Key Climate Concerns: Record Heat, Ocean Warming, and Dengue Outbreaks
Scientists have identified the 10 most critical climate research issues in a new global report, highlighting why 2023-2024 became the warmest years on record, unprecedented ocean warming, and the largest dengue outbreak in history.
10 Critical Climate Insights
The ’10 New Insights in Climate Science 2025/2026′ report was compiled by an international team from institutions including IIT Gandhinagar and Germany’s Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research. The findings aim to guide policymakers and society amid mounting evidence for urgent climate action.
Key areas covered include:
- Losses in labour productivity and income from extreme weather
- Accelerating biodiversity loss
- Rapid depletion of groundwater resources
Record-Breaking Temperatures Signal Acceleration
The World Meteorological Organization confirmed 2024 as the warmest year ever recorded, featuring exceptional land and sea temperatures. While El Niño conditions amplified recent records, researchers note these fluctuations alone cannot explain the anomalies.
A significant increase in Earth’s energy imbalance suggests global warming may be accelerating, with the ocean surface warming at unprecedented rates and marine heatwaves intensifying.
Ocean Systems at Tipping Point
A July Science journal study indicates the 2023 marine heatwaves may signal a climate tipping point, causing irreversible damage to coral reefs and ecosystems. Ocean warming is driving severe ecological losses, eroding coastal livelihoods, and weakening the ocean’s capacity as a carbon sink.
Researchers emphasize that investments in climate adaptation must accelerate and global mitigation strengthen to prevent further ocean and climate destabilization.
Dengue Expansion Linked to Climate
Neglected tropical diseases like dengue are expanding geographically as climate change creates favorable conditions with high humidity and rainfall for mosquito breeding. The Lancet reports dengue’s spreading potential has increased by 49% globally.
The climate insights report confirms “dengue has surged to its largest global outbreak on record.” Climate-driven temperature shifts have expanded mosquito habitats and lengthened transmission periods, compounding effects of urbanization and inadequate waste management.
Health systems are already strained by current outbreaks and face projected steeper increases throughout this century.



