LEC.101 Global Environmental Challenges Flashcards

1
Q

From the 2019 global report, how many species worldwide are threatened by extinction?

A

1 million

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2
Q

What % of people in the 2019 poll were ‘very worried’ about climate change?

A

59%

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3
Q

What is an example of a direct (largest) and indirect driver of biodiversity loss?

A

Direct: Land/sea use change
Indirect: Economic & technological

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4
Q

What does SDG stand for and which is one of the most important goals?

A

Sustainable Development Goals, 13. Climate action

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5
Q

What kind of problems are global environmental challenges?

A

Wicked problems - the problem isn’t easily defined

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6
Q

What are the 2 external risks to the planet?

A
  1. Sun becomes a red giant
  2. Impact with energy > gravity
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7
Q

What are the 2 external risks to the global biosphere/ecosphere?

A
  1. Meteorite impact
  2. Gamma-ray burst from star explosion
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8
Q

What are the 3 internal risks to the global biosphere/ecosphere?

A
  1. Core/mantle convection
  2. Rapid climate change
  3. Biosphere imbalance
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9
Q

What is an external and internal global risk to human society?

A

External: Planetary/biosphere threats
Internal: Ecosphere overshoot

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10
Q

What is ecosphere overshoot and how many people are there on the planet now?

A

Using up biosphere resources to meet increasing human demand, 8.1bn people

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11
Q

What occurs once carrying capacity is exceeded and where in the world is this happening?

A

Population die-off, most of Europe, North America and Asia

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12
Q

Who came up with the term ‘Anthropocene’ in 2000 and what does it refer to?

A

Paul Crutzen, a new epoch whose signature is human impacts

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13
Q

Why does the talk of ‘emergencies’ make social scientists nervous?

A
  1. Rights are often drastically curtailed in states of emergency
  2. Authoritarian rule favoured over democratic decision-making
  3. Problem can be turned into one of management or technological intervention
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14
Q

How many people does modern intensive agriculture produce more than enough calories for and what % of the world’s adult population are overweight?

A

7.7 billion, 39%

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15
Q

Food security definition

A

All people at all times have physical + economic access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs + food preferences for an active + healthy lifestyle

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16
Q

There is a strong association between hunger and ___?

A

Political unrest/war

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17
Q

Which individuals have a higher personal carbon footprint?

A

Wealthy (consume more meat)

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18
Q

Where in the UK is at high risk of water scarcity and which crops are particularly water-demanding?

A

South East, cotton, wheat + rice

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19
Q

Which crop technology reduces CH4 emissions?

A

AWD (Alternate Wetting and Drying)

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20
Q

What is now needed for the Anthropocene?

A

Post-normal science (doesn’t exclude non-experts)

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21
Q

For every 1 degree increase in temp., by what % do wheat yields decrease?

A

5%

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22
Q

What are 4 challenges to achieving increased food production?

A
  1. Increase in biofuels
  2. Urbanisation
  3. Climate change
  4. Soil degradation
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23
Q

What are the 3 benefits that improving the efficiency of CO2 assimilation will provide?

A
  1. More space for biodiversity
  2. Water use efficiency
  3. Lower fertiliser inputs so lower cost + promotes soil sustainability
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24
Q

What is a genetic approach to increasing crop performance?

A

Generating novel germplasm

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25
Q

What are the 2 threats to the world’s soil?

A
  1. Erosion (rates outstrip soil formation worldwide)
  2. Nutrient mining
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26
Q

What have scientists predicted to happen after 2050?

A

Population likely to decline due to food deficit unless there is radical societal transformation

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27
Q

What did Amartya Sen say is almost always the cause of famine?

A

Food allocation

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28
Q

What happened as a result of NAFTA (1994) and what was adopted by the UN in 2018 as a result?

A

Cheap corn flooded Mexican markets, putting Mexican farmers out of business, food sovereignty

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29
Q

What is food sovereignty?

A

People producing the food they want to eat rather than working as exploited labour in global system

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30
Q

What is causing people to disconnect from nature?

A

Increased urbanisation

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31
Q

What did stress reduction theory show about the relationship between nature and human health (Ulrich 1983)?

A

Less pain medication + hospital visits when able to see nature

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32
Q

How many people worldwide lack access to basic sanitation services (UN 2015-)?

A

2.4 billion

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33
Q

Which areas face particular WASH (Water, Sanitation + Hygiene) challenges relating to land/housing tenure insecurity?

A

Urban areas

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34
Q

What has there been a greater focus on in recent decades due to ‘secondary’ failures in sanitation?

A

Sanitation value chain

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35
Q

What do Dalits believe handling human waste is considered a form of and which campaign did Dalit activists take part in?

