Key Takeaways
- Delaying net zero emissions beyond 2050 will make heatwaves hotter, longer, and more frequent
- Heatwave conditions won’t improve for at least 1,000 years even after achieving net zero
- Equatorial regions face annual record-breaking heatwaves if net zero is delayed until 2050+
Heatwaves will become increasingly severe, prolonged, and frequent the longer countries delay reaching net zero emissions, according to a new climate modeling study. The research reveals these extreme weather conditions won’t revert to pre-industrial levels for at least a millennium, even after net zero targets are achieved.
Alarming Projections for Southern Hemisphere
Regions in the Southern Hemisphere are projected to experience significantly worsening heatwaves when net zero occurs by 2050 or later. The study, published in ‘Environmental Research: Climate,’ challenges the common assumption that climate conditions will quickly improve after reaching net zero emissions.
“While our results are alarming, they provide a vital glimpse of the future, allowing effective and permanent adaptation measures to be planned and implemented,” said lead author Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick, professor of climate science at the Australian National University.
Urgent Timeline for Net Zero
Professor Perkins-Kirkpatrick emphasized the critical importance of rapid progress: “It is still vitally important we make rapid progress to permanent net zero, and reaching global net zero by 2040 at the latest will be important to minimise the heatwaves severity.”
Current national commitments vary significantly – while China, the US, and EU countries have pledged net zero by 2050, India has targeted 2070.
Long-Term Climate Simulations
Researchers conducted 1,000-year climate simulations using the Australian Earth system model ‘ACCESS-ESM1-5,’ testing net zero achievement dates between 2030 and 2060. The findings were stark: delaying net zero beyond 2050 creates heatwave conditions worse than a transient 2°C warmer world.
The authors noted they “simply do not see a broadscale reduction in heatwaves for at least 1,000 years regardless of when net zero occurs.”
Equatorial Regions Most Vulnerable
Co-author Andrew King from the University of Melbourne warned that the delay impacts will be most severe near the equator. “Throughout all scenarios, the longer net zero is delayed, the higher the occurrence of historically rare and extreme heatwave events,” he explained.
“This is particularly problematic for countries nearer the equator, which are generally more vulnerable, and where a heatwave event that breaks current historical records can be expected at least once every year or more often if net zero is delayed until 2050 or later,” King said.



