The Greenhouse Effect: EXAM HINT - Candidates Often Confuse The
The Greenhouse Effect: EXAM HINT - Candidates Often Confuse The
The Greenhouse Effect: EXAM HINT - Candidates Often Confuse The
Many people regard global warming or the greenhouse effect as the most serious
environmental threat to our present way of life on earth.
Put simply, the greenhouse effect is the natural "trapping in" of heat by some of the gases
in the atmosphere. Figure 1 shows the key points of the greenhouse effect.
3. But most
gets through
5. Earth's surface warms up and emits longwave radiation - i.e. it re-radiates energy 4. Earth absorbs the radiation
7. Some longwave
radiation escapes
1. Shortwave
radiation from
the sun reaches
Earth's
atmosphere
2. Some is reflected
6. Some of this re-radiated
longwave radiation is trapped
by CO
2
, CFCs, CH
4
, N
2
O and
water vapour - "The greenhouse
gases"
Figure 1: The Greenhouse Effect
EXAM HINT - Candidates often confuse the
greenhouse effect with ozone depletion.
Although they have some common causes,
their mechanisms and effects are very
different.
1
It is the possible implications of this extra heating
effect that are causing so much concern.
We simply do not know how much the
temperature will continue to rise and what effect
any changes will have on local, regional and world
climate. Which areas will benefit and which will
suffer, and how, is still largely unknown. The
temperature will not rise everywhere equally; in
fact some areas will probably become cooler
(because of this, most of the scientific literature
now uses the term "global climate change" rather
than global warming). The effects of possible
changes will be discussed shortly, but first we
need to look at the greenhouse gases in a little more
detail.
Some of the greenhouse gases, for example, carbon
dioxide, occur naturally in the atmosphere, whilst
others such as the chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
are entirely man-made. Regardless of their origin,
such gases warm the lower atmosphere by trapping
outgoing longwave radiation in a manner similar
to that of glass in a greenhouse, hence the term
greenhouse effect.
It is important to realise that the greenhouse effect
is a natural, essential process. Without it, the
average temperature on earth would be about
-17
o
C and life would be impossible.
However, over the last hundred years human
activities have resulted in rising concentrations of
all the greenhouse gases. This has led to an
increased or "enhanced" greenhouse effect
and this in turn seems to have led to an increase
in average global temperature.
Typical exam questions
1. Describe the trend shown in Fig 2.
(1 mark)
2. Suggest why the concentration of CO
2
fluctuates within any one year.
(2 marks)
Why is carbon dioxide so important?
In discussions of the greenhouse effect,
attention is almost invariably focused on
rising CO
2
levels. This is not because it is
an unusually powerful greenhouse gas -
indeed, gases such as methane are thirty
times more powerful weight for weight - but
because of its sheer abundance (Table 1). As
a consequence, its effects outweigh those of
all the other greenhouse gases combined.
Historically, high carbon dioxide
concentrations have always coincided with
inter-glacial periods and low concentrations
with ice ages.
Figure 2. shows how carbon dioxide
concentrations have increased recently.
Figure 2: Mean Monthly CO
2
concentrations at Mauna Loa
C
O
2
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58 62 66 70 74 78 82 86
Year
Table 1: The major greenhouse gases (excluding water vapour*)
* The concentration of water vapour, which has the greatest greenhouse effect, is not significantly affected by human activity
The Greenhouse Effect
2
Conc
(ppm)
Average
residence
time (yrs)
Gas Reason for increase Sources
CO
2
CH
4
N
2
O
O
3
CFCs
360
1.7
0.3
0.01-
0.05
0.003
100
10
130
(variable)
55-116
Combustion of fossil fuels
Respiration
a) Anaerobic bacteria in marshes
and in guts of ruminants
b) Decomposition of organic
material
c) Leakage from gas pipes and coal
mines
a) Combustion of fossil fuels
b) Denitrifying bacteria acting on
nitrates and nitrites
Reaction product of car exhaust
pollutants (nitrous oxides,
hydrocarbons) and sunlight
Coolants, propellants and
expanders
a) Growing world energy demand leading to increased fossil fuel
combustion
b) Destruction of vegetation - eg. rainforests - leading to
i) decline in global photosynthesis
ii) increased CO
2
in atmosphere due to burning of cleared vegetation
a) Increase in ruminant population
b) Increase in area given over to landfill
c) Increase in area given over to rice paddy
a) Increased use of fossil fuels
b) Increased use of nitrate fertilisers
c) Increased cultivation of soil
Increased use of fossil fuels for transport
Increased use of aerosols, refrigerators etc. (although following the
Montreal Protocol, CFCs are now banned in developed countries)
I
N
C
R
E
A
S
I
N
G
T
E
M
P
E
R
A
T
U
R
E
sea level storms
t
o
of freshwaters species distribution including local extinction
pattern of succession because t
o
will favour some species more than
others
northern migration of boreal forest
rainfall pattern eg. intensity/frequency distribution of
grasslands and savannahs. Desiccation of wetlands
Forest productivity since t
o
= a limiting factor or
Forest productivity because of desiccation, wilting, defoliation and
fires
glacial melting at poles dramatic to food webs productivity
water or t
o
stress to animals resistance to opportunistic pests/diseases
coastal erosion habitat loss eg. marshes,
dunes, mangroves and coral reefs
salinisation of estuaries, coastal rivers
and coastal soils
Predicting the exact effects of an increase in
global temperature is extremely difficult.
