World has ‘virtually exhausted’ its carbon budget as fossil fuel emissions reach all-time high

    14 Nov 2025

    New research warns that keeping global warming under 1.5°C is ‘no longer plausible’.

    Emissions from fossil fuels are set to reach a record high in 2025, according to new research published on Thursday.

    It warns that the remaining carbon budget to keep global warming under 1.5°C is now “virtually exhausted”.

    The annual Global Carbon Budget Report says that though decarbonisation of energy systems is progressing in many countries, it isn’t enough to offset the growth in global energy demand.

    Fossil fuel emissions will be 1.1 per cent higher in 2025 than they were a year ago, according to an international team of more than 130 scientists, as coal, oil and gas emissions are all set to rise.

    With no sign of the urgently needed decline in global emissions, its authors say, the level of CO2 in the atmosphere and the dangerous impacts of global warming continue to increase.

    The world has ‘virtually exhausted’ its carbon budget

    This year marks 10 years since the Paris Agreement and, despite progress on many fronts, fossil fuel emissions continue to rise. The report calculates the remaining amount of carbon that can be emitted to keep global warming below the 1.5°C goal set by the agreement.

    “With CO2 emissions still increasing, keeping global warming below 1.5°C is no longer plausible,” said Professor Pierre Friedlingstein, from Exeter’s Global Systems Institute, who led the study.

    “The remaining carbon budget for 1.5°C, 170 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide, will be gone before 2030 at current emission rate. We estimate that climate change is now reducing the combined land and ocean (carbon) sinks – a clear signal from Planet Earth that we need to dramatically reduce emissions.”