Energy Equilibrium Disruption and Critical Climate Indicators: ESG BROADCAST shares key takeaways.
The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) has released its “State of the Global Climate 2025” report, confirming that the Earth’s climate system is more out of balance than at any time in observed history. Released on World Meteorological Day, March 23, 2026, the report introduces “Earth’s Energy Imbalance” (EEI) as a core climate indicator for the first time. This metric measures the difference between the amount of solar energy absorbed by the Earth and the amount of energy radiated back into space. The findings reveal that the planet is currently trapping heat at an unprecedented rate, with the imbalance reaching a 65-year peak due to record concentrations of greenhouse gases.
Data consolidated for the report confirms that the period from 2015 to 2025 represents the hottest 11-year period on record. While 2024 remains the warmest individual year due to a strong El Niño effect, 2025 ranked as the second or third warmest, averaging 1.43°C above the pre-industrial baseline. The report emphasizes that surface temperature warming represents only 1% of the total excess energy accumulated in the Earth system. Approximately 91% of this surplus heat is being absorbed by the global oceans, leading to record-high ocean heat content and accelerating the thermal expansion that drives sea-level rise.
The implementing bodies of the WMO highlighted that ocean warming is now progressing at a rate more than double that observed between 1960 and 2005. This energy accumulation is driving irreversible changes on centennial to millennial timescales, particularly regarding ocean acidification and deep-ocean warming. Arctic sea ice extent in 2025 was recorded at its lowest or second-lowest level in the satellite era, while glacier mass loss remains among the worst on record. These physical shifts are no longer considered outliers but part of an accelerating trend that is fundamentally reshaping environmental risk baselines for governments and industries alike.
The report also underscores the cascading socio-economic impacts of this climate imbalance, specifically regarding food security and human health. More than one-third of the global workforce, roughly 1.2 billion people, now face significant occupational heat exposure risks annually. Extreme weather events in 2025, including devastating floods in Asia and record-breaking storms in Europe, have demonstrated the high vulnerability of interconnected global supply chains. The WMO calls for urgent investment in early warning systems and high-quality meteorological observations to protect lives and livelihoods as the planet approaches critical tipping points.
Strategic significance lies in the necessity for a radical shift in long-term capital allocation and risk modeling. For businesses, the record energy imbalance signals that physical risks will intensify with non-linear speed, making historical weather data an unreliable guide for future resilience planning. Compliance with emerging disclosure standards must now incorporate the reality of accelerated warming and potential “permanent” shifts in local climates. Market participants must prioritize adaptation strategies and transition-aligned investments today to mitigate the multi-billion dollar economic losses projected as the Earth system moves further out of equilibrium.
Image Credit: Ahnaf Ibne Nasir




