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The climate
disaster is here

Earth is already becoming unlivable. Will governments act to stop this disaster from getting worse?

The enormous, unprecedented pain and turmoil caused by the climate crisis is often discussed alongside what can seem like surprisingly small temperature increases – 1.5C or 2C hotter than it was in the era just before the car replaced the horse and cart. 

These temperature thresholds will again be the focus of upcoming UN climate talks at the COP26 summit in Scotland as countries variously dawdle or scramble to avert climate catastrophe. But the single digit numbers obscure huge ramifications at stake. “We have built a civilization based on a world that doesn’t exist anymore,” as Katharine Hayhoe, a climate scientist at Texas Tech University and chief scientist at the Nature Conservancy, puts it.

The world has already heated up by around 1.2C, on average, since the preindustrial era, pushing humanity beyond almost all historical boundaries. Cranking up the temperature of the entire globe this much within little more than a century is, in fact, extraordinary, with the oceans alone absorbing the heat equivalent of five Hiroshima atomic bombs dropping into the water every second.

When global temperatures are projected to hit key benchmarksthis century

Average global surface temperature relative to a 1850-1900 baseline

Worst-case scenario

An unlikely pathway where emissions

are not mitigated

Intermediate

A pathway where emissions start declining

around 2040

Best-case

An unlikely pathway where emissions start

declining now and global temperatures

peak at +1.8C

Projected

to increase

by +1. 5C

+2.7F

2021

2050

2080

11 years

9 years

In 6

+2.0C

+3.6F

In 20

to 31 years

+2.5C

+4.5F

In 32

to 58

years

+3.0C

+5.4F

In 43 years

at the earliest

Worst-case scenario

An unlikely pathway where emissions are not mitigated

Intermediate

A pathway where emissions start declining around 2040

Best-case

An unlikely pathway where emissions start declining now

and global temperatures peak at +1.8C

Projected

to increase

by +1. 5C

+2.7F

2021

2050

2080

11 years

In 6

to 9 years

+2.0C

+3.6F

In 20

to 31 years

+2.5C

+4.5F

In 32

to 58

years

+3.0C

+5.4F

In 43 years

at the earliest

Worst-case scenario

An unlikely pathway where emissions are not mitigated

Intermediate

A pathway where emissions start declining around 2040

Best-case

An unlikely pathway where emissions start declining now and

global temperatures peak at +1.8C

Projected

to increase

by +1. 5C

+2.7F

2021

2050

2080

11 years

In 6

to 9 years

+2.0C

+3.6F

In 20

to 31 years

+2.5C

+4.5F

In 32

to 58

years

+3.0C

+5.4F

In 43 years

at the earliest

Worst-case scenario

An unlikely pathway

where emissions

are not mitigated

Intermediate

A pathway where

emissions start

declining around 2040

Best-case

An unlikely pathway where

emissions start declining now and

global temperatures peak at +1.8C

Projected

to increase

by +1. 5C

+2.7F

2021

2050

2080

11 years

In 6

to 9 years

+2.0C

+3.6F

In 20

to 31 years

+2.5C

+4.5F

In 32

to 58

years

+3.0C

+5.4F

In 43 years

at the earliest

Until now, human civilization has operated within a narrow, stable band of temperature. Through the burning of fossil fuels, we have now unmoored ourselves from our past, as if we have transplanted ourselves onto another planet. The last time it was hotter than now was at least 125,000 years ago, while the atmosphere has more heat-trapping carbon dioxide in it than any time in the past two million years, perhaps more.

Since 1970, the Earth’s temperature has raced upwards faster than in any comparable period. The oceans have heated up at a rate not seen in at least 11,000 years. “We are conducting an unprecedented experiment with our planet,” said Hayhoe. “The temperature has only moved a few tenths of a degree for us until now, just small wiggles in the road. But now we are hitting a curve we’ve never seen before.”

No one is entirely sure how this horrifying experiment will end but humans like defined goals and so, in the 2015 Paris climate agreement, nearly 200 countries agreed to limit the global temperature rise to “well below” 2C, with an aspirational goal to keep it to 1.5C. The latter target was fought for by smaller, poorer nations, aware that an existential threat of unlivable heatwaves, floods and drought hinged upon this ostensibly small increment. “The difference between 1.5C and 2C is a death sentence for the Maldives,” said Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, president of the country, to world leaders at the United Nations in September.

There is no huge chasm after a 1.49C rise, we are tumbling down a painful, worsening rocky slope rather than about to suddenly hit a sheer cliff edge – but by most standards the world’s governments are currently failing to avert a grim fate. “We are on a catastrophic path,” said António Guterres, secretary general of the UN. “We can either save our world or condemn humanity to a hellish future.”

