Strength in collaboration
Editorial
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-025-02298-x
Strength in collaboration
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The IPCC is in its seventh assessment
cycle, and international collabo
ration, which established this
organization, is still needed to ensure
successful deliverables.
nature climate change
outputs, which includes concerns on consistency across Working Groups for dealing with
uncertainites2 and that geographic inclusions
haven’t broadened viewpoints and cultural
understandings3 but celebrates the inclusion
of early-career researchers4.
The seventh assessment report (AR7) is
expected to be finalized in 2029, and the cycle
will include the Special Report on Climate
Change and Cities, the Report on Short-lived
Climate Forcers, the Methodology Report on
Carbon Dioxide Removal Technologies, Carbon
Capture Utilization and Storage, and a revision
of the 1994 Technical Guidelines on impacts and
adaptation. The IPCC planning meeting being
held in China in late February (taking place at
the time of writing) will agree the outline for
AR7 and the Methodology Report, but without
US researchers in attendance. News reports
state that NASA confirmed that Katherine
Calvin, the co-chair of Working Group 3, would
not be there, and the future of the US-based
Working Group 3 Technical Support Unit is
unclear. In the first Trump administration, US
scientists contributed to AR6, but none of the
co-chairs were from the United States; at this
time, it is too early to tell what change there
may be to contributions from the wider community of US-based scientists to AR7.
Moving from IPCC to UNFCCC matters, we do
know that an Executive Order has been signed
early in Trump’s second term to begin the process to withdraw the United States from the
Paris Agreement. The United States previously
withdrew from the Paris Agreement during
President Trump’s first term — effective from
November 2020 — but when the announcement
was made in June 2017, it was feared that this
would lead to others also leaving and to a breakdown in the Agreement. However, in a Comment article at the time, Luke Kemp argued that
if the United States had stayed in the Agreement
that it would have actually been more detrimental as they could have weakened commitments
and eroded the spirit of the Agreement. With
the United States outside it, it might embolden
other nations, as well as states and business, to
push forward into climate leadership roles5,
which was seen; however, it was disruptive to
international climate diplomacy and relations.
The loss of financial commitments and aid
is of course a concern, and previously, Michael
Bloomberg, who is UN Secretary-General’s
Special Envoy on Climate Ambition and Solutions, committed to support the UNFCCC
by covering the financial contributions for
2017–2020 that were the responsibility of the
United States. With the January 2025 announcement that the United States intended to again
leave the Paris Agreement, Bloomberg has
stated that his foundation, Bloomberg Philan
thropies, and other US climate funders will
ensure that US funding obligations are again met.
Not having the United States committed to
the Paris Agreement is a loss, and the same is
true for the IPCC. There are challenges ahead,
as we see at each COP when the final statement
involves concessions to be reached, but these
organizations are bigger than one nation, and
the strength of the collective can ensure that
the AR7 cycle delivers, and can work together
to advance climate action.
Published online: 10 March 2025
References
1. Franz, W. E. The Development of an International Agenda
for Climate Change: Connecting Science to Policy Interim
Report IR-97-034 (International Institute for Applied
Systems Analysis, 1997); https://pure.iiasa.ac.at/id/
eprint/5257/1/IR-97-034.pdf
2. Swart, R., Bernstein, L., Ha-Duong, M. & Petersen, A.
Climatic Change 92, 1–29 (2009).
3. Corbera, E. et al. Nat. Clim. Change 6, 94–99 (2016).
4. Moreno-Ibáñez, M. et al. Front. Clim. https://doi.org/
10.3389/fclim.2024.1395040 (2024).
5. Kemp, L. Nat. Clim. Change 7, 458–460 (2017).
Volume 15 | March 2025 | 227 | 227
CREDIT: AELITTA/ DIGITALVISION VECTORS/ GETTY IMAGES
S
ince its establishment in 1988 by the
United Nations Environment Programme and the World Meteorological Organization and endorsed by the
UN General Assembly, the IPCC has
become the world authority for climate change
knowledge through its, so far, six assessment
reports (AR1 to AR6) as well as numerous reports
and technical guidelines. The IPCC came about
because of an increased awareness of anthropogenic climate change and assessments by
individual agencies along with a 1985 conference in Austria that recognized as important
the shift of climate science into the international
policy space1. The role of the IPCC is to provide
scientific assessments of the climate change
literature to inform government at all levels
to develop climate policies; the international
negotiations that make use of this information is
the responsibility of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC),
established in 1994, which coordinates the
annual Conference of the Parties (COP).
Recognition of the contribution by the
IPCC to the world has seen the organization
being awarded the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize
( jointly with Albert Arnold (Al) Gore Jr) for
“efforts to build up and disseminate greater
knowledge about man-made climate change,
and to lay the foundations for the measures
that are needed to counteract such change”,
and, in 2022 ( jointly with the Intergovernmental Science–Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES)), the
Gulbenkian Prize for Humanity — which
rewards individuals and organizations who
are leading society’s efforts to tackle climate
change — for work in highlighting the threats
of climate change and biodiversity loss.
But it has not been without controversy
or challenges over the years. For example,
questions arose about the quantification of
Himalayan glacier melt included in AR4, which
was later acknowledged as an error. Another
example is the body of literature that has
arisen studying the IPCC, its processes and
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