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WWA Report Warns of Climate Pressures on Global Adaptation

(MENAFN) The increasing occurrence and severity of extreme weather events driven by climate change are stretching the ability of nations to adapt, according to a new study by the World Weather Attribution (WWA).

The 2025 WWA assessment concluded that climate change intensified destructive weather patterns worldwide this year, with the greatest impact falling on disadvantaged and marginalized populations. Rising global temperatures have made heat waves far more severe compared to a decade ago, the report stated.

Since the Paris Agreement was adopted, the average global temperature has climbed by about 0.3 degrees Celsius. Although this may seem minor, experts cautioned that it equates to roughly 11 extra days of extreme heat annually across the globe.

Researchers from WWA emphasized that millions of people in 2025 were pushed to the edge of human adaptability, underscoring that “drastically reducing fossil fuel emissions remains the key policy” to prevent the worst consequences of climate change.

Ruben del Campo, spokesperson for Spain’s national meteorological agency AEMET, described the findings as “a new wake-up call from the scientific community for climate action.”

He pointed out that heat waves in Spain are extending by nearly three days every decade, mirroring global patterns highlighted in the study, according to Science Media Centre Spain.

Froila M. Palmeiro, a researcher at the Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change, noted that the report analyzed the most significant extreme weather events of 2025 and explored their connections to climate change.

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