Heatwaves

Earth’s atmosphere, now saturated with emissions from human activity, is trapping warmth and leading to more frequent periods of extreme heat

  • Oregon, US
    June 2021: A cooling shelter
  • Yokohama, Japan
    July 2021: Staff sprinkles water to cool down patrons
  • Seville, Spain
    August 2021: A billboard shows 47C (117F)
  • Karachi, Pakistan
    September 2021: A zookeeper bathes an elephant

This year has provided bitter evidence that even current levels of warming are disastrous, with astounding floods in Germany and China, Hades-like fires from Canada to California to Greece and rain, rather than snow, falling for the first time at the summit of a rapidly melting Greenland. “No amount of global warming can be considered safe and people are already dying from climate change,” said Amanda Maycock, an expert in climate dynamics at the University of Leeds.

A “heat dome” that pulverized previous temperature records in the US’s Pacific northwest and Canada's west coast in June, killing hundreds of people as well as a billion sea creatures roasted alive in their shells off the coast, would’ve been “virtually impossible” if human activity hadn’t heated the planet, scientists have calculated, while the German floods were made nine times more likely by the climate crisis. “The fingerprint of climate change on recent extreme weather is quite clear,” said Michael Wehner, who specializes in climate attribution at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. “But even I am surprised by the number and scale of weather disasters in 2021.”

Frequency and intensity of once-a-decade heatwave events

Global

warming

level

Increase in

heatwave

temperature

Heatwave

frequency

Historical

1850-1900

A once-a-decade event ...

-

... now happens

2.8x a decade

+1.0C

Present

+1.2C

+1.5C

In 6-11 years

4.1x

+1.9C

+2.0C

About 30 years

5.6x

+2.6C

+4.0C

Unlikely this

century

9.4x

+5.1C

Global

warming

level

Increase in

heatwave

temperature

Heatwave

frequency

Historical

1850-1900

A once-a-decade event ...

-

+1.0C

Present

... now happens 2.8x a decade

+1.2C

+1.5C

In 6-11 years

4.1x

+1.9C

+2.0C

About 30 years

5.6x

+2.6C

+4.0C

Unlikely this

century

9.4x

+5.1C

Global

warming

level

Increase in

heatwave

temperature

Heatwave

frequency

Historical

1850-1900

A once-a-decade event ...

-

+1.0C

Present

... now happens 2.8x a decade

+1.2C

+1.5C

In 6-11 years

4.1x

+1.9C

+2.0C

About 30 years

5.6x

+2.6C

+4.0C

Unlikely this

century

9.4x

+5.1C

Global

warming

level

Increase in

heatwave

temperature

Heatwave

frequency

Historical

1850-1900

A once-a-decade event ...

-

+1.0C

Present

... now happens 2.8x a decade

+1.2C

+1.5C

In 6-11 years

4.1x

+1.9C

+2.0C

About 30 years

5.6x

+2.6C

+4.0C

Unlikely this

century

9.4x

+5.1C

After a Covid-induced blip last year, greenhouse gas emissions have roared back in 2021, further dampening slim hopes that the world will keep within the 1.5C limit. “There’s a high chance we will get to 1.5C in the next decade,” said Joeri Rogelj, a climate scientist at Imperial College London.

For humans, a comfortably livable planet starts to spiral away the more it heats up. At 1.5C, about 14% of the world’s population will be hit by severe heatwaves once every five years. with this number jumping to more than a third of the global population at 2C. 

Beyond 1.5C, the heat in tropical regions of the world will push societies to the limits, with stifling humidity preventing sweat from evaporating and making it difficult for people to cool down. Extreme heatwaves could make parts of the Middle East too hot for humans to endure, scientists have found, with rising temperatures also posing enormous risks for China and India.

A severe heatwave historically expected once a decade will happen every other year at 2C. “Something our great-grandparents maybe experienced once a lifetime will become a regular event,” said Rogelj. Globally, an extra 4.9 million people will die each year from extreme heat should the average temperature race beyond this point, scientists have estimated

At 2C warming, 99% of the world’s coral reefs also start to dissolve away, essentially ending warm-water corals. Nearly one in 10 vertebrate animals and almost one in five plants will lose half of their habitat. Ecosystems spanning corals, wetlands, alpine areas and the Arctic “are set to die off” at this level of heating, according to Rogelj.

Change in fraction of land annually exposed to heatwaves:

+1.5C

+2.7F

With our current policies

Around 2030s

Change from 1986-2006

Insufficient model agreement

+1.5C

+3.0C

Floods

Earth’s hotter climate is causing the atmosphere to hold more water, then releasing the water in the form of extreme precipitation events

  • Kolkata, India
    September 2021: A woman exits a bus onto a flooded street
  • Agen, France
    September 2021: Firefighters inspect a flooded street
  • Al Khaburah, Oman
    October 2021: Flooded streets after Cyclone Shaheen
  • Ayutthaya, Thailand
    October 2021: A boy walks through floodwaters

Across the planet, people are set to be strafed by cascading storms, heatwaves, flooding and drought. Around 216 million people, mostly from developing countries, will be forced to flee these impacts by 2050 unless radical action is taken, the World Bank has estimated. As much as $23tn is on track to be wiped from the global economy, potentially upending many more.

