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UN: Asia Hit by Record Heat, Floods & Sea Levels in 2025

Is Asia's climate crisis an unprecedented emergency or just natural variability being misread as a catastrophe?
UN: Asia Hit by Record Heat, Floods & Sea Levels in 2025
Above: Boys play in the water of a stepwell to beat the summer heat near Jal Mahal in Jaipur, India, on June 14, 2026. Image credit: Vishal Bhatnagar/NurPhoto/Getty Images

The Spin


Climate-concerned narrative

Asia's climate crisis is accelerating at a terrifying pace — every single monitored glacier in High Mountain Asia lost mass, ocean heat hit record levels. Japan, China and South Korea all logged their hottest summers ever, while Pakistan's flooding killed over 1,000 people. The data is undeniable: warming is outpacing preparedness across the entire region.

Climate-skeptic narrative

Alarm over Asia's heat and sea levels ignores the fact that El Niño is a natural, ancient cycle of ocean heat redistribution. Seas have been rising since glaciers melted 12,000 years ago, and current rates are a modest 8-9 inches (20-23 cm) per century. Treating routine natural variability as an unprecedented crisis fuels needless panic rather than evidence-based policy.


Metaculus Prediction

There's a 50% chance that any official weather station in India will record air temperatures of at least 55.0°C (131.0°F) for three or more consecutive days before Jan. 1, 2050, according to the Metaculus prediction community.


The Controversies



Go Deeper

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 7.4.1

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 7.4.1