
The Paris Agreement’s “stretch goal” of limiting warming to 1.5 C above preindustrial levels is no longer feasible, according to an analysis of 15 market outlooks compiled by think tank Resources for the Future.
Energy-related CO₂ surpassed 38,000 million metric tons in 2024, and most forecasts don’t expect a peak until sometime between 2030 and 2035, with reductions by 2050 varying significantly. The most aggressive projection — the International Energy Agency’s Net Zero scenario — demands emissions fall by 13.4% every year through 2050 (the steepest drop this century was 5%, during COVID-19 shutdowns). Renewables will keep reshaping the energy mix, rising from roughly 15% of primary energy in 2024 to more than 20% by 2050. But that won’t be enough to meaningfully cut emissions while fossil fuels enjoy strong markets across the Middle East, Asia, and Africa. Rising electricity demand is also compounding the issue. Global power generation roughly doubled between 2000 and 2024, and could climb another 59% — or more than double again under some scenarios — by 2050, driven by the AI boom, the electrification of transport, and the rapid spread of air conditioning. Renewables are expected to supply a chunk of that new demand, but those additional terawatts represent “an energy addition, not an energy transition,” the report’s authors wrote.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Pentagon advances Golden Dome missile defense with new Space Force contracts - 2
Honda’s Biggest Flex Isn’t Its Superbikes, It’s Selling 500K Bikes In One Month - 3
NASA Artemis II tracker: Where is the Orion now and when will it reach the moon? - 4
Support Your Wellness: 20-Minute Home Exercises That Work - 5
I thought I knew the night sky, but what I saw from the Canary Islands left me speechless
Is an $85 apple pie worth it? Our Thanksgiving taste test says … maybe.
China bans storing cremated remains in empty 'bone ash apartments'
Little Urban areas to Visit in Western Europe
How to watch the last supermoon of the year
2 bright planets light up April evenings — here's where and when to look
Artemis II astronauts channel Apollo 8 with a striking Earthset photo
Starship success, a private moon landing and more: The top 10 spaceflight stories of 2025
Golan resident convicted of spying for Iran after passing tank movement, missile-impact data
Reports: Nepal's former PM arrested over deadly protest crackdown













