Experts Urge Swift Action as 1.5°C Climate Target Faces Potential Overshoot

November 14, 2025
Experts Urge Swift Action as 1.5°C Climate Target Faces Potential Overshoot
  • Experts emphasize the need for negative emissions and carbon sinks as part of managing an overshoot and returning to below-1.5°C.

  • The current consensus is that overshoot of the 1.5°C target is likely in coming years, but the goal remains to manage and eventually bring temperatures back down to 1.5°C.

  • Prominent figures, including scientists and UN leaders, stress that overshoot is likely but not a defeat and call for urgent action to limit warming.

  • Experts describe overshoot as a period when temperatures exceed 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels before potentially returning below that threshold.

  • Tipping points associated with overshoot could include coral reef collapse, intensified heat waves, Amazon drying, Greenland/Antarctica ice melt, and possible Atlantic meridional overturning circulation disruption.

  • Avoiding irreversible damage hinges not just on reaching 1.5°C again, but on returning to it, with overshoot scenarios depending on future tech feasibility and policy measures.

  • Breaching 1.5°C carries risks like coral reef die-off, more extreme heat waves, Amazon drying, and potential tipping points such as ice sheet melt and disruptions to Atlantic circulation.

  • There is ongoing uncertainty about the timing and severity of overshoot impacts, underscoring the imperative for rapid, cumulative emissions cuts and potential future technologies.

  • The 1.5°C limit is framed as a preindustrial-to-present-day increase, with about 1.5°C—roughly 2.7°F—serving as the public reference point in policy discussions.

  • Experts stress that the 1.5°C boundary is a constraint, not a target, and exceeding it raises human suffering and tipping-point risks.

  • Overshoot discussions are embedded in ongoing international diplomacy, with decision-makers aiming to re-lower temperatures in the future rather than accept permanent high warming.

  • Climate Action Tracker estimates suggest that even with maximum action, 1.5°C could be breached around 2030, peaking near 1.7°C and not returning below until the 2060s under current trajectories.

  • Many researchers believe staying strictly at or below 1.5°C is unlikely in the near term, with projections around 2.6°C warming by mid-century absent substantial action.

  • Even with aggressive reductions, the timeline for returning to below-1.5°C may extend into the 2060s, underscoring the urgency of action today.

  • The discourse shifts from a rigid no-go stance to a pragmatic risk-reduction approach that accepts overshoot as possible but prioritizes swift return to below-1.5°C and stronger action.

  • UN officials, scientists, and analysts describe overshoot as a temporary phase where warming exceeds the target before corrective actions can steer the trajectory downward.

Summary based on 7 sources


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