As the World Warms, Researchers Warn That Many Ecosystems Are Nearing a Point of No Return

Rising temperatures threaten to trigger catastrophic tipping points across the planet. But it鈥檚 not too late to turn the tide, according to a recent report.
Peering through green foliage, a glacier recedes across a mountain landscape.
Climate change could push the Mendenhall Glacier, or 脕ak鈥檞 T鈥櫭k S铆t鈥, over a 鈥渢ipping point鈥 and into a cycle of accelerating ice loss. Photo: Bill Gozansky/Alamy

Growing up in southeast Alaska, Jeremy Aantiy茅ili Timothy says his summers were defined by the Mendenhall Glacier, or 脕ak始w T始谩ak S铆t始. He鈥檇 sprint up the 颅moraines鈥攕teep hills of silt and debris deposited by the glacier鈥斅璯etting in shape for the winter ski runs ahead.

Now 48, he has witnessed the landscape transform since his youth. 鈥淪eeing how much the glacier has receded in that timeframe is heartbreaking,鈥 says Timothy, a cultural ambassador program manager for the Central Council of Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska. 鈥淵ou feel like this glacier is a part of you.鈥

Here, the climate crisis isn鈥檛 a theory; it鈥檚 a visible, rapidly unfolding reality of thawing and thinning ice, unstable moraines, and shifting habitats. 鈥淥utburst鈥 floods, which occur when glacial lakes suddenly breach the ice dam containing them, now regularly send dangerous torrents into the Mendenhall River and through Juneau, costing the city tens of millions in damages. Locals and tourists can no longer easily walk up to the glacier or its ice caves. 鈥淲e can still see it, but we can鈥檛 reach it,鈥 says Gwen Baluss, conservation chair for the Juneau 探花精选 Society.

Here, the climate crisis isn鈥檛 a theory; it鈥檚 a visible, rapidly unfolding reality.

As the planet barrels toward , scientists warn that climate change may push 脕ak始w T始谩ak S铆t始, along with other mountain glaciers, over a 鈥渢ipping point.鈥 If temperatures rise enough, the glacier could break into segments, setting off a . Passing these points would be like falling off a cliff instead of sliding down a predictable slope.

A report published in October by 160 scientists found that many Earth systems are similarly in danger of crossing irreversible thresholds, triggering feedback loops that can lead to total ecosystem collapse鈥攁nd facilitate even more warming. 鈥淭he biggest picture is that we鈥檙e sadly already starting to cross climate tipping points, and the risk of crossing others increases with every fraction of a degree of global warming,鈥 says Tim Lenton, University of Exeter climate scientist and lead author of the .

Already, researchers say Earth has reached its first major tipping point: the , which are unable to regenerate as the ocean grows hotter and more acidic. Many other essential systems are also at risk. Drought and deforestation threaten to turn the Amazon rainforest鈥攖he lungs of the planet鈥into a dry savanna. Melting sea ice is shifting the Arctic from a white, sunlight-reflective sheet to a that can, in turn, melt more ice. If thawing permafrost releases trapped greenhouse gases or if warming water causes ocean currents to collapse, the ripple effects could destabilize global weather patterns and food webs.

The future doesn鈥檛 have to be so grim, however. While scientists have worried about these dire thresholds for years, the new report also identifies 鈥減ositive tipping points鈥 that can correct the course. These social, economic, and technological drivers set off chain reactions, too鈥攆lipping failing systems toward stability and locking in progress for the planet.

The new report also identifies 鈥減ositive tipping points鈥 that can correct the course.

Lenton says there is evidence that movement toward positive tipping points is accelerating globally, from the rising use of solar energy鈥攖he fastest-growing source of electricity in history鈥攖o the growing adoption of electric vehicles. As these technologies spread, they become cheaper and more attractive compared to fossil-fuel-based alternatives, further speeding up decarbonization. Restoration and conservation efforts can also tip degraded systems back to health, the report says, buying struggling habitats time to survive. 

In Juneau, Indigenous groups are playing a central role in adapting to the new normal. Last year, the Mendenhall River hit a record-high water level that could have decimated the city if not for recently installed flood barriers. Sabrina Grubitz, the Tlingit and Haida public safety manager, says tribal leaders are working proactively with state and federal partners to protect the community from these increasing risks. The tribal government is also partnering on co-stewardship of the glacier and the surrounding land with the U.S. Forest Service. This effort includes to educate visitors and shedding colonial labels in favor of ancestral ones, such as calling the glacier by its native name.

Such on-the-ground collaboration, especially with Indigenous communities, is essential to staving off ecosystem collapse, Lenton says. When local projects succeed, they create a blueprint. Replicating them at scale鈥攁nd combining them with policies that incentivize clean energy鈥攂uilds momentum toward a safer and healthier planet. That鈥檚 a tipping point, too. 鈥淚t very much involves people and communities and bottom-up action deciding to make the change,鈥 Lenton says. 鈥淭hat change becomes infectious.鈥

This story originally ran in the Spring 2026 issue as 鈥淏alancing Act.鈥 To receive our print magazine, become a member by .