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Factors Affecting Earth's Energy Balance

Environmental Science
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Factors Affecting Earth's Energy Balance

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Natural and Anthropogenic Factors Affecting Earth’s Energy Balance

Earth’s climate is fundamentally determined by its energy balance — the relationship between incoming solar radiation and outgoing thermal radiation. Identifying factors that disturb this balance, and distinguishing natural from human-caused factors, is central to understanding climate change.

Earth’s Energy Balance — Overview

Solar energy arrives at Earth primarily as short-wave visible light and UV radiation. Earth absorbs some and reflects some back (albedo). The absorbed energy warms the surface, which then re-emits energy as long-wave infrared radiation (heat). The atmosphere intercepts some of this outgoing radiation (greenhouse effect) before it escapes to space.

Energy balance equation (simplified):
$$\text{Absorbed solar energy} = \text{Outgoing long-wave radiation}$$

When this is in equilibrium, global temperature is stable. Anything that changes either side shifts global temperature.

Natural Phenomena

1. Volcanic Eruptions

Mechanism of effect:
- Large explosive eruptions (Volcanic Explosivity Index ≥ 5) inject sulfur dioxide (SO$_2$) and ash into the stratosphere
- SO$_2$ reacts with water vapour to form sulfate aerosols
- Aerosols scatter and absorb incoming solar radiation before it reaches the surface
- Net effect: temporary cooling (typically 0.1–0.5°C for 1–3 years)

Examples:
- Mt Pinatubo (1991): Caused ~0.5°C global cooling for 2 years
- Tambora (1815): Triggered the ‘Year Without a Summer’ (1816) — crop failures across Europe and North America
- Krakatoa (1883): Vivid sunsets worldwide; measurable cooling

Contrast with greenhouse warming:
- Volcanic cooling is temporary and short-term (years)
- Greenhouse warming from CO$_2$ is long-term (centuries to millennia)

2. Solar Variability

Mechanism of effect:
- The Sun’s energy output varies due to changes in solar activity (sunspot cycles, ~11 years)
- Solar maximum: More sunspots → slightly higher solar irradiance → slight warming
- Solar minimum: Less sunspot activity → slightly cooler

Magnitude:
- The 11-year solar cycle causes only ~0.1% variation in solar irradiance
- This accounts for only a small fraction of observed 20th century warming
- Longer-term solar variability (Maunder Minimum, 1645–1715 — period of very low solar activity) may have contributed to the Little Ice Age

Key point: Solar variability does not explain the rapid warming since 1950 — satellite measurements show solar output has been flat or slightly declining since the 1980s, while temperatures have risen sharply.

Anthropogenic Factors

3. Changes in Atmospheric Gas Composition

Mechanism of effect:
- Human activities emit greenhouse gases (GHGs) that absorb and re-emit outgoing infrared radiation
- This reduces the rate at which Earth loses heat to space → planet warms until a new equilibrium at a higher temperature is reached
- This enhances the natural greenhouse effect → enhanced greenhouse effect

Key greenhouse gases from human activities:

Gas Human Sources Global Warming Potential (100 yr)
Carbon dioxide (CO$_2$) Fossil fuel combustion, cement, deforestation 1 (baseline)
Methane (CH$_4$) Agriculture (livestock, rice), waste, fossil fuel extraction ~28
Nitrous oxide (N$_2$O) Agriculture (fertilisers), industrial processes ~273
Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) Refrigerants, air conditioning 1,000–14,000
Sulfur hexafluoride (SF$_6$) Electrical equipment ~24,300

The CO$_2$ trajectory:

CO$_2$ concentration has risen from ~280 ppm (pre-industrial) to >420 ppm (2024), exceeding any level recorded in ice cores over the past 800,000 years.

Comparing Natural vs. Anthropogenic Factors

Factor Type Duration of Effect Direction Magnitude
Volcanic eruption Natural Years (temporary) Cooling 0.1–0.5°C
Solar variability (11 yr) Natural Years Warming/cooling <0.1°C
Milankovitch cycles Natural Thousands of years Warming/cooling ~5°C over millennia
GHG emissions Anthropogenic Centuries to millennia Warming 1–4°C by 2100 (IPCC)

EXAM TIP: VCAA frequently asks students to distinguish between natural and anthropogenic climate forcings and to explain why human factors are driving current warming despite the existence of natural variability. Key point: the rate and timing of current warming matches the pattern of GHG emissions, not solar or volcanic activity.

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