Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySilas Morrison Modified over 9 years ago
1
‘Global warming is inevitable; we should therefore concentrate our efforts on accommodating its effects’. Comment. Ryan Jarriel, Juan Mattioli, Tom Fryer
2
Overview Main conflict over project statement Global warming’s relationship to climate change Ways of answering our project statement – Agreement – Disagreement Mitigation versus Adaption – Strategies – Consequences Conclusion
3
Central Conflict Different viewpoints of agreement – We are already too late to prevent climate change – A moral rather than an economic issue The potential benefits outweigh the known costs Monetization problem: a lot of costs of continuing current trends don’t have a monetary value Different viewpoints of disagreement – Doesn’t believe in global warming – Doesn’t believe immediate response is necessary – Believes the planet can handle our global warming – NIMBY
4
Global Warming The Greenhouse Effect – Greenhouse Gases Water vapor,, Defining Climate Change “A change of climate which is attributed directly or indirectly to human activity that alters the composition of the global atmosphere and which is in addition to natural climate variability observed over comparable time periods.” - UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
5
Global Warming
6
Scientific Fact vs. Uncertainty Known Greenhouse effect governs global temperature The risks of consequences Unknown How much warming? Timescale of effects
7
Agrees with the statement Indicators of climate change (a) 10 hottest years on record
8
Agrees with Statement (b) Ice Core Drilling concentration relation to temperature
9
Agrees with Statement Hurricane Katrina failure Evacuation delay The poor suffer first Twisted values – Costs $105 billion for repairs and reconstruction $41.1 billion for the insurance industry Oil production loss 1,836 deaths
10
Agrees with the statement Problems with a passive approach – Population Redistribution: Marshall Islands – Nonmonetary: Loss of biodiversity
11
Opposes the statement Global cooling is too expensive Unfair distribution of cost – China & India problem Scaremongering on the effects – Hurricane Katrina – Exaggerated consequences
12
Mitigation Definition: The attempt to reduce the potential effects of global warming by altering mankind’s behaviour in such a way that reduces our contribution to rising global temperatures. Risk-minimization approach – Underlying concern: do we have the resources?
13
Mitigation Risk-Minimization – Justifying expenditures as insurance Low or certain probability(x) Catastrophic consequences(=) Major risk to society
14
Mitigation A shift in the status quo – Incentive policies – Cost of sustainability Side Benefits – Economic: Energy services – Environmental: Urban air pollution, acid rain – Social: Land reform, reforestation
15
Mitigation – Overlapping cost – “Luxury fever” – Scarcity of rare earth metals Un-sustainability & Global Warming iPad versus iPad 2
16
Adaption Definition: Reducing the vulnerability of natural and human systems in order to reduce the potential impact that climate change has on us Wait-and-see approach – Underlying concern: the cost of preventing what? Global temperatures & world wealth
17
Adaption Can potentially take extreme forms Stern Report (2006) - £3,680,000,000,000
18
Adaption Runaway Greenhouse Effect
19
Adaption/Mitigation Costs of mitigation = immediate Costs of adaptation = long term Costs of mitigation = calculated Costs of adaptation = speculative Developing economies see it differently
20
Conclusions Mitigation > Adaption Gradual changes to industry – Policy changes & consumer preference Agriculture Automotive Water systems – Brownfield land example Previously used derelict or contaminated land 60% of new developments on brownfield by 2008
21
Conclusions “The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to its close. In its place we are entering a period of consequences.” – Sir Winston Churchill Nov 12, 1936
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.