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    Home»Tech»2025 set to be among hottest years on record, UN scientists warn | Science, Climate & Tech News
    Tech

    2025 set to be among hottest years on record, UN scientists warn | Science, Climate & Tech News

    Justin M. LarsonBy Justin M. LarsonNovember 6, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    This year will likely be the second or third warmest ever on record globally, as an “unprecedented streak” of high temperatures persist, UN scientists have warned as climate talks get under way in Brazil.

    Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Prince William will address other nations in the Amazonian city of Belem, including Brazil‘s president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and officials from Jamaica, which is still reeling from the devastating Hurricane Melissa.

    Global average surface temperatures in January to August 2025 were 1.42C above pre-industrial times, before humans started burning fossil fuels at scale, the UN’s World Meteorological Organisation has said.

    The Amazon rainforest around COP30 is threatened by climate change and mining, which also raises cash for the state of Para. Pic: Reuters
    Image:
    The Amazon rainforest around COP30 is threatened by climate change and mining, which also raises cash for the state of Para. Pic: Reuters

    The level is closing in on the goal set in the landmark Paris Agreement, struck at COP21 in 2015, which aimed to limit global warming to “well below” 2C and ideally 1.5C.

    That means just 10 years later, it is already looking “virtually impossible” to stick to the Paris goal without at least temporarily overshooting it, the WMO said.

    Under this heat, the UK experienced its hottest summer on record, two million people in Pakistan were evacuated from deadly floods and parts of the Amazon rainforest are so dry that once rare wildfires now spread easily.

    Hilde Heine, president of the coral atoll country of the Marshall Islands in the Pacific, said the “widespread mortality of coral reefs [is] now seemingly inevitable” and the Amazon is “likely not far behind in suffering a similar fate”.

    WMO chief Celeste Saulo stressed it would be “still entirely possible and essential” to bring temperatures down to the 1.5C goal again.

    That 1.5C limit is “not just a figure” but a “lifeline for Pacific communities and climate-vulnerable nations” grappling with rising and warming seas, said Shiva Gounden, head of Pacific at Greenpeace Australia Pacific.

    “The legal, moral, and political responsibility for climate action has never been stronger, and the ambition leaders take to Belem will define its success.”

    Read more from Sky News:
    Earth’s lungs are collapsing – is net zero dead?
    Few places explain world’s refugee crisis as well as this

    A climate change protester. File pic: AP
    Image:
    A climate change protester. File pic: AP

    China, US and India leaders staying away

    The leaders are in town over the course of two days, before the COP30 climate summit begins on Monday.

    But only about 60 are due to attend, compared with more than double the number in some previous years.

    The heads of the world’s three largest drivers of climate change, China, the US and India, are all staying at home.

    Although many missing leaders will still send officials to the negotiations, diplomats here in Belem are worried that governments are distracted by cost-of-living woes and boosting defence.

    They also fear US President Donald Trump will seek to water down any deals from afar by threatening countries that agree to anything too ambitious.

    Leaders ‘denying reality’

    Mariana Menezes, a Brazilian mother caught up in the devastating floods in Rio Grande do Sul last year, said: “We see world leaders denying reality and making plans to expand fossil fuels.

    “These people, who once enjoyed full lives with unforgettable summers and long walks outdoors in their youth, are condemning future generations to lives of pollution and disasters.”

    The WMO’s annual State of the Climate reports found that the past 11 years – from the Paris Agreement year of 2015 to 2025 – have each been in the top 11 warmest on record.

    And the past three years have been the three warmest years in the record, stretching back 176 years.

    Sir Keir will admit that the “consensus is gone” on climate change, conceding that cross-party unity on the science has splintered at home and globally.

    But despite attacks on climate policies from the Conservatives and Reform, Britons are still concerned about and believe in climate change, and are still buying in to green technology like electric vehicles and heat pumps, Sky News has found.



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