What are the Effects of Global Warming?

 

Climate Change

Climate change: Climate is the long term average of a region’s weather events lumped together. Climate change represents a change in these long term weather patterns.

Recent Climate History

The Earth has warmed about 0.6 Celsius in the last century. In 1988 the United Nations Environment Program and the World Meteorological Organization put together a team of 200 top scientists to show whether as greenhouse gases increase, so does the world’s temperature.

In 2001 the two groups, now known as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) had concluded that global air temperature had increased by 0.6 Celsius since 1861.

"Experts have long regarded Earth's polar regions as early indicators for global climate change. . . . Now a more than twenty-year record of space based measurements has been analyzed by researchers at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. Based on their findings, evidence of a warming planet continues to grow."
NASA
Photo courtesy of NASA
"This is an animated sequence of several NASA satellites and instruments that are dedicated to observing the Earth’s system, including the cryosphere."
NASA
Photo courtesy of NASA

Natural Disasters

Climate change could have a severe effect on natural disasters. There might be more frequent and intense hurricanes, tornadoes, storms, cyclones and water evaporation.

As a result of natural disasters, houses, cities and towns would need to be built more stably against the forces of wind and water.

These natural disasters could have a huge effect on people’s lives and those of future generations.

Tornado

Tornado damage

Hurricane damage

Flood

photos courtesy of FEMA

Sea level rises

The sea level worldwide rose between 10-25cm during the 20th century. This was confirmed by the IPCC scientists. To understand why this is happening, we need to understand the role of the polar caps & the glaciers.

As temperatures rise it is expected that glaciers and polar caps will continue to melt making the sea level rise. Low-lying Pacific nations may be entirely flooded under the ocean. Coastal cites and coast-lines would not be suitable for living because of the sea level.

An important role of the polar caps is also to reflect the sun light. If our polar caps keep melting, it would add more heat to our oceans and land instead of helping regulate it. Without polar caps the sun would be adding heat to the vicious circle.

Due to the rising temperature of our oceans and plants and animals which aren’t heat tolerant would die.

These pictures from NASA shows the changes in the polar ice cap between 1979 and 2003.

1979

2003

“Arctic perennial sea ice has been decreasing at a rate of 9% per decade. The first image shows the minimum sea ice concentration for the year 1979, and the second image shows the minimum sea ice concentration in 2003. The data used to create these images ... were collected bythe Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) Special Sensor Microwave Imager (SSMI).”
This paragraph is copied from the NASA website.
Image courtesy of NASA

Human Health

In a warmer world, scientists predict more people may get heat stressed, sicken or die, due to the hot days and nights.

Diseases now found only in the tropics, spread by animals especially mosquitoes and other insects, will become more common in cooler areas as these animals widen their range and travel into regions too cold for them at present.

Today 45 percent of people in the world live where they might get bitten by a mosquito carrying the parasite that causes malaria: that will increase to 60% if temperatures rise. Other tropical diseases that may spread similarly include dengue fever, yellow fever and encephalitis.

Scientists also predict more allergies and respiratory diseases which could effect the community.

Copyright: University of Wisconsin-Madison, Illlustration by SV Medaris.

Ecological systems

meaning: the totality or pattern of relations between organisms and their environment.

Climate change may alter the world’s habitats and ecosystems. Many places rely on a balance of rainfall, soil and temperature. With a rapid change in climate this balance would become uneven and dramatically endanger many living things.

Most of the past climate changes have occurred gradually, allowing plants and living creatures to adapt to the new environment or move somewhere else. However, if future climates change radically, scientists predict that the living plants and animals would become extinct because they will not be able to adapt quickly enough.

Birds

Dead tree

Seagulls

Trees

 

Agriculture

Global Warming may make Earth warmer in some cold places. People in these areas might have more chances of growing crops, but it might also bring droughts to other areas where we presently grow crops.

Inland lakes and rivers could shrivel. Forest and Bush fires could occur more often. Frequent periods of drought could make it difficult to raise crops for food. Crops and woodlands many also be afflicted by insects and plant disease.

Rice field

Rice field