UN Reports Warn of Unprecedented Heat to Be Recorded in 2025

NEW YORK, USA, November 7th –The United Nations has predicted that 2025 is expected to be among the hottest years ever recorded. It has, however, been said that the trend could still be reversed.

While this year will not surpass 2024 as the hottest recorded, it will rank second or third, capping more than a decade of unprecedented heat, the UN’s weather and climate agency said, capping more.

At the same time, concentrations of greenhouse gases grew to new record highs, locking in more heat for the future, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) warned in a report released as dozens of world leaders met in the Brazilian Amazon ahead of next week’s COP30 UN climate summit.

Together, the developments “mean that it will be virtually impossible to limit global warming to 1.5 °C in the next few years without temporarily overshooting the Paris Agreement target,” WMO chief Celeste Saulo told leaders in Belem in northern Brazil.

The 2015 Paris climate accords aimed to limit global warming to well below two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, and to 1.5 °C if possible. Saulo insisted in a statement that while the situation was dire, “the science is equally clear that it’s still entirely possible and essential to bring temperatures back down to 1.5 °C by the end of the century.”

UN Chief Antonio Gutierres called the missed temperature target a “moral failure.” Speaking at a Geneva press conference, WMO’s Climate Science chief Chris Hewitt stressed that “we don’t yet know how long we would be above 1.5 degrees.”

“That very much depends on decisions that are made now… So that’s one of the big challenges of COP30.”

It has, however, been established that the world remains far off track. Already, the years between 2015 and 2025 will individually have been the warmest since observations began 176 years ago, WMO said with the 2023, 2024 and 2025 figures at the very top of that ranking.

The WMO report said that the mean near-surface temperature about two meters (six feet) above the ground during the first eight months of this year stood at 1.42 °C above the pre-industrial average.

At the same time, concentrations of heat-trapping greenhouse gases in the atmosphere and ocean heat content continued to rise, up from 2024’s already record levels, it found. In its annual report, the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) also confirmed that emissions of greenhouse gases increased by 2.3 percent last year, growth driven by India, followed by China, Russia and Indonesia.

The WMO said the impact of temperature rises can be seen in the Arctic sea ice extent, which, after the winter freeze this year, was the lowest ever recorded. The Antarctic sea ice extent, meanwhile, tracked well below average throughout the year, it said.

The UN agency also highlighted numerous weather and climate-related extreme events during the first eight months of 2025, from devastating flooding to brutal heat and wildfires, with “cascading impacts on lives, livelihoods and food systems.”

In this context, the WMO hailed “significant advances” in early warning systems, which it stressed were “more crucial than ever.”

Since 2015, it said, the number of countries reporting such systems had more than doubled, from 56 to 119. It hailed in particular progress among the world’s least developed countries and small island developing states, which showed a five-per-cent hike in access in the past year alone.

However, it lamented that 40 per cent of the world’s countries still have no such early warning systems. “Urgent action is needed to close these remaining gaps,” it said.

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