A

Slavery, ‘Stop Killing Us’ campaign

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36
Q

What are 3 challenges for sanitation workers?

A
  1. Injuries/death
  2. Fear job loss due to mechanisation
  3. Can’t access ‘improved’ jobs in sanitation
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37
Q

What are the units of radioactivity and radiation dose?

A

Radioactivity: Becquerels (Bq)
Radiation dose: Sievets (Sv)

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38
Q

What is a lethal dose of radiation?

A

10,000 mSv

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39
Q

Explain nuclear fission

A

Neutron collides with nucleus of 235U to form unstable 236U –> explosion releases energy, fission products that cause contamination, and more neutrons that trigger more nuclear fission

40
Q

What do the moderator, control rods, and pressure vessel do in a nuclear reactor?

A

Moderator: Slows down neutrons so more likely to react with 235U
Control rods: Change rate of nuclear fission reaction
Pressure vessel: Contains reaction safely, pressurised fluids more likely to get to higher temp. before boiling

41
Q

What caused Chernobyl 1986 (level 7 nuclear accident)?

A

Operators conducted tests that deliberately overrode safety systems 6 times + in-built design faults –> Reactor 4 exploded + caught fire for 10 days

42
Q

How many people did of acute radiation sickness as a result of Chernobyl?

A

28

43
Q

What caused Fukushima 2011?

A

Earthquake triggered >10m tsunami which shut down nuclear power plants + flooded backup generators –> H started building up –> series of explosions

44
Q

What 3 things does the ozone layer do?

A
  1. Absorbs UV radiation
  2. Heats stratosphere
  3. Protects life on Earth
45
Q

What has caused an increase in tropospheric ozone?

A

Pollution

46
Q

What 4 modern techniques are used to measure ozone concentration?

A
  1. Satellites
  2. Ozonesondes (lightweight, balloon-borne instruments)
  3. High/low altitude aircraft
  4. Laser beams
47
Q

What is ‘column ozone’ and what is total column ozone measured in?

A

All ozone over a certain area compressed down to 0°C and 1 atm pressure, Dobsern Units (DU)

48
Q

At what latitude is there less ozone?

A

Mid-latitude/tropics

49
Q

What were 2 causes of ozone depletion in the 1980s?

A
  1. NO emissions from aircraft
  2. Cl. from CFC refrigerants (banned by Montreal Protocol)
50
Q

What year was the ozone hole discovered over Antarctica and why does ozone deplete more over this region?

A

1985, extremely cold temps. allow polar stratospheric clouds to form which increase ozone depletion via Cl. from CFCs

51
Q

What was the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd generation of CFCs and what were the problems with each?

A

1st gen: CFCs (ozone depleting)
2nd gen: HCFCs (less ozone depleting but not completely)
3rd gen: HFCs (no ozone depletion but GHG)

52
Q

When is the ozone hole expected to close?

A

Between 2050-2100

53
Q

Define pollution

A

Presence of substances in atmosphere that cause adverse effects to man and the environment

54
Q

How is acid deposited in remote areas such as Scandinavia?

A

Acid rain from UK transported via prevailing winds

55
Q

What are 2 examples of primary polluting gases?

A
  1. CO2
  2. SO2
56
Q

What are 2 examples of secondary polluting gases?

A
  1. Ground level ozone (formed from VOCs, NOx + sunlight)
  2. HNO3
57
Q

What are 4 examples of primary polluting particles?

A
  1. PM 10
  2. PM 2.5 (more harmful because easier to enter lungs)
  3. Dust
  4. Soot
58
Q

What is an example of secondary polluting particles?

A

Organics

59
Q

What are the 5 major pollutants?

A
  1. NO2 (combustion, –> O3, acid rain)
  2. Ozone (strong oxidant)
  3. CO (poisonous, –> O3)
  4. SO2 (fossil fuels, –> acid rain)
  5. PM (Particulate Matter)
60
Q

Define grounding line

A

Point at which ice sheet isn’t thick enough to be grounded and starts to float

61
Q

Define circumpolar deep water

A

Region of relatively warm water around Antarctica which can increase melting and calving if drawn closer to an ice sheet

62
Q

Define calving

A

Iceberg breaking off from an ice shelf

63
Q

Define reverse slope

A

Bedrock sloping downwards due to erosion and weight of the ice sheet

64
Q

What are 3 examples of geohazards and their tropographic change?

A
  1. Tectonic processes (strain accumulation + release)
  2. Volcanic processes (lava flows + domes)
  3. Landslides/rockfalls
65
Q

What are 2 examples of expensive monitoring geohazards equipment?