Some of the most dire impacts revolve around water – both the lack of it and inundation by it. Enormous floods, often fueled by abnormally heavy rainfall, have become a regular occurrence recently, not only in Germany and China but also from the US, where the Mississippi River spent most of 2019 in a state of flood, to the UK, which was hit by floods in 2020 after storms delivered the equivalent of one month of rain in 48 hours, to Sudan, where flooding wiped out more than 110,000 homes last year.

Frequency and intensity of once-a-decade heavy precipitation events

Global

warming

level

Heavy

precipitation

frequency

Increase in

wetness

Historical

1850-1900

A once-a-decade event ...

-

... now happens

1.3x a decade

+1.0C

Present

+6.7%

+1.5C

In 6-11 years

1.5x

+10.5%

+2.0C

About

30 years

1.7x

14.0%

+4.0C

Unlikely this

century

2.7x

+30.2%

Global

warming

level

Heavy precipitation

frequency

Increase in

wetness

Historical

1850-1900

A once-a-decade event ...

-

+1.0C

Present

... now happens 1.3x a decade

+6.7%

+1.5C

In 6-11 years

1.5x

+10.5%

+2.0C

About 30 years

1.7x

14.0%

+4.0C

Unlikely this

century

2.7x

+30.2%

Global

warming

level

Heavy precipitation

frequency

Increase in

wetness

Historical

1850-1900

A once-a-decade event ...

-

+1.0C

Present

... now happens 1.3x a decade

+6.7%

+1.5C

In 6-11 years

1.5x

+10.5%

+2.0C

About 30 years

1.7x

14.0%

+4.0C

Unlikely this

century

2.7x

+30.2%

Global

warming

level

Heavy precipitation

frequency

Increase in

wetness

Historical

1850-1900

A once-a-decade event ...

-

+1.0C

Present

... now happens 1.3x a decade

+6.7%

+1.5C

In 6-11 years

1.5x

+10.5%

+2.0C

About 30 years

1.7x

14.0%

+4.0C

Unlikely this

century

2.7x

+30.2%

Meanwhile, in the past 20 years the aggregated level of terrestrial water available to humanity has dropped at a rate of 1cm per year, with more than five billion people expected to have an inadequate water supply within the next three decades.

At 3C of warming, sea level rise from melting glaciers and ocean heat will also provide torrents of unwelcome water to coastal cities, with places such as Miami, Shanghai and Bangladesh in danger of becoming largely marine environments. The frequency of heavy precipitation events, the sort that soaked Germany and China, will start to climb, nearly doubling the historical norm once it heats up by 2C.

Change in the mass of precipitation:

+1.5C

+2.7F

With our current policies

Around 2030s

Change from 1986-2006

Insufficient model agreement

+1.5C

+3.0C

Wildfires

Earth’s hotter atmosphere soaks up water from the earth, drying out trees and tinder that amplify the severity of wildfires

  • Wooroloo, Australia
    February 2021: A wildfire destroyed over 30 homes
  • Ogan Ilir, Indonesia
    August 2021: Indonesian firefighters try to extiguish a peatland fire
  • Chefchaouen, Morocco
    August 2021: A woman looks at wildfires tearing through a forest
  • California, US
    September 2021: Flames consume a house in the Fawn Fire

Virtually all of North America and Europe will be at heightened risk of wildfires at 3C of heating, with places like California already stuck in a debilitating cycle of “heat, drought and fire”, according to scientists. The magnitude of the disastrous “Black Summer” bushfire season in Australia in 2019-20 will be four times more likely to reoccur at 2C of heating, and will be fairly commonplace at 3C. 

A disquieting unknown for climate scientists is the knock-on impacts as epochal norms continue to fall. Record wildfires in California last year, for example, resulted in a million children missing a significant amount of time in school. What if permafrost melting or flooding cuts off critical roads used by supply chains? What if storms knock out the world’s leading computer chip factory? What happens once half of the world is exposed to disease-carrying mosquitos? 

“We’ve never seen the climate change this fast so we don’t understand the non-linear effects,” said Hayhoe. “There are tipping points in our human-built systems that we don’t think about enough. More carbon means worse impacts which means more unpleasant surprises.”

