1 / 29

Chapter 16 Climate Change and Ozone Loss

Chapter 16 Climate Change and Ozone Loss. Carter Kimball, Ryland Burke, and Camille French. Case Study: Studying a Volcano to Understand Climate Change. June 1991 eruption James Hansen makes climate change prediction Eruption serves as model to test global climate.

palti
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 16 Climate Change and Ozone Loss

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 16 Climate Change and Ozone Loss Carter Kimball, Ryland Burke, and Camille French

  2. Case Study: Studying a Volcano to Understand Climate Change • June 1991 eruption • James Hansen makes climate change prediction • Eruption serves as model to test global climate. • Scientists and politicians are convinced.

  3. 16-1 Past Climate Change and the Natural Greenhouse Effect • Past historic changes • The natural Greenhouse Effect • Major Greenhouse Gases

  4. Historic Changes in Earth’s Temperature • Earth has experienced prolonged periods of global warming and global cooling • These are called glacial and interglacial periods • The agricultural period stabilized the climate

  5. The Natural Greenhouse Effect • This is when gases get trapped in the atmosphere and absorb heat. • The absorbed heat raises the global temperature • The two Major greenhouse gases are Water vapor and Carbon dioxide Svante Arrhenius discovered this tropospheric heating effect in 1896

  6. 16-2 Climate Change and Human Activities • Signs of a Warming troposphere • Scientific consensus on future climate change • Why should we be concerned about a warmer earth?

  7. Signs that the Troposphere is Warming • Since 1861 the concentrations of CO2, CH4, and N2O have risen sharply and the temp has risen .8 degrees Celsius • The 20th century is the hottest in the past 1000 years • Glacial Ice is melting causing sea levels to rise • Permafrost is melting around the world • The 16 warmest years recorded have been in the past 30 years

  8. Scientific Consensus on Future Climate Change • There is newer and better evidence that most of the climate change in the last 50 years is caused by human activities • It is very likely that the earths mean surface temp will increase 1.4-5.8 degrees between 2000 and 2100

  9. Why Should we be Concerned about a Warmer Earth? • The concern is not with the temp. change, but the speed of the change • Rapid change can effect the availability of resources, and traditions and activities kept for generations • The Natl. Academy of Sciences in 2002 suggested that Temp. can increase drastically in only a decade or two (in past up to 10 C) • This could cause ecosystems to collapse, major flooding, wildlife disappearances, disease, Storms

  10. Must be viewed as a serious threat to global stability and should be elevated beyond a scientific debate to a US national security concern. • Most serious problem we are facing today. More serious than terrorism.

  11. 16. 3 Factors Affecting the Earth’s Temperature • Oceans remove CO2 and heat from the atmosphere. • Currents help create Earth’s present climate. • Climate change will disrupt currents. • Warmer temperatures create cloud cover than can either warm or cool the earth’s surface. • Jet contrail emissions can contribute to tropospheric warming.

  12. 16. 3 Factors Affecting the Earth’s Temperature (cont’d) • Aerosols and other air pollutants are released into the troposphere by volcanic eruptions and human activities. • These particles can contribute to warming and cooling patterns. • Soot/black carbon aerosols • Increased CO2 levels could increase photosynthesis. • Methane hydrates in permafrost

  13. 16.4 Possible Effects of a Warmer World • Some areas will benefit from increased global temperatures. • Other areas will suffer. • Risk of wild fires will increase. • Higher temperatures will cause tree deaths, loss of biodiversity, species population depletion. • Will encourage population growth of “bad” species. • Most vulnerable ecosystems… • Effects of sea level rise… • Largest burden of global warming will fall on the poorer countries.

  14. 16.5 Dealing with the Threat of Global Warming

  15. Why Climate Change is Difficult to Deal With • Many complex causes • Global problem • Long-term issue • Harmful and beneficial impacts of climate change are not spread evenly • Can’t stop climate change but we can slow its rate and adapt to its effects • Reducing global warming can disrupt economies and lifestyles

  16. Solutions: What Are Our Options? • Disagreements persist about what should be done • Wait-and-See Strategy • Act Now to Reduce Risk Strategy • Act Now / No Regrets Strategy

  17. Solutions to Global Warming Prevention Cleanup • Improve energy efficiency • Reduce fossil fuel use • Switch to carbon-free renewable energy • Reduce deforestation • Remove CO2 from smokestacks and vehicles • Planting trees to store CO2 • Store CO2 deep underground or in the deep ocean Fig. 16-13, p. 379

  18. Removing and Storing CO2 Fig. 16-14, p. 380

  19. Government Role in Reducing Climate Change • Carbon or Energy Taxes • Increase renewable energy subsidies • Reduce subsidies on fossil fuel • Technology Transfer

  20. Kyoto Protocol • Required 39 developed countries to cut emissions to 5.2% below 1990 levels by 2012 • Didn’t require developing countries to cut emissions • Bush withdrew U.S. from Protocol in 2001

  21. Kyoto Protocol Percent Change in Emissions in 2007 compared to 1990

  22. What You Can Do to Reduce Your CO2 Emissions • Drive a fuel efficient car, walk, bike, or carpool • Energy efficient appliances • Reduce garbage / recycle • Compact fluorescent bulbs • Low-flow shower head

  23. 16-6 Ozone Depletion in the Stratosphere

  24. Ozone Depletion • Ozone (03) in stratosphere blocks 95% of sun’s harmful UV radiation • Ozone thinning is greatest at poles and present everywhere except tropics • Caused by chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)

  25. CFC’s and Ozone Depletion

  26. Effects of Ozone Depletion • More skin cancer and eye cataracts in humans • Damage to crops and forests • Decreased populations of UV sensitive species • Increased acid deposition and photochemical smog • Accelerates global warming by decreasing ocean uptake of CO2

  27. 16-7 Protecting the Ozone Layer

  28. Reducing Ozone Depletion • Stop using Ozone Depleting Chemicals (ODCs) • Montreal Protocol: 36 countries met to reduce CFC emissions by 35% by 2000 (didn’t include ODCs) • Copenhagen Protocol: 93 countries amended Montreal Protocol to phase out ODCs

More Related