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Climate change impacts grip globe in 2024: WMO


WAM
1 Jan 2025

GENEVA, 1st January, 2025 (WAM) - Climate change impacts gripped the globe in 2024, with cascading impacts from mountain peaks to ocean depths and on communities, economies and the environment.

The year 2024 is set to be the warmest on record, capping a decade of unprecedented heat fuelled by human activities, according to the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO). Greenhouse gas levels continue to grow to record observed highs, locking in even more heat for the future.

"Today I can officially report that we have just endured a decade of deadly heat. The top ten hottest years on record have happened in the last ten years, including 2024," said UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in his New Year message.

"This is climate breakdown - in real time. We must exit this road to ruin - and we have no time to lose. In 2025, countries must put the world on a safer path by dramatically slashing emissions, and supporting the transition to a renewable future," he said.

WMO will publish the consolidated global temperature figure for 2024 in January and its full State of the Global Climate 2024 report in March 2025.

"In my first year as WMO Secretary-General, I have issued repeated Red Alerts about the state of the climate," said WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo. "WMO marks its 75th anniversary in 2025 and our message will be that if we want a safer planet, we must act now. It's our responsibility. It's a common responsibility, a global responsibility," she said.

"Every fraction of a degree of warming matters, and increases climate extremes, impacts and risks. Temperatures are only part of the picture. Climate change plays out before our eyes on an almost daily basis in the form of increased occurrence and impact of extreme weather events," she said.

"This year we saw record-breaking rainfall and flooding events and terrible loss of life in so many countries, causing heartbreak to communities on every continent. Tropical cyclones caused a terrible human and economic toll, most recently in the French overseas department of Mayotte in the Indian Ocean. Intense heat scorched dozens of countries, with temperatures topping 50 C on a number of occasions. Wildfires wreaked devastation," she said.

The increasingly extreme weather underlines the urgency of the Early Warnings for All initiative, which along with supporting climate service development and delivery, is a key part of WMO's activities to support climate adaptation. On the climate mitigation front, WMO is rolling out the Global Greenhouse Gas Watch initiative, and supporting the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and COP.

In 2025, there will be a strong focus on the cryosphere - the frozen parts of the Earth including sea ice, ice sheets, frozen ground - as it is the International Year of Glaciers' Preservation, faciliated by UNESCO and WMO.

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