
Globalist scientists push climate alarmism with claims of 2025 record heat, ignoring natural cycles while demanding fossil fuel shutdowns.
Story Snapshot
- World Weather Attribution (WWA) labels 2025 one of the three hottest years on record, blaming fossil fuels despite La Niña cooling effects.
- Heat waves emerged as the deadliest events, made 10 times more likely by human-induced changes according to the report.
- UN climate talks in Brazil failed to secure a fossil fuel transition plan, highlighting geopolitical inaction.
- Oceans absorbed record heat for the ninth straight year, fueling storms like Hurricane Melissa.
2025 Heat Records Defy Natural Cooling
World Weather Attribution released its December 30, 2025, analysis declaring 2025 among the three hottest years recorded. Temperatures broke records even with La Niña’s cooling influence. The group examined 157 severe weather events worldwide. Heat waves topped the list as deadliest killers. Scientists like Friederike Otto attributed these to fossil fuel emissions making extremes 10 times more likely. The three-year average surpassed the 1.5°C Paris Agreement threshold for the first time. This breach underscores long-term warming trends from industrial-era greenhouse gases.
Extreme Events Overwhelm Global Adaptation
Throughout 2025, disasters struck relentlessly including Greece and Turkey wildfires, Mexico floods, Super Typhoon Fung-wong in the Philippines, India monsoons, and Hurricane Melissa battering Jamaica, Cuba, and Haiti. WWA analyzed 22 events linking climate change directly to their intensity. Oceans absorbed over 90% of excess heat, marking the ninth consecutive record with 23 zettajoules added across multiple basins. Vulnerable communities in small islands and poor regions faced adaptation limits as responses faltered. Annual extremes already kill thousands and cost billions yearly.
UN Talks Stall, Fossil Policies Persist
November 2025 UN climate negotiations in Brazil concluded without a fossil fuel phase-out plan. Developing nations pushed for adaptation funds while major emitters resisted binding commitments. U.S. policies under President Trump prioritize domestic energy production favoring fossils for economic strength. China pursues renewables alongside coal expansions. Europe grapples with growth versus green mandates. Friederike Otto warned rapid emissions cuts are essential or limits become unreachable. Power dynamics favor economic interests over urgent scientific calls.
Watch:
Real Impacts on Families and Economy
Short-term effects include deadlier heat waves and intensified storms overwhelming local responses. Long-term risks encompass ecosystem collapse, sea-level rise, and marine die-offs driving stronger hurricanes. Billions in damages mount annually alongside thousands of deaths, displacements, and health crises. Global poor suffer most from adaptation shortfalls. Political disinformation stalls action while fossil-renewable tensions grow. Resilient infrastructure and energy shifts offer paths forward but require balanced approaches protecting American jobs and security.
World Not Ready for Rise in Extreme Heat, Scientists Sayhttps://t.co/FRxPPtVOo5
— Asharq Al-Awsat English (@aawsat_eng) January 26, 2026
Sources:
Almost impossible’: Another one of the hottest years on record (Fortune, referencing WWA analysis)
Ocean warming record heating 2025 (The Cool Down)
Wake-up call: Global population living in extreme heat to double by 2050 (BusinessGreen)