A
  1. Airborne laser scanning (laser deployed and reflects back to aircraft - measures distance, large spatial scale)
  2. Ground-based laser scanning (good for rockslides, small spatial scale)
66
Q

What are the 3 steps to close-range photogrammetry and computer vision research (cheap, multiple phone cameras due to distortion)?

A
  1. ‘Structure from motion’ photogrammetry (gives general model)
  2. Multi-view stereo (fills in holes)
  3. Geo-referencing (links 3D model to coordinates system we know)
67
Q

What is the loop from unsustainable use of natural resources?

A

–> poor environmental health –> poor human health + well-being –> socio-technical innovation –> unsustainable use of natural resources

68
Q

In 2018 what temperature did the IPCC say that global warming must be limited to?

A

1.5 degrees

69
Q

What % of global emissions does China’s net zero target cover compared to the net zero targets of all countries involved?

A

28% compared to 89%

70
Q

What are 2 strategies implemented to try and reach net zero?

A
  1. Planting forests which are cut down and burnt (releases energy), carbon is captured before being released from factory and stored
  2. Carbon offset (company pays another company to reduce carbon emissions whilst keeping their own the same - balances out)
71
Q

What % of medicine is from tropical forests?

A

25%

72
Q

What fraction of the global terrestrial carbon sink do tropical rainforests represent?

A

1/2

73
Q

What % of a tropical rainforest’s own rain does it produce (important in water recycling)?

A

30-50%

74
Q

What are 2 reasons that tropical rainforests have strong climate control?

A
  1. Strong carbon storage
  2. Strong evaporative cooling
75
Q

What % of deforestation is due to pasture expansion for beef and which country is the largest exporter of beef?

A

41%, Brazil

76
Q

What % of mining in Brazil is illegal (forests can’t be replaced there)?

A

80%

77
Q

What is a local climatic effect of deforestation?

A

Clouds forming over pastures between forests instead of over forests (less ppt.)

78
Q

What is the edge effect caused by pasture expansion?

A

Trees on the edge of a pasture are more exposed to wind/fire from burning pastures to regrow grass

79
Q

Which drought meant that there was 57% less rain than usual and affected 50% of forest?

A

2010 Amazonian drought

80
Q

In which year did the world’s largest anti-deforestation policy begin in Brazil (national policy)?

A

2004

81
Q

What is an example of a global commitment to tackling deforestation?

A

Paris Agreement 2015

82
Q

Why does CO2 concentration naturally fluctuate?

A

Seasonal changes in photosynthesis (more in summer)

83
Q

What are 3 ways carbon can be captured?

A
  1. Pre-combustion capture
  2. Post-combustion capture
  3. Oxy-fuel combustion capture
84
Q

What are 2 ways carbon can be transported?

A
  1. Pipeline
  2. Ship/lorry
85
Q

What are 3 ways carbon can be stored?

A
  1. Industrial fixation
  2. Ocean storage
  3. Geological storage
86
Q

What are 3 options for geological storage of carbon?

A
  1. Depleted oil/gas reservoirs
  2. Use of CO2 in enhanced oil recovery (reduces oil viscosity so oil flows out more easily)
  3. Deep unused saline water-saturated reservoir rocks
87
Q

What are 4 ways CO2 can be trapped?

A
  1. Structural/stratigraphic trapping
  2. Solubility trapping
  3. Mineral trapping
  4. Residual CO2 trapping
88
Q

By how many metres did the IPCC predict global sea level to rise by 2100 in 2019?

A

Between 0.43 and 0.84m

89
Q

What 4 underlying processes cause local sea level changes to deviate substantially from the global mean value?

A
  1. Dynamical ocean response + currents
  2. Static gravitational effects from glacier/land ice mass changes
  3. Terrestrial water storage changes
  4. Global isostatic readjustment
90
Q

What 4 things can extreme sea levels arise from combinations of?

A
  1. Storm surges
  2. Wind waves and swell
  3. Astronomical tides
  4. Interannual variability in sea level
91
Q

What is the prediction of future storm surges related to?

A

Wind (lots of uncertainties)

92
Q

By how many cm is wave height predicted to increase in the British Channel by 2100?

A

20-30 cm

93
Q

What are 3 factors affecting coastal flooding?

A
  1. Increased water levels + wave activity
  2. Drainage + GW levels (both affected by ppt. and increased water levels)
  3. Subsidence
94
Q

What are 4 factors affecting coastal erosion?

A
  1. Increased water levels + wave activity
  2. Currents
  3. Precipitation
  4. Sediment delivery + sediment budget
95
Q

How many properties are expected to be at significant risk of flood damage in the UK by 2050?

A

1.5m properties (1.2m homes)