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Global Tipping Points Report 2025 shows: It will take immense effort now to prevent the die-off of many coral reefs. Â
In a report released today, October 13, 2025, international climate researchers conclude that the death of numerous tropical coral reefs caused by rising ocean temperatures can now only be prevented with the utmost effort. Parts of the polar ice sheets may have already passed their tipping points. Their continued melting could lead to an irreversible sea level rise of several meters.
Among the lead authors of the Global Tipping Points Report 2025 (GTPR 2025) is Nico Wunderling, Professor of Computational Earth System Sciences at ¿´Æ¬Èí¼þ's Center for Critical Computational Studies | C3S and researcher at the Senckenberg Research Institute Frankfurt, who, together with other lead authors, headed the chapter on “Earth System Tipping Points and Risks." Wunderling says: “The devastating consequences that arise when climate tipping points are crossed pose a massive threat to our societies. There is even a risk of the tipping of one climate system potentially triggering or accelerating the tipping of others. This risk increases significantly once the 1.5°C threshold is exceeded."
Some two dozen subsystems of the climate system are known to have tipping points. According to the report, the first of these – that of tropical coral reefs – has now been reached. The study further assumes that the global average temperature will increase by 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels within the next few years. This means the world is entering a phase in which the crossing of further climate tipping points is at risk, potentially leading to far-reaching consequences such as sea level rise from melting ice sheets or global temperature changes in the event of a collapse of the Atlantic Ocean circulation. The report also proposes measures to counter further temperature increases.
Coordinating lead author of the GTPR 2025 is Tim Lenton, Professor at the University of Exeter's (UK) Global Systems Institute. More than 100 scientists from over 20 countries contributed to the report, published just in time for the 30th World Climate Conference, which begins on November 10, 2025, in Belém, Brazil. The Global Tipping Points Report, first published in 2023 and already widely noted at the time, is regarded as an authoritative publication in the field of assessing both the risks and opportunities of negative and positive tipping points in the Earth system and in human societies.
Climate tipping points have started receiving greater attention within climate sciences for only about 20 years. The authors of the report define a climate-induced tipping point in Earth systems – such as coral reefs, the Amazon rainforest, or large-scale ocean currents – as the level of warming beyond which these systems undergo self-reinforcing and often irreversible changes. For example, many tropical coral reefs would die off after exceeding their tipping point, even if humanity were to limit further global warming. The scientists predict that it is quite possible that additional tipping points will be crossed in the coming decades, especially as some may already lie at around 1.5°C of global warming – including those of the Amazon rainforest (leading to savannization), the ice sheets of Greenland and West Antarctica (causing several meters of sea level rise), and the Atlantic Ocean circulation (causing a sharp cooling of the European continent).
The GTPR also features a series of case studies on various tipping elements of the climate system, including the following:
The GTPR's authors emphasize that, alongside these negative tipping points in the climate system, there also exist positive tipping points in our societies. Crossing these can trigger rapid transformations toward more climate-friendly behavior. Some examples:
Global Tipping Points Report:
Further Information / Contact:
Prof. Dr. Nico Wunderling
Professor for Computational Earth System Sciences
Center for Critical Computational Studies (C3S)
¿´Æ¬Èí¼þ Frankfurt and Senckenberg Research Institute Frankfurt
wunderling@c3s.uni-frankfurt.de
Thilo Körkel, Research Assistant
Center for Critical Computational Studies (C3S)
koerkel@c3s.uni-frankfurt.de
Editor: Dr. Dirk Frank, Press Officer/ Deputy Press Spokesperson, PR & Communications Office, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 1, 60323 Frankfurt am Main, Tel.: +49 (0)69/798-13753, frank@pvw.uni-frankfurt.de