22 Countries Most Likely To Survive Climate Change

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In this article, we will look into the 22 countries most likely to survive climate change. If you want to skip our detailed analysis, you can go directly to the 5 Countries Most Likely To Survive Climate Change.

Global Climate Change Outlook

Climate change is a major threat affecting vulnerable communities all over the world. In 2023, the global temperature reached 14.98°C according to the ERA5 dataset of C3S. 2023 was recorded as the warmest calendar year in history since 1850. The temperature was 1.48°C higher in 2023, compared to the 1850-1900 pre-industrial levels. Every month of the year reported higher temperature compared to the corresponding months of the previous years, since July.

According to the January climate report by NOAA, there is a 99% probability that 2024 will be one of the top 5 warmest years. However, there is a 22% chance it will be the absolute warmest year on record. January 2024 was the warmest compared to the corresponding month of the previous years. The global surface temperature in January was 1.27°C high, compared to the 12.2°C average of the 20th century. The record-high temperature rise continued for the 10th consecutive month. Temperatures were higher than the average across the Arctic, North America, South America, Central Russia, Australia, and most parts of Asia. The climate change report by IPCC states that global warming will surpass 1.5°C during the 21st century.

Transition Towards Clean Energy

At the 28th Climate Change Conference, COP28, many countries and big industrial giants made commitments to cut down the global fossil fuel consumption. A fund of $11 billion was launched to support climate-vulnerable countries. Over 120 countries made commitments to triple the amount of clean energy and double the energy efficiency over the next decade. Over 140 countries committed to combat GHG emissions from food systems and include it in their mitigation planning for climate change. Overall, many strong pledges were made to transition away from fossil fuels at COP28.

On January 23, Reuters reported that the European Union is set to establish a new target to reduce its GHG emissions by 90% compared to 1990 emissions levels, by 2040. This can be achieved by a substantial reduction in fossil fuel consumption, with a decline of 80% by 2040. The electricity sector in the region would be required to become CO2-free by 2040. The use of oil and gas would be restricted to only some sectors and coal would have to be phased out completely to reach the emission reduction target. These targets can be met by an enormous estimated investment of 1.2 trillion euros annually. This goal is expected to reduce the fossil fuel exports of Europe by $3.03 trillion from 2031 to 2050, compared to the 2011-2020 yearly average.