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Pan American experiences
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The established goals do not appear sufficient to prevent a dangerous jump in global climate. Photo by Piotr Arnoldes/Pexels.
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The Planet On the Brink of a “Game Over” Climate JumpUN Reports World Warming of More than 3°C If Action Is Not TakenBy Estefanía Muriel for Ruta Pantera on 11/25/2025 10:23:23 AM |
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| According to official sources such as CNN , new analyses—guided by the International Energy Agency (IEA) and United Nations agencies — warn that the planet could face “extremely dangerous” global warming, far exceeding conventional limits. Far from the ideal set forth in the Paris Agreement, projections point to a scenario of more than 3°C in the coming decades, a threshold with potentially irreversible consequences.
Pledges and Emissions Dangerously Diverging This situation reflects an alarming gap between the commitments declared by countries and actual emissions: the established targets do not seem sufficient to prevent a dangerous leap in the global climate. |
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In the Americas — including the United States, Latin America, and the Caribbean — the projected impacts are profoundly uneven. Vulnerable regions such as the Caribbean islands and Latin American coastal areas would be among the hardest hit by extreme weather events: more intense heat waves, more powerful hurricanes, and rising sea levels that would threaten densely populated areas. Conversely, industrialized nations of North America, while possessing the resources to adapt, won’t be exempt from economic shocks: losses in agriculture, strain on urban infrastructure, and rising healthcare costs due to the heat. Socioeconomic inequality signals that many Latin American communities will lack the resources to deal with a climate crisis of the magnitude predicted. The forecast is not only technical, but also political and ethical. Projections of warming exceeding 3°C not only jeopardize entire ecosystems, but also social stability, especially in countries with less adaptive capacity. If governments fail to bridge the gap between climate pledges and concrete actions, the world will not only miss its targets, but will also proceed toward a systemic crisis. The UN warning, prompted by the IEA, should serve as a call to urgent action: it is not about rebuilding abstract hopes, but about acting with the forcefulness demanded by a planet that is already on the brink of a point of no return. |
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