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2025 third hottest year on record: climate monitors

By AFP
January 15, 2026
Tourists and locals paddleboard at the sunrise on the Mediterranean Sea in Barcelona, Spain July 2, 2025. — Reuters
Tourists and locals paddleboard at the sunrise on the Mediterranean Sea in Barcelona, Spain July 2, 2025. — Reuters

BRUSSELS, Belgium: The planet logged its third hottest year on record in 2025, extending a run of unprecedented heat, with no relief expected in 2026, global climate monitors said on Wednesday.

The last 11 years have now been the warmest ever recorded, with 2024 topping the podium and 2023 in second place, according to the EU´s Copernicus Climate Change Service and Berkeley Earth, a California-based non-profit research organisation.

For the first time, global temperatures exceeded 1.5C relative to pre-industrial times on average over the last three years, Copernicus said in its annual report.

“The warming spike observed from 2023-2025 has been extreme, and suggests an acceleration in the rate of the Earth´s warming,” Berkeley Earth said in a separate report.

The landmark 2015 Paris Agreement commits the world to limiting warming to well below 2C and pursuing efforts to hold it at 1.5C -- a long-term target scientists say would help avoid the worst consequences of climate change.

UN chief Antonio Guterres warned in October that breaching 1.5C was “inevitable” but the world could limit this period of overshoot by cutting greenhouse gas emissions as quickly as possible.

Copernicus said the 1.5C limit “could be reached by the end of this decade -- over a decade earlier than predicted”.