Amazon’s Carbon Crisis Deepens as Key Monitoring Satellite Faces Budget Axe
The Unprecedented CO₂ Surge of 2024 Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations experienced their most dramatic single-year increase on record in 2024,…
The Unprecedented CO₂ Surge of 2024 Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations experienced their most dramatic single-year increase on record in 2024,…
Over 100 countries now experience at least 10 more hot days annually compared to a decade ago, according to new climate research. Atmospheric CO₂ concentrations reached 423.9 ppm in 2024, marking the largest one-year increase since measurements began in 1957.
More than 100 countries now experience at least 10 additional “hot days” per year compared to when the Paris Agreement was established in 2015, according to recent studies by Climate Central and World Weather Attribution groups. The research indicates that global average temperature has risen to 1.3°C above pre-industrial levels, up from 1°C in 2015, resulting in nearly every nation worldwide experiencing hotter conditions.