Unit 2: Global climate - vulnerability and resilience

Unit 2: Global climate - vulnerability and resilience

1. Causes of global climate change

  • How natural and human processes affect the global energy balance

  • The atmospheric system, including the natural greenhouse effect and energy balance (incoming shortwave radiation and outgoing longwave radiation)

  • Changes in the global energy balance, and the role of feedback loops, resulting from: solar radiation variations, including global dimming due to volcanic eruptions; terrestrial albedo changes and feedback loops; methane gas release and feedback loops

  • The enhanced greenhouse effect and international variations in greenhouse gas sources and emissions, in relation to economic development, globalization and trade

  • The complexity of the dynamic climate system and the spatial interactions of different processes and feedback mechanisms

2. Consequences of global climate change

  • The effects of global climate change on places, societies and environmental systems

  • Climate change and the hydrosphere, atmosphere and biosphere, including: water stored in ice and oceans, and changing sea levels; carbon stored in ice, oceans and the biosphere; incidence and severity of extreme weather events, including drought; spatial changes in biomes, habitats and animal migration patterns; changes to agriculture, including crop yields, limits of cultivation, soil erosion

  • Impacts of climate change on people and places, including health hazards, migration and ocean transport routes

  • The uneven spatial distribution of effects and uncertainty about their timing, scale and impacts for individuals and societies

3. Responding to global climate change

  • Possibilities for responding to climate change and power over the decision-making process

  • Disparities in exposure to climate change risk and vulnerability, including variations in people's location, wealth, social differences (age, gender, education), risk perception

  • Detailed examples of two or more societies with contrasting vulnerability

  • Government-led adaptation and mitigation strategies for global climate change: global geopolitical efforts, recognizing that the source/s of greenhouse gas emissions may be spatially distant from the countries most impacted; carbon emissions offsetting and trading; technology, including geo-engineering

  • Civil society and corporate strategies to address global climate change

  • Case study of the response to climate change in one country focusing on the actions of non-governmental stakeholders

  • Why perspectives and viewpoints may be different about the need for, practicality and urgency of action on global climate change

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