World's greenhouse gas emissions are forecast to be 16% HIGHER by 2030 despite attempts to limit global warming to 1.5°C, UN warns
- World's greenhouse gas emissions are on track to be 16 per cent higher by 2030
- UN also warns that emissions in the atmosphere hit record highs again last year
- It comes a week before world leaders attend COP26 climate change conference
- 2015 Paris Agreement aimed to limit global average temperature to 1.5°C (2.7°F)
The world's greenhouse gas emissions are on course to be 16 per cent higher by 2030 than they are now, the United Nations will warn today.
Scientists also cautioned that levels of planet-warming greenhouse gases in the atmosphere reached record highs again last year.
It comes just a week before the UK hosts the COP26 climate change conference in Glasgow, where world leaders will discuss and potentially set new legally binding agreements that aim to keep global temperatures from rising out of control.
The UN is expected to publish its third report into the global pledges to address climate change later, having already warned in August that the situation was 'code red for humanity'.

The world's greenhouse gas emissions are on track to be 16 per cent higher by 2030 than they are now, the United Nations will warn today (stock image)

This graphic shows how greenhouse gas emissions have increased between 1900 and 2020
Its latest findings are expected to say that the world is still not on track to limit global warming to 1.5°C (2.7°F), as set out in the Paris Agreement, with large economies such as China, India and Australia yet to reveal detailed plans about how they will reduce their use of fossil fuels over the next decade.
The UN's World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) has also released a report saying that concentrations of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases in the atmosphere rose at a faster rate in 2020 than over the previous decade, and the trend has continued in 2021.
The economic slowdown caused by the Covid-19 pandemic did not have any discernible impact on atmospheric levels of greenhouse gases and the rate they are building up — although there was a temporary decline in new emissions, the WMO said.
If greenhouse gas concentrations continue to increase at current rates, the world will see temperature rises far above globally agreed long-term targets to limit warming to 1.5°C (2.7°F) to 2°C (3.6ºF) to avoid the worst impacts of climate change.
The UN has previously said that to hit the 2°C (3.6ºF) target, CO2 emissions needed to decrease by about 25 per cent from the 2010 level by 2030 and the world to reach net zero in about 2070.
To hold global temperature rises to 1.5°C (2.7°F), emissions would need to decline by about 45 per cent from the 2010 level by 2030, reaching net zero in about 2050.
However, its latest calculations has global gas emissions on track to be 16 per cent higher by 2030 than today.
Greenhouse gases are emitted by human activities such as burning fossil fuels for power, heating and transport, farming and deforestation, and they build up in the atmosphere where higher concentrations of the gases trap more heat, causing rising temperatures, extreme weather and rising seas.
WMO secretary general Professor Petteri Taalas said the latest information on greenhouse gases contained a stark, scientific message for climate negotiators at the COP26 talks, adding: 'We are way off track.'
The last time the Earth had similar concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere was three to five million years ago when the temperature was 2C-3C warmer than now, and sea levels were 10-20 metres (32-65ft) higher — but there weren't 7.8 billion people living on the planet then, he warned.
Professor Taalas said: 'Many countries are now setting carbon neutral targets and it is hoped that COP26 will see a dramatic increase in commitments.

Greenhouse gases are emitted by human activities such as burning fossil fuels for power, heating and transport, farming and deforestation (stock image)
'We need to transform our commitment into action that will have an impact on the gases that drive climate change.
'We need to revisit our industrial, energy and transport systems and whole way of life.
'The needed changes are economically affordable and technically possible. There is no time to lose.'
The latest annual greenhouse gas bulletin from the WMO shows that levels of carbon dioxide — the most important greenhouse gas — in the atmosphere reached 413 parts per million in 2020, 49 per cent above what it was in 1750, before human activity started affecting natural systems.
Concentrations of other key greenhouse gases methane and nitrous oxide also hit record highs in 2020, as they increased at faster rates than in the past 10 years.
Roughly half the carbon dioxide emitted by human activities remains in the atmosphere, while the other half is absorbed by oceans and land habitats such as forests.
But the bulletin warns that these carbon-absorbing 'sinks' may become less effective in the future, reducing their ability to take carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and buffer the planet from even greater warming.
The bulletin has been published as world leaders and negotiators prepare to gather in Glasgow for the COP26 climate conference in less than a week, where countries will be under pressure to take greater action to cut emissions of the greenhouse gases that are driving rising temperatures.
Responding to the report, Professor Dave Reay, the director of Edinburgh Climate Change Institute, University of Edinburgh, said the true success or failure of COP26 would be written in the skies in the form of greenhouse gas concentrations.
'This new report from the WMO provides a brutally frank assessment of what's been written there to date. So far, it's an epic fail,' he said.
The 'small window of opportunity' to stabilise greenhouse gas concentrations at a level that meets global goals to curb rising temperatures was about to vanish, he warned.
Dr Heather Graven, reader in climate physics at Imperial College London, said: 'These atmospheric measurements provide hard evidence that, rather than slowing climate change, we are accelerating it.
'Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere are increasing faster than ever.
'It is crucial that COP26 succeeds in ramping up mitigation efforts across the globe,' she said.