Moneycontrol

World on track for record CO₂ emissions again in 2025

China may be slowing, but the world is still burning more fossil fuels a decade after the Paris deal.

November 13, 2025 / 13:07 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Representative image

Global emissions from fossil fuels are expected to hit a new record in 2025, with no clear sign of an overall decline yet. A new analysis suggests that while China’s pollution may finally be flattening, the rest of the world is still adding more carbon dioxide to the atmosphere each year, the New York Times reported.

Researchers from the Global Carbon Project estimate that burning coal, oil and gas, along with cement production, will pump about 38.1 billion tons of carbon dioxide into the air this year. That is roughly 1.1 percent higher than in 2024 and comes ten years after governments signed the Paris Agreement, which assumed that global emissions would peak and then fall rapidly. Instead, they continue to edge up, making it harder and more expensive to keep global warming within agreed limits.

Story continues below Advertisement

A slower rise, but still the wrong direction

Scientists point out that emissions are not growing as fast as they once did, largely because many countries have started shifting to cleaner energy. Solar, wind and electric vehicles are spreading quickly, and some governments have put in place tougher climate policies. Supporters of the Paris deal say this has avoided an even steeper rise in emissions.