UN warns climate threshold overshoot as emissions urgency rises
The United Nations has issued a stark warning on World Environment Day, pointing to accelerating climate disruption and rising global temperatures. The Secretary-General described the current trajectory as increasingly unstable, with the past eleven years identified as the hottest period recorded in modern history.
The statement details multiple environmental pressures affecting the planet at once. Air pollution continues to intensify in many regions. Soil degradation expands across agricultural zones. Ecosystems weaken under combined stress. Biodiversity loss accelerates. These changes are linked to rising human health risks, destruction of homes, and growing food insecurity in vulnerable regions.
The United Nations projects that global temperatures will temporarily exceed the 1.5°C threshold compared with pre-industrial levels. It warns that even small increases beyond this limit will amplify climate damage. The message stresses the need to reduce the scale and duration of any overshoot and to bring temperatures back down as quickly as possible.
The Secretary-General calls for rapid emission reductions and a faster shift away from fossil fuels. He highlights renewable energy as a key tool for energy security and cost reduction. Methane cuts are presented as one of the fastest ways to slow warming. The statement also urges stronger protection of forests, land, and oceans, alongside increased financial support for developing countries to strengthen resilience and adaptation.
-
16:31
-
16:05
-
15:49
-
14:40
-
14:30
-
14:15
-
14:15
-
14:00
-
13:47
-
13:33
-
13:15
-
12:30
-
11:40
-
11:30
-
11:17
-
11:00
-
10:57
-
10:48
-
10:34
-
10:21
-
09:59
-
09:44
-
09:30
-
09:15
-
09:09
-
08:54
-
08:19
-
07:53
-
07:36
-
07:30
-
07:19
-
07:19
-
07:15