The world is still on track to experience “the worst impacts of climate change,” according to a new report, as nations’ pledges to reduce carbon emissions still fall substantially short of what’s needed to keep warming levels beneath the 2°C threshold.

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Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan School of Management (MIT Sloan) along with climate analysts with the Washington D.C.-based nonprofit Climate Interactive on Monday released the latest findings from their interactive Climate Scoreboard. Based on the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) put forward in advance of the UN climate talks in Paris this November and December—and assuming countries adhere to the non-binding measures—the planet still faces a global temperature increase of 3.5°C.

Under the 0.8°C of warming already recorded since the Industrial Revolution, the world has experienced significant melting of land ice, punishing drought, an uptick in extreme weather events, and a destabilization of the global food supply. However, should nations continue along their current path, the study predicts that the Earth could see increases up to 4.5°C.

The emissions reductions must be paired with “further action,” the groups warn, namely a cohesive plan to switch the global energy system from fossil fuels to a renewable energy supply.

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