Revised Climate Scenarios: Worst-Case Warming Now 3.5°C, Paris 1.5°C Target Still Out of Reach

May 19, 2026
Revised Climate Scenarios: Worst-Case Warming Now 3.5°C, Paris 1.5°C Target Still Out of Reach
  • A revised set of seven plausible warming scenarios replaces older extremes, with the worst-case near 3.5°C by 2100 and the best-case still above prior estimates, meaning the Paris 1.5°C target remains out of reach under current paths.

  • A middle scenario shows about 3.0°C warming by the century’s end, aligning with current emissions trends and underscoring that incremental action has reduced extremes but is not enough to hit 1.5°C.

  • Even the best-case trajectory remains above 1.5°C, effectively ruling out the Paris goal under existing trajectories, while the extreme coal-heavy 4.5°C path is no longer considered likely.

  • Public and political reactions vary, with criticism of past high-end projections and acknowledgment that outcomes depend on future emissions and natural climate feedbacks.

  • Many observers argue that the former high-end scenario (RCP8.5) is outdated and unlikely, noting policy implications hinge on emission choices and technological progress.

  • The shift reflects slower-than-ideal progress in emissions cuts but quicker-than-expected gains in renewables, which reduce the probability of extreme high-end warming.

  • Experts urge faster action and stronger policy to avert significant impacts, framing 1.5°C as a life-saving boundary for vulnerable regions such as small island developing states.

  • Lowering the highest-end scenario (RCP8.5) is tied to cheaper renewables and changes in energy deployment, even as it had been a commonly cited plausible path.

  • Natural climate feedbacks—like ocean heat uptake, forest and soil carbon release, and cloud dynamics—could add up to about 0.5°C of warming beyond human-emitted emissions, complicating projections.

  • A key uncertainty remains that feedbacks could contribute roughly 0.5°C of extra warming, underscoring the unpredictability of natural systems.

  • Despite a century-long persistence of emissions in the atmosphere, reducing pollution and accelerating policy remain essential to limit warming, though renewable trends lessen the likelihood of prior extreme outcomes.

  • Scientists revise global warming projections, discarding extreme high and low-end scenarios as less plausible due to slower-than-ideal cuts and rising use of renewables.

Summary based on 3 sources


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