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IEA Warns Current Fossil Fuel Policy Risks 2.4°C Global Warming

Current global climate policies are failing to curb fossil fuel reliance, leaving the world on track for a 2.4°C temperature rise by the end of the century. The International Energy Agency warns that without a sharp, systemic phase-out of oil, gas, and coal, the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C threshold remains unreachable.

IEA Warns Current Fossil Fuel Policy Risks 2.4°C Global Warming

The latest World Energy Outlook report acknowledges the rapid expansion of solar, wind, and electric vehicle adoption, yet highlights a critical contradiction: clean energy growth is being cannibalized by persistent fossil fuel consumption. Even with current policy advancements, global emissions remain dangerously high. Executive Director Fatih Birol described the clean energy transition as unstoppable, though he emphasized that preventing catastrophic warming depends entirely on the speed of the shift.

With the COP28 summit approaching in the United Arab Emirates, the findings serve as a stark baseline for negotiations. Kelly Trout of Oil Change International noted that the current trajectory creates a deadly gap between existing policy and the necessary decline in emissions. Experts point to a surge in new liquefied natural gas projects—primarily in the United States and Qatar—as a direct violation of international climate commitments. Greenpeace International policy coordinator Kaisa Kosonen argued that nations cannot claim to support climate action while simultaneously greenlighting infrastructure that locks the world into further warming and ecological destruction.

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