action
The world’s largest fossil fuel and cement companies should shoulder a major share of the investment needed to develop carbon removal technologies, according to a new peer-reviewed study in Climate Policy
A major new assessment finds that the world is stalling on progress to limit warming to 1.5°C, with none of the 45 indicators of climate action on track for 2030
This report looks at decarbonisation options for both the so-called “hard-to-abate” iron & steel – and cement – sectors, along with the lack of progress on CCS, and finds the claims they are hard-to-abate difficult to reconcile with reality
Asian countries are considering CCS to address fossil fuel emissions, which could create a “considerable and unnecessary risk” not only to the Paris Agreement, but also to their own economies
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Source: climateanalytics.org

