Environmental Policies & Practices
Environmental Policies & Practices
Environmental Policies & Practices
Plate tectonics helps to carry the carbonate rocks into the mantle,
which are then released again by volcanic activities.
– Earth’s lithosphere is broken into pieces (the plates).
– These plates float on top of the mantle, interacting with each
other to produce the geological features we see and feel today.
Global warming
Human Activities
Green House Effect
• The greenhouse effect is a naturally
occurring process that aids in heating the
Earth's surface and atmosphere.
• It results from the fact that certain
atmospheric gases, such as carbon
dioxide, water vapor, and methane, are
able to change the energy balance of the
planet by absorbing longwave radiation
emitted from the Earth's surface.
• Without the greenhouse effect life on this
planet would probably not exist as the
average temperature of the Earth would
be a chilly -18° Celsius, rather than the
present 15° Celsius.
Climate change
• Climate is average weather of an area
• Control temperature, evaporation rate,
seasons, moisture content.
• Conditions if prevail for 30 years…its said
to be the climate of an area
• Currently Climate is Changing
Climate change Evidence
• Intergovernmental Panel On Climate
Change.
• Published evidence of climate change
• Observed that earth’s climate has
changed over years.
• Average temperatures have
fluctuated by 0.5 to 1 0 C.
• Anthropogenic activities are affecting
climate
• Its not uniform in all places. Poles will
be more warmer
Global warming
Over the 20th Century, the
global average Surface
Temperature has increased
by 0.6 + 0.2°C (IPCC, 2001)
(Where most of the warming has
occurred between 1976 and 2000)
Further it is projected to
increase by 1.4 to 5.8 °C
over the period of 1990 -
2100.
GLOBAL WARMING
• Overall increase in temperature by a
few degrees.
• It happens when greenhouse gases
(carbon dioxide, water vapor, nitrous
oxide, and methane) trap heat and
light from the sun in the earth’s
atmosphere, which increases the
temperature.
• This hurts many people, animals, and
plants.
• Many cannot take the change, so
they die.
Effects
• Change in Wind current patterns
• Ocean currents will change
• Hydrological cycle will intensify
• Sea level rise: submergence of areas.
• Changed agricultural production
• Cases of flood, droughts, cyclones on a
rise.
Solutions
• Renewable energy
• Biofuels
• Afforestation
• Reduce the current rate of CFCs use
• Trap methane for fuel
• Potential of algae in Carbon dioxide
utilization
• Sustainable agriculture
Conservation
› Reduce energy needs
› Recycling
Alternate energy sources
› Nuclear
› Wind
› Geothermal
› Hydroelectric
› Solar
› Fusion?
1. Depleted oil and gas reservoirs
2. CO2 in enhanced oil and gas recovery
3. Deep saline formations – (a) offshore (b) onshore
4. CO2 in enhanced coal bed methane recovery
1 4
3b
3a
2
Alternately:
§ Saves about 182.5 kWhr of
electricity per year
§ Mitigates 157 kg CO2
emissions per year
Reduction of
Plastics
Products
The Kyoto Protocol - background
- places the heaviest burden for fighting climate change on industrialized nations
Annex 1: industrialized economies and economies in transition
Annex 2: the richest Annex 1 countries
(aka the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD
- developing countries will have largest climate change impacts; work to mitigate
The Kyoto Protocol
Dec 1-11, 1997: representatives from 160 countries agreed to enter into
binding limits on emissions of greenhouse gases
TARGETS:
Total: reduce developed nation emissions to 5% below 1990 levels during
“commitment period” 2008-2012
(most countries need -18% reduction in BAU by 2008)
PENALTY:
Non-compliant countries will have to reduce emissions by 1.3 units for
every unit of emissions “overshoot” in subsequent commitment period.
Ex: if your emissions target is 7Gtons per year by 2012, and you end
up at 10Gtons/yr, in the next commitment period (2013-2020) you
will have to reduce by 4Gtons/yr (in addition to any new targets) to be
compliant
Natural sunscreen: Ozone layer
• The production and emission of
CFCs, chlorofluorocarbons, is by far
the leading cause.
• CFCs in the stratosphere. There, the
chlorine atom is removed from the
CFC and attracts one of the three
oxygen atoms in the ozone
molecule. The process continues,
and a single chlorine atom can
destroy over 100,000 molecules of
ozone.
• In 1984, ozone layer hole was
discovered over Antarctica
HAZARDS OF OZONE DEPLETION
• Acid rain results from the emission into the atmosphere of various
pollutant gases, in particular sulphur dioxide and various oxides of
nitrogen, which originate from the burning of fossil fuels and from
car exhaust fumes, respectively.