Global tipping points report 2025. Status of Earth system tipping points: what’s new? [Chapter 2.2]
    Armstrong McKay, David I.; Buxton, Joshua E.; Loriani, Sina; Wunderling, Nico; Abis, Beniamino; Abrams, Jesse F.; Aksenov, Yevgeny; Arellano Nava, Beatriz; Brunetti, Maura; Chiessi, Cristiano M.; Dakos, Vasilis; Dennis, Donovan P.; Duke, Norman C.; England, Matthew H.; Flores, Bernardo M.; Garbe, Julius; Gunn, Kathryn; Hessen, Dag O.; von der Heydt, Anna; Kääb, Andreas; Kéfi, Sonia; Langebroek, Petra M.; Lucarini, Valerio; Messori, Gabriele; Millman, Helen; Nitzbon, Jan; Parry, Isobel; Pichon, Benoît; Pradal, Marie-Aude; Sakschewski, Boris; Sanabria-Fernández, José A.; Schwinger, Jörg; Sinet, Sacha; Spears, Bryan M. 
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0876-0405; Staver, A. Carla; Steinert, Norman J.; Sudakow, Ivan; Tharammal, Thejna.
  
2025
    Global tipping points report 2025. Status of Earth system tipping points: what’s new? [Chapter 2.2].
  
    University of Exeter, 29pp.
    
  
  
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Abstract/Summary
The world has entered a new reality. Global warming will soon exceed 1.5°C. This puts humanity in the danger zone where multiple climate tipping points pose catastrophic risks to billions of people. Already warm-water coral reefs are crossing their thermal tipping point and experiencing unprecedented dieback, threatening the livelihoods of hundreds of millions who depend on them. Polar ice sheets are approaching tipping points, committing the world to several metres of irreversible sea-level rise that will affect hundreds of millions. Every fraction of additional warming increases the risk of triggering further damaging tipping points. These include a collapse of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) that would radically undermine global food and water security and plunge northwest Europe into prolonged severe winters. Together, climate change and deforestation put the Amazon rainforest at risk of widespread dieback below 2°C global warming, threatening incalculable damage to biodiversity and impacting over 100 million people who depend on the forest. These climate tipping point risks are interconnected and most of the interactions between them are destabilising, meaning tipping one system makes tipping another more likely. The resulting impacts would cascade through the ecological and social systems we depend upon, creating escalating damages. Humanity faces a potentially catastrophic, irreversible outcome. The Inter-American Court of Human Rights recognises the right of humans to a safe climate, hence preventing irreversible harm to the climate system is a legal imperative. How hot we let it get and for how long really matters in preventing climate tipping points. The magnitude and duration of global temperature overshoot above 1.5°C has to be minimised. To achieve that, global anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions must be halved by 2030 (compared to 2010 levels) and then reach net zero by 2050. This requires an unprecedented acceleration in decarbonisation, rapid mitigation of methane emissions and other short-lived climate pollutants and fast scaling of sustainable carbon removal from the atmosphere. If we wait to cross tipping points before we act, it will be too late. The only credible risk management strategy is to act in advance. But the window for preventing damaging tipping points is rapidly closing. Current Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and binding long-term or net zero targets are not enough. They still commit the world to ongoing global warming that will likely exceed 2°C before 2100. This demands immediate, unprecedented action from leaders at COP30 and policymakers worldwide. To achieve such a radical acceleration of action requires triggering positive tipping points that generate self-amplifying change in technologies and behaviours, towards zero emissions. In the two years since the first Global Tipping Points Report was published, there has been a radical acceleration in the uptake of solar power and electric vehicles worldwide. However, there has also been a recent spate of backsliding on commitments in some nations and sectors, including finance. Nevertheless, a minority can still tip the majority when they have self-amplifying feedback on their side. This is clearly evident in clean technology adoption. Solar PV panels have dropped in price by a quarter for each doubling of their installed capacity. Batteries have improved in quality and plummeted in price the more that are deployed. This encourages further adoption. The spread of climate litigation cases and nature positive initiatives is also self-amplifying. The more people undertaking them the more they influence others to act. Positive tipping points are also starting to interact and reinforce one another. Policies targeting super-leverage points of interaction can help trigger this cascading positive change. Reinforcing feedback between civil society and policymakers is also critical to amplifying positive change. Hence the Global Mutirão, by catalysing collective action from civil society, could be key to triggering positive tipping points. Only with a combination of decisive policy and civil society action can the world turn from facing existential climate tipping point risks to seizing positive tipping point opportunities.
| Item Type: | Publication - Report | 
|---|---|
| UKCEH and CEH Sections/Science Areas: | Environmental Pressures and Responses (2025-) | 
| Funders/Sponsors: | Bezos Earth Fund, Advanced Research and Invention Agency (ARIA), Quadrature Climate Foundation (QCF), World Wildlife Fund (WWF), Trex, Global Challenges Foundation | 
| Additional Information: | Open Access chapter - full text available via Official URL link. | 
| NORA Subject Terms: | Ecology and Environment Meteorology and Climatology  | 
        
| Date made live: | 20 Oct 2025 09:00 +0 (UTC) | 
| URI: | https://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/540410 | 
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