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New Study From Jeonbuk National University Finds Current Climate Pledges May Miss Paris Targets

Analysis projects 2.48 ยฐC warming by 2300, reinforcing the urgency for stronger national pledges ahead of the 2030 deadline.

JEONJU, South Korea, March 2, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — International efforts to tackle climate change reached a major milestone with the Paris Agreement, adopted by more than 190 countries. The agreement aims to limit the average global temperature rise to well below 2 ยฐC, preferably to 1.5 ยฐC. However, questions remain as to whether current national climate pledges are sufficient to meet these goals.

Against this backdrop, a new collaborative study by Assistant Professor Taeyoung Jin of Jeonbuk National University and researchers from Pusan National University evaluated the impact of current climate pledges.ย Their analysis shows that even if countries follow existing plans, global temperatures could reach 2.48 ยฐC by 2300. This paper was made available online on November 17, 2025 and was published in Volume 174 of the journal Environmental Science & Policy on December 1, 2025.

“Even if every country keeps its current promises to cut carbon emissions, the world is still on track to warm by about 2.5 ยฐC, which is higher than the internationally agreed 2 ยฐC safety limit,” says Dr. Jin.

The team carried out their analysis using the Regional Integrated Model of Climate and the Economy (RICE-2010). This model simulates how economic activity, emissions, and climate change interact across different global regions. It works through a feedback process in which economic growth leads to carbon emissions, emissions drive climate change, and climate impacts cause economic damage that can hinder future growth.

The researchers incorporated real-world policy commitments into the model, including nations’ 2030 emission reduction targets and long-term net-zero goals. They then projected outcomes up to the year 2300 under four scenarios: (1) a business-as-usual (BAU) scenario with no emission cuts; (2) a social optimum scenario focused on maximizing welfare; (3) a net-zero scenario based on actual country commitments; and (4) a 1.5 ยฐC-compliant pathway.

Under the BAU scenario, global temperatures could rise by as much as 7 ยฐC by 2300. In contrast, the net-zero scenarioโ€”based on current pledgesโ€”limits warming to approximately 2.48 ยฐC. While this represents significant progress compared to a no-action baseline, it still falls short of the 2 ยฐC target.

The study also estimates that an additional reduction of approximately 5 gigatonnes of CO2-equivalent emissions by 2030 is required to meet the 2 ยฐC goal. Without more rigorous mitigation, total global climate-related damages could reach nearly US$65 trillion by 2200. However, these risks could be mitigated to about US$19 trillion under the net-zero scenario, and further to roughly US$15 trillion under a pathway aligned with the 1.5 ยฐC goal.

Without stronger action, the world could face more extreme heatwaves and floods, higher food and energy prices, and greater economic instability, say the researchers. However, if countries act earlier and cooperate more closely, long-term climate risks can be dramatically reduced.

“Our data reveal that today’s climate promises are importantโ€”but they are not enough. However, if countries act earlier and more decisively, the overall damage from climate change can be significantly reduced, even if it requires short-term economic adjustments,” reflects Dr. Jin.

These findings provide crucial evidence for policymakers as they prepare to update their national climate pledges, highlighting that it is high time for more ambitious and immediate action.

Reference
Title of original paper: Evaluating global carbon neutrality commitments: An integrated assessment model approach to the 2 ยฐC target
Journal: Environmental Science & Policy
DOI: 10.1016/j.envsci.2025.104280

About Jeonbuk National University
Website: https://www.jbnu.ac.kr/en/index.do

Contact:
Yoonbeom Kim
82 63 270 4638
[email protected]

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