climate change causes

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World at risk Climate change and its causes AS Geography

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Causes of climate change for Edexcel A Level Geography Spec

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Page 1: Climate change  causes

World at riskClimate change and its causes

AS Geography

Page 2: Climate change  causes

Climate change

• Climate change can be assessed across short, medium and long timescales.

• Short-term (recent) climate change is on a timescale of decades, e.g. global warming.

• The medium-term (historical) timescale covers changes over the last few thousand years.

• Long-term climate change has occurred on geological timescales, over hundreds of thousands to millions of years.

Page 3: Climate change  causes

Geological timescales

Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration measured from the Vostok ice core, East Antarctica

Page 4: Climate change  causes

Geological timescales

• Ice cores, pollen analysis and past sea-level changes all indicate that climate has changed in the past.

• Ice ages and interglacial's (warmer periods) seem to occur on a cycle of about 100,000 years.

• The last ice age (the Devensian) ended approximately 10,000 years ago and the current interglacial period (the Holocene) began.

Page 5: Climate change  causes

Historical climate change

• Written records, pictures, tree rings and the extent of glaciers suggest climate has changed on historical timescales.

• During the Little Ice Age (1400–1850) the climate was around 1C colder than it was in the twentieth century.

• During the Medieval Warm Period (800–1400) the climate was around 1C warmer than in the twentieth century.

Page 6: Climate change  causes

Recent climate change

Global temperatures, 1850–2008

Page 7: Climate change  causes

Recent climate change

• Global temperatures fluctuated considerably between 1860 and 1970 (see graph on previous slide).

• Since the late 1970s there has been a marked warming of around 0.5C.

• This corresponds to the ‘era of global warming’. • Accurate instrumental measurements of air and

ocean temperatures as well as ice cover testify to this record of global warming.

• Increasingly ecosystems are changing in response to rising temperatures.

Page 8: Climate change  causes

Possible causes of climate change

Ice ages in geological time

(glacial/interglacial cycles)

(1,000s–10,000s years)

Milankovitch cycles — changes in the amount and distribution of solar

energy received at the Earth’s surface caused by natural variations in its

orbit around the sun and the tilt of the Earth’s axis.

Historical changes

(Little Ice Age/Medieval Warm Period)

(several hundreds of years)

Variations in solar output and volcanic activity. The output of the sun

naturally varies as sunspots grow and shrink, thereby changing the

amount of solar energy received by the Earth. Volcanic dust, ash and

sulphur dioxide have a short-term cooling effect.

Global warming

(several decades since 1970)

Anthropogenic (human) greenhouse gas emissions (carbon dioxide,

methane) trap outgoing radiation in the atmosphere, thereby creating a

warming effect.

El Niño Southern Oscillation (years) Variations in Pacific Ocean currents cause short-term changes in climate

around the world.

Page 9: Climate change  causes

The greenhouse effect

The greenhouse effect

• The greenhouse effect is the natural process whereby gases in the

atmosphere, principally carbon dioxide, trap some outgoing solar

radiation.• This process warms the planet.

Page 10: Climate change  causes

The enhanced greenhouse effect

• Gases released by burning fossil fuels have enhanced the greenhouse effect and made it more powerful.

• This has a net warming effect.

• The level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has risen steadily since accurate recording began in the 1950s.

Carbon dioxide concentrations, Hawaii, 1959–2005

Page 11: Climate change  causes

Anthropogenic greenhouse gas sources

• Transport, industry, electricity and heat account for over 50% of all greenhouse gas emissions.

• Carbon dioxide is the most important greenhouse gas by volume.

• Methane is a more powerful greenhouse gas per molecule.

Global greenhouse gas emissions by economic sector, 2000

Page 12: Climate change  causes

Anthropogenic greenhouse gas sources

• The average carbon footprint in the developed world is five to ten times greater than in the developing world.

• This confirms that global warming is a problem created largely by the developed world.

North America 24.1

Europe 10.5

Asia 3.4

Sub-Saharan Africa 2.3

South America 5.3

Oceania 19.1

Greenhouse gas emissions per person (tonnes of carbon dioxide

equivalent, 2005)

Page 13: Climate change  causes

Unprecedented global warming?

• Average global temperatures have risen by 0.8 C since 1880.• The decades from 1980–2000 were the hottest for at least 400

years.• Measured warming in the Arctic is twice that for the rest of the

world.• Arctic sea ice in 2007 was at its lowest recorded extent.• Carbon dioxide levels, at 380 ppm in 2007, are over 100 ppm

higher than pre-industrial ‘natural’ levels.

Concern about global warming centres on key data, which are

increasingly taken to be ‘fact’ by the majority of scientists: