The world entered the era of the Paris Agreement with a bold moral and technical commitment: to limit global warming to 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels. That target wasn’t chosen because it felt easy. It was chosen because the science shows every fraction of a degree matters for lives, livelihoods and global ecosystems.
But today we must face an uncomfortable truth: despite all the progress, it is increasingly clear that we will exceed the 1.5 °C threshold. That does not strictly mean failure in our collective global efforts to mitigate global warming. Instead, it highlights the ever-growing urgency and complexity of continuing to address this challenge.
A recent announcement from the International Energy Agency (IEA) in its flagship report World Energy Outlook 2025 lays out this difficult news. Under current policies and trajectories, we are no longer on a clear path to stay below the 1.5 °C hard limit.
Why is this the case?
To summarize: the world has heeded the call to decarbonize and actively mitigate CO₂ output with the use of green power generation, renewable feedstocks, and biofuels. But the pace in which we’re achieving it can’t keep up with fuel demand to successfully remain below the 1.5 °C threshold.
While warnings and calls-to-action are grim, exceeding 1.5 °C does not mean the end of the world. Yet it does raise the stakes significantly higher.
Drawing on recent commentary from climate science:
Even if the 1.5 °C limit slips past us, what we do now still matters. The world must continue in its pursuit of decarbonization even more strongly than we already have.
Based on these findings, several important imperatives follow:
The recognition that the world will overshoot 1.5 °C doesn’t diminish the role of biofuels; it amplifies it.
If anything, the IEA’s latest modelling clarifies something the energy sector has felt for years: liquid fuels aren’t disappearing any time soon. Accordingly, every credible pathway to limit peak warming relies on accelerating the shift from fossil-based liquids toward lower-carbon alternatives.
Here are the key implications for the biofuels market:
Even in the IEA’s more conservative scenarios (STEPS and CPS), global oil demand remains high through 2050. That means sectors like aviation, shipping, heavy road transport, and certain industrial applications will continue to rely on liquid fuels. This will boost demand for liquid alternatives like sustainable aviation fuel (SAF).
When climate targets become harder to meet, policymakers typically respond with stronger enforcement and more ambitious standards.
You can expect several outcomes from these shifts:
Overshoot doesn’t weaken climate policy. It shifts the focus toward aggressive emissions reduction and avoided warming, which puts biofuels squarely in the policy spotlight.
The IEA’s NZE scenario depends on sharp and immediate declines in fossil fuel use. Such declines are simply unattainable without significant scaling of:
These fuels take pressure off sectors that cannot electrify quickly and allow hard-to-abate industries to make real cuts in carbon intensity.
As demand grows, so does the pressure on feedstock supply chains. Accordingly, more pressure will:
These pressures can help the industry to rapidly modernize to meet evolving standards.
Breaching 1.5 °C does not reduce the importance of the biofuels sector in any way. Instead, it makes it more critical than ever.
Biofuels…
In an overshoot world, the question is no longer whether we should expand biofuels. It’s how fast we can scale them while ensuring sustainability, transparency, and global equity.
Although the IEA’s news isn’t exactly positive, overshoot does not mean surrender. What it means is that the fight doesn’t get easier tomorrow… it grows more challenging. But hope lies ahead.
The fact that the global temperature increase will reach 1.6 °C instead of a larger number like 3 °C or 4 °C reflects the work we’ve done and are doing. The cost of renewables keep falling as well, demonstrating that investors and consumers increasingly demand clean energy. When viewed together, we see a much stronger outlook on where our climate future is headed.
Even if the world passes the 1.5 °C boundary, we can respond. We can still limit the worst-case scenarios, reduce human suffering, protect vulnerable communities, and build a cleaner, fairer energy system.
The 1.5 °C target may have slipped, but the purpose behind it remains: a livable planet, abundant life, and equity for all. That purpose is still within our reach as long as we keep fighting to make a positive change throughout the world.
If today’s climate outlook makes anything clear, it’s that the path forward will demand sharper insight, faster action, and smarter strategy. To help industry leaders navigate what’s coming, ResourceWise is hosting a live webinar, Biofuels Market Outlook 2026, on December 4 at 10:00 a.m. EDT (3:00 p.m. UTC).
The live webinar is fast approaching, so we encourage you to register now to secure your spot.