Global Geopolitical Efforts
- Global warming and climate change require an international response because it affects the entire globe
- Responses involve:
- Mitigation - actions that reduce emissions that contribute to global warming and climate change
- Adaptation - actions which minimise or prevent the negative impacts of global warming and climate change
Mitigation
- One form of mitigation is through international agreements:
- In 1988 the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was set up to assess the 'risks of human-induced climate change
- This was followed by several international agreements:
- Earth Summit, Rio 1992
- Set out aims to stabilise greenhouse gas levels
- Kyoto Protocol 1997
- Delegates from 150 countries agreed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
- It stated that industrialised countries would reduce emissions to below the levels in 1990
- Developing countries including China and India were exempt from the agreement
- The USA did not sign up for the treaty
- Canada withdrew in 2011 stating that without China and USA, the treaty would not work
- Paris Agreement 2015
- Global agreement to limit global warming to 2oC (preferably 1.5oC) above pre-industrial levels
- The agreement also includes reducing CO2 emissions by at least 60% by 2050
- Signed by 196 countries including the USA and China (the USA withdrew in 2020 and later, re-joined in 2021)
- Conference of the Parties (COP)
- The United Nations (UN) holds an annual (every year) meeting to discuss climate change.
- COP26 was held in Glasgow, UK in 2021, COP27 in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt in 2022 and COP28 in Dubai, UAE in 2023
- All nations agreed to take actions to further reduce greenhouse gas emissions
Adaptation
- These are ways in which people can adapt to the impacts through:
- Change in agricultural systems
- Managing water supplies
- Reducing risks from rising sea levels
Change in agricultural systems
- Agricultural systems will need to adapt to changing weather patterns, different pests and diseases
- Changing crops or the livestock raised to suit the climatic conditions
- More irrigation may be required which will need careful management of water supplies
- Development of drought-resistant crops
- Floating gardens where crops are planted on platforms which rise with the level of water
Managing water supplies
- Reducing demand through the use of water-efficient appliances and devices (shower heads, dual flush toilets)
- Increasing supply through desalinisation
- Water storage facilities
- Improved irrigation systems which waste/use less water
Reducing risks from rising sea levels
- Construction of sea walls as in the Maldives
- Mangrove forest restoration which protects the land from coastal flooding
- Raised homes on stilts to allow waters to flow underneath
- Construction of artificial islands up to 3m high
- Flood barriers such as the Thames Barrier in London
Examiner Tip
It is important to be clear about the difference between mitigation and adaption. Adaptation is the actions actions taken to adjust to natural events to reduce potential damage or deal with the consequences such as building homes on stilts to adapt to increased flooding. Mitigation is the actions taken to reduce or eliminate the long-term risk to human life and property from climate change such as international agreements to reduce carbon emissions.