The report underscores that human-induced climate change is no longer a distant threat but a present-day reality. Across 22 analyzed extreme events—ranging from intense heatwaves and wildfires to devastating storms—researchers documented how global warming has destroyed communities and exhausted agricultural capacity. The study highlights a troubling disparity, noting that marginalized populations in the Global South face the brunt of these impacts, often exacerbated by a lack of observational data and reliance on climate models designed primarily for the Global North.
While adaptation measures remain necessary, experts emphasize that they have physical limits. Intense events like Hurricane Melissa demonstrate that even high levels of preparation cannot mitigate extreme losses in vulnerable regions such as the Caribbean. Friederike Otto, co-founder of WWA and a climate scientist at Imperial College London, warned that failing to rapidly phase out fossil fuels makes the 1.5°C goal increasingly unattainable. The findings arrive shortly after the COP30 summit in Brazil concluded with minimal progress toward a global energy transition, prompting activists like Margie Alt of the Climate Action Campaign to describe the current political climate in Washington as a direct impediment to urgent environmental protection.





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