Reacción a "2025 was the third warmest year on record"
Xavier Rodó
ICREA research professor and head of ISGlobal's Climate and Health programme
"The report reflects, as is unfortunately becoming the norm, that our planet is showing clear and evident signs of accelerating climate change. The indicators are numerous and, unfortunately, consistent, with no contradictory values. Therefore, the report's importance lies not so much in a single value, but in the synergy of many aligned indicators.
Copernicus is currently, and due to the discontinuation of many programs at NOAA (the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration), the best tool the world has to objectively and scientifically warn of global and regional climate change. Its reliability is extremely high, both because of the methodologies applied and the academic and scientific institutions in charge of the program at the ECMWF.
How does this fit with the evidence already known, and what implications might it have?
"Unfortunately, too well." For several years now, all indicators have aligned to show that we are immersed in a spiral of global warming, whose global, regional, and local effects we are only beginning to understand. In fact, the fact that 2025 is the third warmest year on record is merely anecdotal, especially considering that it was only 0.1 degrees Celsius cooler than the second warmest (2023), and because both that year and 2024 (the warmest by 0.13 degrees Celsius) saw a strong El Niño event. Conversely, in 2025 we experienced cool conditions in the surface waters of the Pacific Ocean corresponding to a La Niña event, which we know produces a relative, but temporary, cooling effect on the climate. Without that, this year would clearly have been the warmest or the second warmest, without a doubt.
The fact that the 1.5°C threshold set by the Paris Agreement has been exceeded on average every three years for the first time is bad news, not so much because of the value itself, since it is an approximate limit, but because of the clear upward trend it indicates. Furthermore, the joint observation of sea ice covariation at both poles is highly relevant in itself.
The coming years, and particularly the next decade, will be crucial for a clearer understanding of the true value of global climate sensitivity—that is, the degree of warming per unit of CO2 emitted. Consequently, we will also gain a better understanding of the types of responses that will occur at the level of the different compartments of the climate system, both individually and in cascade, and we will have a clearer view of the impacts and effects of these changes on the planetary climate.”
Are there any significant limitations to consider?
“Given that this is the best available data, obtained with the best monitoring systems on the planet, we must acknowledge that, although the conclusions that can be drawn are always subject to a margin of error and uncertainty (we can never sample the planet 'perfectly'), right now it constitutes extremely reliable data on the state of the climate and its changes.”