November 25, 2025 | 05:03 GMT +7
November 25, 2025 | 05:03 GMT +7
Hotline: 0913.378.918
"Tipping points" refer to junctures in the climate system that, when crossed, can usher in irreversible changes. Tipping points include the near-complete melting of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet or the shutdown of the ocean current that includes the Gulf Stream.
Why it matters: The new study, published Friday in Science, finds tipping points lurking much closer to the present level of warming, and that the Paris Agreement's most stringent warming target of 1.5°C compared to preindustrial levels could trigger four of them.
These would include the abrupt thawing of permanently frozen soil that rings the Arctic and the die-off of warm-water coral reefs.
Context: The study defines a tipping point as when changes in a large part of the climate become self-perpetuating. Not every tipping point immediately affects the planet, and some are only felt regionally.
Still others — like the melting of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, could take centuries to fully play out.
The big picture: The new study is a more complete but sobering read compared to a similar paper published in 2008, since it adds new tipping points to the list and concludes that at least four of them, including the abrupt thawing of permanently frozen soil that rings the Arctic, are likely to be set off at 1.5°C of warming.
"Current policies leading to [about] 2 to 3°C warming are unsafe," the study states.
Zoom in: The researchers put forward the idea of a tipping point early warning system, which could combine remote sensing, such as satellite measurements, with computer modeling and deep learning techniques.
Perhaps that way, alarms could be sounded before irreversible, harmful changes are set into motion.
What they're saying: "Since I first assessed climate tipping points in 2008 the list has grown and our assessment of the risk they pose has increased dramatically," said study co-author Tim Lenton, of the University of Exeter, in a statement.
"We now need to trigger positive social tipping points that accelerate the transformation to a clean energy future. We may also have to adapt to cope with climate tipping points that we fail to avoid, and support those who could suffer uninsurable losses and damages."
On the agenda at this gathering: "Positive tipping points," which are socio-economic steps that could help accelerate society's transition away from fossil fuels.
A new effort is launching to look at concerns over "cascading risks" that tipping points pose, where there's a chain reaction of sorts.
The new work is called the "Tipping Points Model Intercomparison Project", or “TIPMIP." It too is on the conference program.
The bottom line: In the 20 years since the first tipping points assessment came out, some have become nearly inevitable.
It's clear from this new paper and the broader research on this topic that without dramatic emissions cuts in the interim, we can't allow another 20 years to pass before we take another in-depth look.
(axios)
(VAN) Brazil's COP30 presidency pushed through a compromise climate deal on Saturday that would boost finance for poor nations coping with global warming but that omitted any mention of the fossil fuels driving it.
(VAN) Poultry farmers in the UK have been warned that they could face one of the worst winters yet for bird flu.
(VAN) Prices of main-crop paddy have risen sharply, with jasmine rice hitting 16,100 baht per tonne — the highest level in years.
(VAN) In Brazil, FAO unveiled a series of reports and initiatives showing how sustainable agrifood systems are a solution to the climate crisis.
(VAN) With names like neodymium and dysprosium, rare-earth elements sound exotic — and their perceived scarcity has only added to the mystique.
(VAN) In a new study published in Trends in Biotechnology, researchers used a gene-editing technology called CRISPR to increase a fungus's production efficiency and cut its production-related environmental impact by as much as 61%- all without adding any foreign DNA.
(VAN) A top official in Beijing’s Cop delegation says China is committed to clean energy – but US’s absence is a problem.