The Greenhouse Effect (DP IB Environmental Systems & Societies (ESS))

Revision Note

Greenhouse Gases & the Greenhouse Effect

  • Greenhouse gases (GHGs) and aerosols play an important role in Earth's climate by trapping heat in the atmosphere

Greenhouse gases and aerosols

  • GHGs: gases in the atmosphere that trap heat

    • Key GHGs:

      • Water vapour

      • Carbon dioxide

      • Methane

      • Nitrous Oxides

  • Aerosols: tiny particles or droplets in the atmosphere

    • Key aerosols:

      • Black carbon

        • A type of aerosol produced from incomplete combustion of fossil fuels, wood and other biomass

        • Found in emissions from, e.g. diesel engines, cooking stoves and open burning of vegetation

        • Absorbs sunlight and warms the atmosphere

        • Can darken snow and ice surfaces, reducing their reflectivity and accelerating melting

Key Greenhouse Gases

Name of GHG

Sources

Other Information

Water vapour

Evaporation from oceans, lakes and rivers

Transpiration from plants

Sublimation from ice and snow

Combustion of fossil fuels

Most abundant GHG

Concentration varies with temperature

Amplifies effects of other GHGs

Positive feedback loop: warmer atmosphere holds more water vapour, leading to more warming and greater evaporation

It is often excluded from climate models due to its dynamic levels and essential role in life, meaning it cannot be mitigated against

Carbon dioxide

Burning fossil fuels: coal, oil and natural gas (e.g. vehicle emissions)

Deforestation (when forests are cleared or burned, the carbon stored in trees is released back into atmosphere as carbon dioxide)

Industrial processes (e.g. cement production)

Significant contributor to the greenhouse effect due to high concentration and long lifespan in the atmosphere

Methane

Agriculture: livestock digestion (e.g. from large-scale cattle farming)

Landfills

Natural gas extraction (methane leaks)

rice paddies

Wetlands

More effective at trapping heat than carbon dioxide (over 20 times more potent over 100 years)

Found in much lower concentrations than carbon dioxide, so overall warming effect is less

Nitrous oxides

Agricultural practices (use of synthetic and organic fertilisers)

Fossil fuel combustion

Industrial processes

Potent GHG with a warming effect nearly 300 times that of carbon dioxide per molecule

Found in much lower concentrations than carbon dioxide, so overall warming effect is less

Aerial photograph of rice paddies
Rice paddies produce methane due to the anaerobic conditions created by flooded cultivation, which promote the growth of methane-producing microorganisms that decompose organic matter in the soil (photo by Steve Douglas on Unsplash)

The Greenhouse Effect

What is the Greenhouse Effect?

  • The Sun emits energy in the form of solar radiation

    • This includes visible light and ultraviolet rays

  • This solar radiation enters the Earth’s atmosphere

  • Some thermal energy is reflected from the Earth's surface

  • Most thermal energy is absorbed and re-emitted back from the Earth’s surface

    • This energy passes through the atmosphere

  • Some thermal energy passes straight through and is emitted into space

  • However, some thermal energy is absorbed by greenhouse gases

    • This causes thermal energy to be re-emitted in all directions

  • These gases act like a blanket

    • They allow sunlight to pass through while preventing a significant amount of the infrared radiation from escaping back into space

  • This reduces the thermal energy lost into space and traps it within the Earth’s atmosphere

    • This keeps the Earth warm

  • This process is known as the greenhouse effect

    • The greenhouse effect is a naturally occurring phenomenon

    • The greenhouse effect is important to ensure that Earth is warm enough for life

    • Without the greenhouse effect, the average temperature would be much colder, making the planet uninhabitable

      • For example, the average surface temperature of Earth is about 15 °C

      • Without the greenhouse effect, it would be about -18 °C

Diagram showing the sun's rays entering Earth's atmosphere, some energy absorbed by Earth and re-emitted, with some escaping to space and some trapped by greenhouse gases.
Greenhouse gases absorb the radiation that is re-emitted from the Earth's surface, trapping it in the atmosphere

Exam Tip

Don't get confused—the greenhouse effect is a natural process and is necessary for life on Earth. The accelerated or enhanced greenhouse effect refers to the changes in the greenhouse effect (mostly due to human activity) that are commonly referred to as global warming. This is discussed further in Causes of Climate Change.

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Alistair Marjot

Author: Alistair Marjot

Alistair graduated from Oxford University with a degree in Biological Sciences. He has taught GCSE/IGCSE Biology, as well as Biology and Environmental Systems & Societies for the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme. While teaching in Oxford, Alistair completed his MA Education as Head of Department for Environmental Systems & Societies. Alistair has continued to pursue his interests in ecology and environmental science, recently gaining an MSc in Wildlife Biology & Conservation with Edinburgh Napier University.