I think this New Scientist piece might fit in here. 14th January
"“Governments need to agree on a planetary solvency plan quickly,” says David King, former top climate adviser to the UK government who contributed to the report. “We are looking at an accelerated rate of temperature rise. We’re not sure if that will continue into the future but we can probably assume it’s not going to relax backwards.”
A first step towards such a plan could be to stop assuming the world economy will keep expanding, says Sandy Trust at the Institute and Faculty of Actuaries in the UK, an author of the new report. According to the Network for Greening the Financial System, global GDP could fall by 25 per cent with 2°C of warming by 2050. This would mean up to $25 trillion in economic losses annually due to climate-related impacts, says Trust. But the network says it doesn’t foresee a recession, since it expects global economic growth to outpace those damages."...
But the biggest reason we could surpass 1.5°C sooner than expected is because emissions have continued to increase each year, says Samantha Burgess at Copernicus. Fossil fuel emissions set yet another record in 2025.
“Emissions haven’t come down as fast as people believed they would,” says Burgess.
Every tenth of a degree of warming will result in more frequent and intense extreme weather. Already, the Los Angeles wildfires in January 2025 – potentially the costliest natural disaster in US history – were twice as likely and 25 times larger due to climate change. Hurricane Melissa, the strongest storm to make landfall around the Atlantic Ocean, was associated with wind speeds at least 16 kilometres per hour faster than would be expected without climate change.
Sooner-than-expected climate impacts could cost the world trillions
A report warns that we may have seriously underestimated the rate of warming, which could damage economic growth
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2511371-sooner-than-expected-climate-impacts-could-cost-the-world-trillions/
RogerP West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire
Everything taken together, here in Lincolnshire are more good things than man could have had the conscience to ask.
William Cobbett, in his Rural Rides - c.1830