A new dangerous planetary boundary have been breached – A greener life, a greener world

By Anders Lorenzen

A New report released by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impacts Research (PIK) has revealed that seven of the world’s critical Earth system boundaries were breached on more than one occasion this year.

The research from PIK’s Planetary Boundaries Science Lab, released in its 2025 Planetary Health Check, found that the planetary boundary of Ocean Acidification has been breached for the first time. Mainly driven by the continuing increase in the burning of fossil fuels, this is also worsened by deforestation and land-use change. This shift degrades the oceans’ ability to act as Earth’s stabiliser. 

The risk status of the nine planetary boundaries.
The Planetary Boundaries Science Lab at PIK finds that seven of nine critical Earth system boundaries have been breached, leaving only ozone depletion and aerosol loading within safe limits. Graph credit: PIK.

The nine planetary boundaries

The nine planetary boundaries that form Earth’s operating system are Climate Change, Biosphere Integrity, Land System Change, Freshwater Use, Biogeochemical Flows, Novel Entities, Ocean Acidification, Loading of Aerosols—more commonly known as air pollution—and the stratospheric ozone layer. Only the last two are currently within safe boundaries.

Johan Rockstrom: Ocean Acidification is destabilising the planet

This development has concerned the planetary boundaries expert and PIK Director Johan Rockström, “More than three-quarters of the Earth’s support systems are not in the safe zone. Humanity is pushing beyond the limits of a safe operating space, increasing the risk of destabilising the planet.” 

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The breach of the seventh planetary boundary is pushing humanity further beyond the safe zone for civilisation, PIK said. 

This puts the world’s oceans closer to a tipping point, as Ocean Acidification has now gone beyond what is considered safe for marine life. The ocean ecosystems are feeling the effects and are being overstressed.

As acidification continues to spread and intensify, cold-water corals, tropical coral reefs, and Arctic marine life are especially vulnerable.

Pushing marine ecosystems beyond safe limits

Since the world started to industrialise, the pH value of the world’s oceans has fallen by around 0.1 units. This translates to a 30-40% increase in acidity, pushing marine ecosystems beyond safe limits.

Levke Caesar, Co-lead of Planetary Boundaries Science Lab and one of the report’s lead authors, echoed the concerns, “The movement we’re seeing is absolutely headed in the wrong direction. The ocean is becoming more acidic, oxygen levels are dropping, and marine heatwaves are increasing. This is ramping up pressure on a system vital to stabilising conditions on planet Earth. This intensifying acidification stems primarily from fossil fuel emissions, and together with warming and deoxygenation affects everything from coastal fisheries to the open ocean.”

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Rockström: Failure is not an option

Rockström urged policymakers and governments to step up: “The drop in aerosol pollution and healing of the ozone layer shows that it is possible to turn the direction of global development. Even if the diagnosis is dire, the window of cure is still open. Failure is not inevitable; failure is a choice—a choice that must and can be avoided.”

Dr Sylvia Earle: Without healthy seas, there is no healthy planet

The world-famous marine biologist and oceanographer and scientist Dr Sylvia Earle heeded those calls, “The Ocean is our planet’s life-support system. Without healthy seas, there is no healthy planet. For billions of years, the ocean has been Earth’s great stabiliser: generating oxygen, shaping climate, and supporting the diversity of life. Today, acidification is a flashing red warning light on the dashboard of Earth’s stability. Protect the ocean, and we protect ourselves.”

In 2009, Rockström was the lead architect amongst a working group of scientists that established the framework and coined the term ” Planetary Boundaries.

Anders Lorenzen is the founding Editor of A greener life, a greener world.


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