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Earth Nears 'Hothouse' Path: Scientists Warn of Unraveling Systems
12 Feb
Summary
- Critical Earth systems show signs of destabilization, nearing a 'hothouse' trajectory.
- Multiple planetary subsystems are identified as tipping elements close to instability.
- Reversal of extreme warming and sea level rise may be impossible on human timescales.

Multiple critical Earth systems are showing signs of destabilization, suggesting the planet may be closer to a 'hothouse' trajectory than previously understood. An international research collaboration highlights that these destabilizations could trigger cascading interactions among subsystems, accelerating extreme warming and sea level rise.
Sixteen key 'tipping elements,' or Earth subsystems sensitive to temperature thresholds, are identified as being near instability. These include major ice sheets, glaciers, permafrost, rainforests, and ocean circulation patterns like the AMOC. Crossing these thresholds could lead to consequences difficult to reverse on human timescales.
The research, published in One Earth, notes that global temperatures have already exceeded 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels for a sustained period. This breach, coupled with record-high CO2 concentrations, indicates climate change is advancing rapidly. Amplifying feedback loops, such as melting ice and permafrost thaw, further magnify warming.
Urgent climate mitigation and adaptation strategies are deemed necessary. These include scaling up renewable energy, protecting carbon-storing ecosystems, embedding climate resilience into policy, and phasing out fossil fuels. Novel approaches like coordinated global tipping-point monitoring are also proposed to manage risks and avert a potentially irreversible 'point-of-no-return' transition.



