Context:
β’ The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) released its State of the Global Climate 2025, its flagship annual report, highlighting accelerating global warming trends and irreversible climate impacts.
Key Highlights:
- Scientific Findings / Climate Indicators
β’ 2015β2025 recorded as the hottest 11-year period globally
β’ 2025 among the top three warmest years, ~1.43Β°C above pre-industrial levels
β’ Introduction of Earthβs Energy Imbalance (EEI) as a key indicator
β Reflects excess heat retained by Earth - Ocean and Cryosphere Changes
β’ Ocean Heat Content reached a record high
β’ Around 90% of ocean surfaces affected by marine heatwaves
β’ Arctic sea ice remains near record lows
β’ Sea-level rise rate doubled compared to 1993β2002 baseline - Irreversible Changes
β’ Ocean warming and acidification now irreversible over centuries to millennia
β’ Long-term accumulation of greenhouse gases (GHGs) driving permanent changes - Health and Socio-economic Impacts
β’ Rising dengue cases due to climate-sensitive disease spread
β’ Heat stress impacts over one-third of global workforce
β’ Increased risks to livelihoods, food security, and public health - Stakeholders Involved
β’ WMO (UN agency)
β’ National meteorological agencies
β’ Governments, climate scientists, global institutions
Relevant Prelims Points:
- World Meteorological Organization (WMO):
β Specialized UN agency (est. 1950, Geneva)
β Deals with weather, climate, and hydrology - Earthβs Energy Imbalance (EEI):
β Difference between incoming solar radiation and outgoing heat energy
β Positive EEI β global warming acceleration - Marine Heatwaves:
β Periods of abnormally high ocean temperatures
β Affect coral reefs, fisheries, and marine ecosystems - Ocean Acidification:
β Caused by absorption of COβ by oceans
β Lowers pH, affecting marine biodiversity - Greenhouse Gases (GHGs):
β COβ, CHβ, NβO major contributors to warming
Relevant Mains Points:
- Climate change acceleration and global implications:
β Crossing 1.5Β°C threshold risks intensifies extreme events
β Impacts include heatwaves, floods, sea-level rise - Significance of EEI as a climate metric:
β Provides real-time assessment of energy accumulation
β Helps refine climate models and policy decisions - Impact on oceans and cryosphere:
β Oceans act as heat sinks, delaying but worsening long-term warming
β Melting ice contributes to coastal vulnerability - Human and economic consequences:
β Health risks (vector-borne diseases, heat stress)
β Economic losses in agriculture, fisheries, labour productivity - Global governance and climate action challenges:
β Gap between climate commitments and implementation
β Need for stronger adaptation and mitigation strategies - Way Forward:
β Accelerate decarbonization and renewable energy transition
β Strengthen climate resilience and adaptation policies
β Enhance global cooperation under UNFCCC and Paris Agreement
β Invest in early warning systems and climate finance
UPSC Relevance:
β’ GS 3: Environment, Climate Change, Disaster Management
β’ GS 2: International Institutions (WMO), Global Cooperation
β’ Prelims: EEI, Marine Heatwaves, WMO
