But most climate scientists agree there are many runaway effects we're headed for pretty directly like
- the runaway greenhouse effect
- ocean acidification causing the ocean to be less able to take up CO2 (the ocean is estimated to have offset 30-50% of co2 emitted by fossil fuels)
- more droughts -> deforestation -> hotter temperatures -> more droughts, etc
I could go on but you could also just read the IPCC reports. Believe it or not their quite easy to parse even for a layman. They make two versions of them, one for policymakers and one for academics but in my experience the academically oriented reports are actually more readable and useful
https://www.climate.gov/news-features/understanding-climate/...
But most climate scientists agree there are many runaway effects we're headed for pretty directly like
- the runaway greenhouse effect
- ocean acidification causing the ocean to be less able to take up CO2 (the ocean is estimated to have offset 30-50% of co2 emitted by fossil fuels)
- more droughts -> deforestation -> hotter temperatures -> more droughts, etc
I could go on but you could also just read the IPCC reports. Believe it or not their quite easy to parse even for a layman. They make two versions of them, one for policymakers and one for academics but in my experience the academically oriented reports are actually more readable and useful
https://www.ipcc.ch/reports/
If you want to skip to the most depressing/dooming one check out the 2019 report on oceans and the cryosphere