World Leaders Ask Climate To Respect Policy Timeline Before Becoming Historic
## WORLD LEADERS ASK CLIMATE TO RESPECT POLICY TIMELINE BEFORE BECOMING HISTORIC
**Delegates call for the planet to respect diplomatic process after temperatures appear to move faster than agreed language.**
**By Eleanor Silt** **Climate Correspondent**
World leaders yesterday urged the climate to show greater respect for international policy process after fresh warnings suggested the planet may break another heat record before governments have finished discussing targets.
At a press conference hosted by the **Office for Responsible Climate Sequencing**, officials unveiled a new document titled **The Interim Roadmap Toward Possible Future Urgency**, described as a practical framework for ensuring that planetary overheating does not outpace diplomatic procedure.
Standing beside a giant screen reading **PLEASE WAIT WHILE TARGETS ARE DISCUSSED**, senior officials said the atmosphere had lately shown a worrying tendency to move faster than agreed language, placing unfair pressure on governments still engaged in consultation, stakeholder outreach and the careful removal of binding verbs.
“We fully recognise that the planet is warming,” said director Martin Eaves. “But it is important that the planet also recognises that these things take time. We cannot have temperatures becoming historic before the communiqué is ready.”
The warning followed a week of red-hot forecasts, record anomalies and increasingly panicked scientific briefings, which delegates said risked undermining public confidence in the orderly pace of official ambition.
According to the new roadmap, governments remain committed to action in principle, provided the climate allows adequate time for review, further discussion and a phased approach to appearing concerned. Officials stressed that urgency must be balanced against process integrity.
One chart shown at the briefing appeared to compare the rise in global temperatures with the slower movement of ministerial commitment, though spokespeople later clarified that the widening gap should not be interpreted negatively.
“We are not saying the planet must stop warming altogether,” said one aide. “We are simply asking it to respect sequence.”
Several observers noted that the meeting took place indoors after an outdoor session was abandoned due to extreme heat. Delegates said this should not be read as a contradiction, but as evidence of their flexibility under changing conditions.
Scientists, meanwhile, warned that the window for meaningful action was narrowing rapidly. One called the current approach “the political equivalent of watching a house fire while debating hose etiquette.”
Officials rejected that characterisation, insisting that managed ambition remains the best route forward. “Rushed action helps no one,” said Eaves. “We need calm, coordination, and above all a shared commitment from the climate not to escalate ahead of schedule.”
At the close of the event, delegates thanked the public for its patience and confirmed that a follow-up summit on accelerated delay would be announced in due course.