However, it is expected that greater warming
will occur at the poles than at the equator and
this will affect atmospheric circulation
patterns which are dependent on the
temperature differences between these two
areas. Similarly, regional rainfall patterns
may drastically change which in turn will
affect the pattern of world food production,
with obvious economic and political
consequences.
Sea-levels will rise as a consequence of melting
glaciers and thermal expansion of water.
Consequences include flooding, salinisation
of soils and coastal erosion. No one is sure
how much the sea-level around Britain will
rise - the most commonly quoted estimated
rise by 2050 is 0.3 to 0.6 metres. The
southeast, which is already sinking relative to
the sea, would be the most seriously affected.
KEY
increase
decrease
Figure 3: Possible Biological and Ecological Consequences of Increasing Temperature
This figure is meant only to indicate the complexity of possible changes; some areas will certainly become cooler.
EXAM HINT - Annotated diagrams using
shorthand symbols such as for increase
makes revision faster.
KEY
t
o
temperature
change
What Can Be Done?
Strategies to reduce the emissions or levels of
the greenhouse gases have mainly targeted
carbon dioxide. These include:
1. Reducing the consumption of fossil
fuels by increasing the fuel efficiency of
buildings and vehicles. Improvements
to the latter would also reduce N
2
O
emissions.
2. Switching fuel from coal to oil and gas
which release less carbon dioxide upon
consumption.
3. Switching from fossil fuels to renewable
energy sources such as solar, geothermal,
wind, wave, tidal and hydro-electric.
4. Preventing destruction of the tropical
rainforests, simultaneously removing a
problem and providing a solution.
However, as mentioned earlier, because the
other greenhouse gases absorb different infra-
red wavelengths to carbon dioxide, reductions
in this gas alone are unlikely to be sufficient.
CFC emissions have already been reduced as
a result of the Montreal Protocol in 1989 and
subsequent amendments. Alternatives to
CFCs are now widely available.
Any measures which reduced vehicle use or
pollution would simultaneously help to
reduce emissions of carbon dioxide, nitrous
oxide and levels of tropospheric ozone.
Worldwide however, the trend is in the
wrong direction, with one new car joining the
roads every second. In Britain, road transport
is responsible for 18% of carbon dioxide
emissions,45% of nitrous oxide emissions
and 30% of all hydrocarbon emissions.
The Greenhouse Effect
3
Negative and Positive Feedback
Negative feedback is an important principle
of homeostasis - if a system begins to move
out of equilibrium, negative feedback will
initiate processes which tend to bring the
system back into equilibrium. In terms of the
greenhouse effect, one possible negative
feedback may be that with increasing
temperature there will be an increase in
evaporation which will lead to increased
cloudiness through condensation of the water
vapour. This could reduce the amount of
solar radiation which actually reaches the
earth's surface, causing a cooling effect.
Positive feedback may also be involved - the
world's oceans are important sinks for carbon
dioxide but as their temperature rises, their
ability to absorb the gas will decrease and
therefore more carbon dioxide will be left in
the atmosphere, further raising the
temperature.
Practice questions
1. Define the term greenhouse effect.
(3 marks)
2. The Figure shows atmospheric
concentrations of carbon dioxide at Mauna
Loa observatory in Hawaii
(a) i) Describe the trend shown.
(1 mark)
ii)In the Northern Hemisphere, winter
concentrations of carbon dioxide are usually
higher than summer concentrations.
Suggest a possible explanation for this.
(2 marks)
3. Suggest 4 different ways in which the
enhanced greenhouse effect may affect
the carbon cycle.
(4 marks)
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Year
Answers
Semicolons indicate marking points.
1. Heating of the atmosphere;
Longwave radiation trapped;
By CO
2
, CFCs, N
2
O, CH
4
, water vapour;
2. a) i) Increasing CO
2
concentration;
ii) Reduced photosynthesis/ Less carbon
dioxide absorbed;
Deciduous trees are leafless/
temperature limiting;
or Greater fossil fuel combustion;
Releases carbon dioxide;
3. Increased rate of photosynthesis/respiration/
weathering/decomposition;
As temperature may be a limiting factor;
Ref. to enzymes;
So atmospheric concentration may change;
May increase size of long term sink if
phytoplankton form sediments;
Decreased solution leading to increased
atmospheric concentration;