The World
What the Paris Agreement actually commits countries to
The Paris Agreement is the closest the world has come to a shared climate contract, but how it works, and what it does not require, is widely misunderstood.
The World
The Paris Agreement is the closest the world has come to a shared climate contract, but how it works, and what it does not require, is widely misunderstood.

The Paris Agreement, adopted in 2015 under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, brought almost every country on Earth into a single framework for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. It set a long-term temperature goal and established a system for countries to set and regularly revise their own targets. It is the most widely ratified environmental treaty in history. It is also, by design, less binding than it might appear, and understanding the gap between its ambition and its enforcement mechanism matters for assessing how much progress the world is actually making.
The Paris Agreement commits signatories to holding the increase in global average temperature to well below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, with efforts to limit the increase to 1.5 degrees. It does not set a single global carbon budget or assign specific emission reductions to each country. Instead, each country submits its own plan, called a Nationally Determined Contribution, or NDC. Countries are required to submit NDCs, to update them over time, and to report on their progress. They are not legally required to meet the targets in their NDC. The architecture is deliberately bottom-up: targets are nationally set, and the pressure to increase ambition over time comes from peer review, public transparency, and diplomatic norms rather than from legal penalties.
The 1.5 degree limit has become the political shorthand for the Agreement's ambition, partly because climate scientists have documented that the risks of warming, including extreme weather, sea level rise, coral reef loss, and agricultural disruption, increase significantly beyond that threshold. Reaching net zero global emissions by around mid-century is broadly what the science indicates is required to keep warming within range of the 1.5 degree target. Net zero means that the greenhouse gases added to the atmosphere each year are balanced by the amount removed, through forests, soils, and engineered carbon capture. Most large emitters have set net zero targets, though the policies to deliver them vary widely in specificity and credibility.
The Paris Agreement includes commitments from wealthier countries to provide climate finance to developing nations to help them both cut emissions and adapt to the changes already locked in. The scale and nature of those flows has been a persistent source of tension, particularly as climate-related disasters impose growing costs on the countries least responsible for historical emissions. The debate over who pays how much, and in what form, is one of the most contested dimensions of international climate diplomacy.
Australia is a signatory to the Paris Agreement and has submitted NDCs committing to emissions reduction targets. As a major exporter of coal and natural gas, Australia faces particular scrutiny in the international climate debate, because the emissions produced when those exports are burned overseas are not counted in Australia's own national inventory. Domestically, the Agreement has shaped energy and industry policy across successive governments, even when the specific targets have been contested. For Australians, the practical effects of climate change, from more intense bushfires and droughts to reef bleaching, are already visible, making the Agreement's implementation a domestic as well as a global concern.
The Paris Agreement is a framework for global climate cooperation, not a guarantee of action. Its power comes from transparency, peer pressure, and the escalating costs of inaction, not from enforcement. Whether that is enough depends on how quickly major emitters translate their commitments into policy.
This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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