The 2024 report of the Lancet Countdown on health and climate change: facing record-breaking threats from delayed action.
Executive Summary
Despite the initial hope inspired by the 2015 Paris Agreement, the world is now dangerously close to breaching its target of limiting global multiyear mean heating to 1·5 °C. Annual mean surface temperature reached a record high of 1·45 °C above the pre-industrial baseline in 2023, and new temperature highs were recorded throughout 2024. The resulting climatic extremes are increasingly claiming lives and livelihoods worldwide. The Lancet Countdown: tracking progress on health and climate change was established the same year the Paris Agreement entered into force, to monitor the health impacts and opportunities of the world’s response to this landmark agreement. Supported through strategic core funding from Wellcome, the collaboration brings together over 300 multidisciplinary researchers and health professionals from around the world to take stock annually of the evolving links between health and climate change at global, regional, and national levels. The 2024 report of the Lancet Countdown, building on the expertise of 122 leading researchers from UN agencies and academic institutions worldwide, reveals the most concerning findings yet in the collaboration’s 8 years of monitoring.
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[Note that some other sources already report that we have passed +1·5 °C. We’ve had 12 months of record-breaking global heat. How close are we to passing the 1.5 C limit? | CBC News Ed.]
Link to | Facing record-breaking threats from delayed action.