Urgent Need to Include Permafrost and Wildfire Feedbacks in Global Carbon Budgets

PNAS, May 17

Today, carbon emissions (both CO2 and methane) from abrupt permafrost thaw and Arctic wildfires still are not fully included within global emissions budgets and modelling. Ignoring such feedbacks, which both directly result from rapid warming of the Arctic region, and intensify that warming further, causes governments to overestimate the remaining carbon budget. This in turn could make us exceed temperature targets, overshooting the limits of the Paris Agreement. Authors note the importance of scientists communicating the importance of such feedbacks to policy makers and the general public; as well as the need for more directed work to better include these additional climate feedbacks into future carbon budget models and Paris Agreement stocktaking processes.

https://www.pnas.org/content/118/21/e2100163118

Pam Pearson

Recent Posts

Seasonal Glacier Water Supply Becoming Less Reliable for Cities in Asia

Nature Communications, 15 May 2026 Glaciers and snowpack currently help reduce water shortages for many…

5 dagar ago

Increasingly Unpredictable River Floods in Indus River Basin

Communications Earth & Environment, 14 May 2026 River floods in the upper Indus basin are…

5 dagar ago

Thawing Permafrost Increases Flood and Landslide Risks in the Western Himalaya

NPJ Natural Hazards, 8 May 2026 Rapid warming increases permafrost thaw and the risk of…

5 dagar ago

Impact of 2022 Heatwave and 2023 Extreme Summer Snowfall on the Western Himalaya

Scientific Reports, 29 April 2026 Extreme weather events increasingly shape how Himalayan glaciers gain and…

5 dagar ago

Glacier Retreat Increases Likelihood of Landslides and Tsunamis

Science, 6 May 2026 An August 2025 landslide in Tracy Arm fjord, Alaska, generated one…

2 veckor ago

Record-Breaking Glacier Loss in Central Asia in 2025

Environmental Research, 30 April 2026 Central Asia’s glaciers experienced their most severe mass loss year…

2 veckor ago