About usClimate Analytics is a global climate science and policy institute engaged around the world in driving and supporting climate action aligned to the 1.5°C warming limit.
Decarbonisation targets and 1.5℃ pathwaysTo help governments, civil society and the private sector understand the pace of change required, we develop new methods to calculate the emission reductions needed to decarbonise in line with this planetary limit.
Homepage > Publications > Energy transition to renewable energies: opportunities for Australian cooperation with Indonesia 26 October, 2019 Energy transition to renewable energies: opportunities for Australian cooperation with IndonesiaAuthors Ursula Fuentes Hutfilter, Tania Urmee, Chris Muir, Muhammad Hasnat Morshed Bhuyan, Anna Chapman First publishedShare Publications Submission to the Australian Climate Change AuthorityClimate Analytics Australia's submisson to Australia's CCA on its 2025 annual progress report on climate change. Projections of climate change vulnerability along the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways 2020–2100As climate change continues to accelerate, its multifaceted impacts will affect societies across the globe in increasingly complex and uneven ways. This study provides a comprehensive assessment of how socioeconomic factors interact with climate vulnerability up to the year 2100. A blueprint for climate leadership: 1.5-aligned targets for AustraliaThis report answers the question: what would science-based, 1.5˚C-compatible 2030 and 2035 targets, and a net zero roadmap, look like for Australia? Decarbonising China's cement industryCement is an integral base material for the global economy, but it poses a major climate challenge. Given China produces more than half the world’s cement, generating 13-15% of its national CO2 emissions, decarbonising this sector is critical to meeting China’s climate goals. 1.5˚C aligned climate targets for Western AustraliaWestern Australia is the only Australian state without an emissions reduction target. Here, we recommend 1.5˚C aligned targets for WA. Latest science on the 1.5°C limit of the Paris AgreementThis briefing provides a comprehensive overview of what the science is saying now about the 1.5°C warming limit – what it means, what is at stake, and what actions are needed to limit the risks of overshoot and safeguard a liveable future. Tracking what matters: SIDS priorities for global adaptation indicatorsThis briefing helps SIDS advocate for global adaptation indicators that catalyse support, investment, and political will to scale up adaptation responses, not just track them. The full implications of Australia's North West Shelf decisionOn 28 May 2025, Australian Environment Minister Murray Watt made the first step towards what looks set to be a final decision to approve Woodside Energy's North West Shelf LNG plant in Western Australia through to 2070. Climate overshoot implications for local adaptation planningNew perspective piece argues climate overshoot – the temporary exceedance of the 1.5°C limit of the Paris Agreement – may not be relevant for short-term adaptation planning, but it should be considered for long-term plans and policies, such as infrastructure-based measures and for irreversible impacts such as sea-level rise. Addressing challenges in the land sector under the Paris AgreementThis report examines how loose land-sector rules under the Paris Agreement enable countries to overstate carbon removals and delay essential fossil fuel emissions cuts. The impact of global climate pledges on national action: a snapshot across AsiaA detailed analysis of eight Asian countries' climate action compared with global pledges. Fair carbon removal obligations under climate response uncertaintyWe assess the level of ‘preventive’ CDR needed to draw warming down to 1.5°C in case of a stronger-than-average Earth System response.
Submission to the Australian Climate Change AuthorityClimate Analytics Australia's submisson to Australia's CCA on its 2025 annual progress report on climate change.
Projections of climate change vulnerability along the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways 2020–2100As climate change continues to accelerate, its multifaceted impacts will affect societies across the globe in increasingly complex and uneven ways. This study provides a comprehensive assessment of how socioeconomic factors interact with climate vulnerability up to the year 2100.
A blueprint for climate leadership: 1.5-aligned targets for AustraliaThis report answers the question: what would science-based, 1.5˚C-compatible 2030 and 2035 targets, and a net zero roadmap, look like for Australia?
Decarbonising China's cement industryCement is an integral base material for the global economy, but it poses a major climate challenge. Given China produces more than half the world’s cement, generating 13-15% of its national CO2 emissions, decarbonising this sector is critical to meeting China’s climate goals.
1.5˚C aligned climate targets for Western AustraliaWestern Australia is the only Australian state without an emissions reduction target. Here, we recommend 1.5˚C aligned targets for WA.
Latest science on the 1.5°C limit of the Paris AgreementThis briefing provides a comprehensive overview of what the science is saying now about the 1.5°C warming limit – what it means, what is at stake, and what actions are needed to limit the risks of overshoot and safeguard a liveable future.
Tracking what matters: SIDS priorities for global adaptation indicatorsThis briefing helps SIDS advocate for global adaptation indicators that catalyse support, investment, and political will to scale up adaptation responses, not just track them.
The full implications of Australia's North West Shelf decisionOn 28 May 2025, Australian Environment Minister Murray Watt made the first step towards what looks set to be a final decision to approve Woodside Energy's North West Shelf LNG plant in Western Australia through to 2070.
Climate overshoot implications for local adaptation planningNew perspective piece argues climate overshoot – the temporary exceedance of the 1.5°C limit of the Paris Agreement – may not be relevant for short-term adaptation planning, but it should be considered for long-term plans and policies, such as infrastructure-based measures and for irreversible impacts such as sea-level rise.
Addressing challenges in the land sector under the Paris AgreementThis report examines how loose land-sector rules under the Paris Agreement enable countries to overstate carbon removals and delay essential fossil fuel emissions cuts.
The impact of global climate pledges on national action: a snapshot across AsiaA detailed analysis of eight Asian countries' climate action compared with global pledges.
Fair carbon removal obligations under climate response uncertaintyWe assess the level of ‘preventive’ CDR needed to draw warming down to 1.5°C in case of a stronger-than-average Earth System response.