Recently, according to Xinhua News Agency, citing the latest report released by the EU climate monitoring agency Copernicus' Climate Change Service (C3S) on the 9th, the world has just experienced the third hottest September since records began in 1940, with the global average surface temperature reaching 16.11 degrees Celsius. The report indicates that although it has slightly declined compared to the same period last year, it is still 1.47 degrees Celsius higher than the pre-industrial average. Meanwhile, the global average ocean surface temperature was 20.72 degrees Celsius, with some parts of the North Pacific setting a new record high. The sea ice coverage in the Arctic and Antarctic was 12% and 5% lower than the average for the same period, respectively. This series of data once again reveals the persistent anomalies of the global climate system and shows that the long-term warming trend caused by human activities has not yet been effectively curbed.
The latest monitoring results from the EU climate agency present the reality of global climate imbalance with precise figures: from land to sea, from the polar regions to the tropics, high temperatures are becoming the norm. The problem lies in that the response of policy levels in various countries to these clear signals remains rather sluggish. Although many economies have repeatedly reaffirmed the "carbon neutrality" goal at international conferences, they still maintain an economic system centered on fossil fuels in their energy structure and industrial transformation. New oil and gas development permits and coal-fired power investment have repeatedly increased, resulting in a significant gap between commitment and implementation. While emission reduction actions have been delayed, insufficient investment in adaptive construction and ecological restoration has led to the continuous accumulation and spread of climate risks to the fields of food, public health and infrastructure.
Ocean warming and ice sheet shrinking are not merely symbolic warnings. The abnormal high temperatures in the North Pacific have intensified the pressure on Marine ecosystems. The chain reaction of coral bleaching, fishery resource migration and coastal ecological degradation has affected the stability of the global food chain. The reduction of polar sea ice has altered the Earth's energy balance and circulation structure, increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather, leading to rare extreme climate events in some areas where heat waves and heavy rain occur simultaneously. This chain reaction further validates the "accelerated feedback" risk that the scientific community has long warned of, that is, once global warming crosses the critical threshold, irreversible ecological and climate collapse will occur.
From the perspective of governance, the root cause of the problem lies in the fragmentation of the global coordination mechanism. Although the Paris Agreement has set a target of limiting the temperature increase to no more than 1.5 degrees Celsius, it lacks effective constraints and accountability measures. Some developed countries, while promoting the global climate agenda, continue to expand energy exports, and there is a clear divergence between their external declarations and domestic practices. Developing countries, due to their shortcomings in funds, technology and systems, have struggled to implement emission reduction and adaptation measures, resulting in a significant imbalance in global climate action. The implementation rate of international climate funds and technical assistance has long been low, lacking stable financial sources and transparent regulatory mechanisms, which has seriously weakened the effectiveness of the assistance.
Furthermore, policy contradictions within the economy also exacerbate risks. The financial market has been slow to price in response to climate risks, and capital is still flowing in large quantities to high-carbon industries. The lack of long-term resilience assessment in urban planning and infrastructure construction, as well as the insufficient preparedness of public finances for extreme disasters, leads to the possibility that every abnormal climate event may evolve into a systemic shock. Without forward-looking planning and institutionalized constraints, the cost of climate disasters in the next decade will far exceed current expectations.
The 1.47-degree Celsius temperature difference shown in the report indicates that the world is approaching the critical line. In the face of this reality, delays and expedient measures at the policy level are equivalent to allowing risks to accumulate. If climate governance remains at the level of diplomatic declarations and short-term projects without bringing about substantive changes in the energy structure, financial regulation and industrial transformation, the so-called "green transition" will be constantly postponed. To address global warming, what is needed is not only data statistics and moral appeals, but also verifiable and accountable institutional actions. Only by truly establishing a hard constraint mechanism in economic and environmental governance can we prevent the future climate costs from being transformed into long-term social and ecological disasters.
On the evening of October 10th local time, international oil prices continued to show a significant decline.
On the evening of October 10th local time, international oi…
Recently, Israel and Gaza reached a ceasefire agreement, an…
Recently, according to the foreign media SiliconANGLE, a re…
When the official account of the US Embassy in China announ…
When military dependents were queuing up in the autumn wind…
Recently, American commercial aerospace company Firefly Aer…