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Comment in 2025

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  • Transforming school environments into nature-based climate shelters not only promotes cooling and greening under extreme heat, but also fosters quality education, ecological restoration, empowerment and reconnection with nature, and provides children with healthier, safer, more playful, equitable and climate-proof spaces.

    • Isabel Ruiz-Mallén
    • Francesc Baró
    • Filka Sekulova
    Comment
  • Climate change drives displacement and migration across the Americas, particularly exposing Latin American and Caribbean children to compounded health risks. We explore these health impacts, identify gaps in related US healthcare and health policy, and propose recommendations for how they can respond.

    • Sebastian Pintea
    • Ava Acevedo
    • Abrania Marrero
    Comment
  • Climate denial in political discourse is fuelled by psychological factors such as psychological distance, cognitive dissonance, confirmation bias, loss aversion, existential anxiety and social identity. Effective communication strategies addressing deniers’ motivations are crucial as denial undermines urgent climate action.

    • Alon Tal
    • Shlomit Paz
    Comment
  • Decarbonization of the tourism sector faces challenges of structural lock-ins. This Comment challenges the conventional narratives of green tourism and emphasizes to practice more transformative eco-friendly solutions rather than to consume less, with ecotourism as a promising alternative to encourage more low-carbon behaviour in daily life.

    • Yi Liu
    • Yu Yang
    • Xiaojuan Li
    Comment
  • Recent United Nations policymaking on international emissions trading fails to reconcile longstanding flaws that could jeopardize the integrity of these programmes. We call for urgent action by policymakers to safeguard the future of the Paris Agreement.

    • Stephen Lezak
    • Sharaban Zaman
    • Barbara Haya
    Comment
  • Adaptation to climate change goes beyond the migration–non-migration divide. Families and communities combine mobility with rootedness, drawing on cultural ties, intergenerational learning, and lived knowledge to navigate risks and shape long-term futures.

    • Bishawjit Mallick
    • Lori Mae Hunter
    • Julia van den Berg
    Comment
  • Interactions between climate change and antimicrobial resistance across terrestrial, aquatic and health systems reveal shared drivers, synergies and trade-offs that shape health and environmental outcomes. This Comment outlines a solutions-oriented research agenda to advance evidence and action that addresses climate change and antimicrobial resistance as interconnected issues.

    • Kelly Moon
    • Bianca van Bavel
    • Rebecca King
    Comment
  • Objective assessments indicate that extreme heat is increasing health risks; however, many of the most exposed populations do not perceive extreme heat as risky. This misperception may undermine public awareness of the need for effective cooling strategies, leaving a dangerous blind spot in adaptation and protection.

    • Yi Yang
    • Gang Liu
    • Yonghua Li
    Comment
  • Restrictions on civil society may drive climate activists to shift from protest to litigation. However, challenges to judicial independence, deregulation and anti-climate litigation mean that activists need to consider the conditions under which litigation leads to strengthened climate ambition and implementation.

    • Mette Eilstrup-Sangiovanni
    • Nina Hall
    • Harro van Asselt
    Comment
  • Standardized quantitative emissions benchmarking is essential for corporate climate accountability, yet recent literature has critiqued this approach. We argue for structured pluralism with budget compliance — balancing methodological flexibility while preserving the disciplining power of carbon budgets.

    • Saphira Rekker
    • Kaya Axelsson
    • Belinda Wade
    Comment
  • Causal approaches employed at the scale of commercial agriculture are required to build high-quality evidence that climate-smart agricultural interventions result in real emissions reductions and removals. Such project-scale empirical data are additionally required to demonstrate and advance the viability of process-based models and digital measurement, reporting and verification as tools to scale soil carbon accounting.

    • Mark A. Bradford
    • Sara E. Kuebbing
    • Emily E. Oldfield
    Comment
  • Nearly one-third of the global shoreline is in the Arctic, a region undergoing some of the most rapid warming and substantial environmental transitions due to climate change. While Arctic research has largely focused on terrestrial and open-ocean systems, there is now an urgent need to focus on the unique challenges associated with changing coastal ecosystems.

    • Jakob Thyrring
    Comment
  • The role of climate science is changing — fast. Once positioned to inform policy, scientific assessments are increasingly being used in courtrooms to substantiate claims of harm, causation and state responsibility. Climate knowledge has now become legal evidence in the fight for climate justice.

    • Stacy-ann Robinson
    • Shaina Sadai
    • Heloise Evins-Mackenzie
    Comment
  • Africa’s future climate could be shaped by solar radiation management (SRM) decisions made elsewhere. To ensure these technologies, if ever pursued, reflect principles of justice and local priorities, Africa must move from passive recipient to active leader in SRM research, governance and public engagement.

    • Kwesi Akumenyi Quagraine
    • Babatunde J. Abiodun
    • Samuel Essien-Baidoo
    Comment
  • Scientists increasingly assess interventions against misinformation mainly via truth discernment. However, pursuing truth discernment may not be sufficiently beneficial to society if interventions do not improve behaviour and other outcomes.

    • Tobia Spampatti
    Comment
  • Projects are not delivering the transformative change needed for climate change adaptation. This failure is due in part to the delivery of adaptation as projects, but there are viable alternatives that can better address the underlying and structural causes of vulnerability.

    • Megan Mills-Novoa
    • Kimberley Anh Thomas
    • Michael Mikulewicz
    Comment
  • IPCC assessments are of limited use to the UNFCCC policy process due to misalignment and lack of relevance, with the situation further exacerbated by the UNFCCC’s weak scientific uptake mechanisms. The interface between the IPCC and the UNFCCC urgently needs to be reformed to facilitate a more effective science–policy connection.

    • Svante Bodin
    • Örjan Gustafsson
    Comment
  • Ecologists often leverage patterns observed across spatial climate gradients to predict the impacts of climate change (space-for-time substitution). We highlight evidence that this can be misleading not just in the magnitude but in the direction of effects, explain why, and make suggestions for improving the reliability of ecological forecasts.

    • Margaret E. K. Evans
    • Peter B. Adler
    • Jennifer L. Williams
    Comment
  • Urban development policies, designed to improve city resilience, could unintentionally increase the exposure to climate risk. This Comment discusses the impact of misaligned incentives, miscalculated benefits and costs, and overlooked behavioural responses on policy outcomes, as well as future directions.

    • Sumit Agarwal
    • Mingxuan Fan
    • Yu Qin
    Comment
  • Deltas are complex and are among the most vulnerable landforms under climate change. Studying them collectively highlights common stressors that drive their most significant challenges. A holistic conceptual framing of a delta and its feeding river basin is fundamental to effective adaptation planning.

    • Sepehr Eslami
    • Gualbert Oude Essink
    • Robert J. Nicholls
    Comment

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