Change in fraction of land annually exposed to wildfires:

+1.5C

+2.7F

With our current policies

Around 2030s

Change from 1986-2006

Insufficient model agreement

+1.5C

+3.0C

Crop failure

Unpredictable weather, like too much or too little rainfall, decreases the quantity and quality of crop yields

  • La Ceiba Talquezal, Guatemala
    May 2017: Crops on a hillside damaged by deforestation, pests and prolonged droughts
  • New South Wales, Australia
    October 2019: A farmer stands in a paddock of failed wheat crop
  • Lusaka, Zambia
    January 2020: Poor crops after the lack of normal summer rainfall
  • Badghis, Afghanistan
    September 2021: A farmer holds a handful of failed wheat from his crop

There are few less pleasant impacts in life than famine and the climate crisis is beginning to take a toll on food production. In August, the UN said that Madagascar was on the brink of the world’s first “climate change famine”, with tens of thousands of people at risk following four years with barely any rain. Globally, extreme crop drought events that previously occurred once a decade on average will more than double in their frequency at 2C of temperature rise. 

Heat the world a bit more than this and a third of all the world’s food production will be at risk by the end of the century as crops start to wilt and fail in the heat.

Frequency of once-a-decade crop drought events

Global

warming

level

Crop drought

frequency

Historical

1850-1900

A once-a-decade event ...

+1.0C

Present

... now happens 1.7x a decade

+1.5C

In 6-11 years

2.0x

+2.0C

About 30 years

2.4x

+4.0C

Unlikely this

century

4.1x

Global

warming

level

Crop drought

frequency

Historical

1850-1900

A once-a-decade event ...

+1.0C

Present

... now happens 1.7x a decade

+1.5C

In 6-11 years

2.0x

+2.0C

About 30 years

2.4x

+4.0C

Unlikely this

century

4.1x

Global

warming

level

Crop drought

frequency

Historical

1850-1900

A once-a-decade event ...

+1.0C

Present

... now happens 1.7x a decade

+1.5C

In 6-11 years

2.0x

+2.0C

About 30 years

2.4x

+4.0C

Unlikely this

century

4.1x

Global

warming

level

Crop drought

frequency

Historical

1850-1900

A once-a-decade event ...

+1.0C

Present

... now happens 1.7x a decade

+1.5C

In 6-8 years

2.0x

+2.0C

About 30 years

2.4x

+4.0C

Unlikely this

century

4.1x

Many different aspects of the climate crisis will destabilize food production, such as dropping levels of groundwater and shrinking snowpacks, another critical source of irrigation, in places such as the Himalayas. Crop yields decline the hotter it gets, while more extreme floods and storms risk ruining vast tracts of farmland.

Change in fraction of land annually exposed to crop failure:

+1.5C

+2.7F

With our current policies

Around 2030s

Change from 1986-2006

Insufficient model agreement

+1.5C

+3.0C

Despite the rapid advance of renewable energy and, more recently, electric vehicles, countries still remain umbilically connected to fossil fuels, subsidizing oil, coal and gas to the tune of around $11m every single minute. The air pollution alone from burning these fuels kills nearly nine million people each year globally. Decades of time has been squandered – US president Lyndon Johnson was warned of the climate crisis by scientists when Joe Biden was still in college and yet industry denial and government inertia means the world is set for a 2.7C increase in temperature this century, even if all emissions reduction pledges are met.

By the end of this year the world will have burned through 86% of the carbon “budget” that would allow us just a coin flip’s chance of staying below 1.5C. The Glasgow COP talks will somehow have to bridge this yawning gap, with scientists warning the world will have to cut emissions in half this decade before zeroing them out by 2050.

“2.7C would be very bad,” said Wehner, who explained that extreme rainfall would be up to a quarter heavier than now, and heatwaves potentially 6C hotter in many countries. Maycock added that much of the planet will become “uninhabitable” at this level of heating. “We would not want to live in that world,” she said.

A scenario approaching some sort of apocalypse would comfortably arrive should the world heat up by 4C or more, and although this is considered unlikely due to the belated action by governments, it should provide little comfort. 

Every decision – every oil drilling lease, every acre of the Amazon rainforest torched for livestock pasture, every new gas-guzzling SUV that rolls onto the road – will decide how far we tumble down the hill. In Glasgow, governments will be challenged to show they will fight every fraction of temperature rise, or else, in the words of Greta Thunberg, this pivotal gathering is at risk of being dismissed as “blah, blah, blah”.

“We’ve run down the clock but it’s never too late,” said Rogelj. “1.7C is better than 1.9C which is better than 3C. Cutting emissions tomorrow is better than the day after, because we can always avoid worse happening. The action is far too slow at the moment, but we can still act.”

This article was amended on 15 October 2021 with the correct IPCC projections for when global temperatures are expected to reach each threshold and to correct the spelling of Wooroloo. The time ranges in each map have also been amended to show time range projections from the Climate Action Tracker's current policies pathway. It was further amended on 25 October 2021 to add the west coast of Canada to the areas affected by the "heat dome" in June.