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Understanding Climate Change

Environmental Science
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Understanding Climate Change

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Understanding Climate Change

Climate change refers to long-term shifts in global or regional temperatures, precipitation, wind patterns and other climate parameters. The IPCC defines it as “a change in the state of the climate that can be identified (e.g. using statistical tests) by changes in the mean and/or variability of its properties and that persists for an extended period, typically decades or longer.”

Distinguishing Weather from Climate

Weather Climate
Atmospheric conditions at a specific time and place Long-term average of atmospheric conditions (30+ years)
Varies day to day Changes over decades to centuries
Example: “It rained today in Melbourne” Example: “Melbourne’s average annual rainfall is ~600 mm”

Common misconception: A cold winter does not refute climate change — climate refers to long-term averages and trends, not individual weather events.

The Enhanced Greenhouse Effect

The natural greenhouse effect is essential for life. The enhanced greenhouse effect occurs when human activities increase concentrations of greenhouse gases beyond natural levels, trapping additional heat in the atmosphere.

Natural vs. Enhanced Greenhouse Effect — Key Differences

Feature Natural GHE Enhanced GHE
Cause Natural atmospheric composition Human GHG emissions
Effect Maintains habitable temperatures (~+33°C) Additional warming beyond natural baseline
CO$_2$ level ~280 ppm (pre-industrial) >420 ppm (2024)
Temperature trend Relatively stable (Holocene) Rapid upward trend since ~1850
Reversibility Stable natural process Requires active emissions reduction

Observable Signs of Climate Change

The IPCC (2021) states that human influence has warmed the climate at an unprecedented rate in recorded history. Observable evidence includes:

  • Temperature: Global average surface temperature increased by ~1.1°C above pre-industrial (1850–1900) levels as of 2024
  • Sea level: Global mean sea level rose ~20 cm since 1900; rate accelerating (currently ~3.6 mm/year)
  • Sea ice: Arctic sea ice extent declined ~13% per decade since satellite records began (1979)
  • Glaciers: Global glacier mass loss accelerating
  • Extreme weather: Increased frequency and intensity of heatwaves, heavy rainfall events, droughts
  • Ocean heat: Ocean heat content has increased substantially, particularly since the 1970s
  • Ocean acidification: Ocean pH has decreased from ~8.2 to ~8.1 since pre-industrial times (30% increase in acidity)

Key Concepts

Concept Definition
Radiative forcing Change in energy flux in the atmosphere caused by a driver (e.g. doubling CO$_2$); measured in W m$^{-2}$
Climate sensitivity How much global average temperature rises for a doubling of CO$_2$ (estimated 2.5–4°C)
Tipping points Thresholds beyond which climate systems shift abruptly to a new state
Feedback loops Processes that amplify (positive) or dampen (negative) initial warming

Major Positive (Amplifying) Feedbacks

  • Ice-albedo feedback (melting ice exposes darker surfaces → more absorption)
  • Water vapour feedback (warming increases evaporation → more water vapour → stronger greenhouse effect)
  • Permafrost thaw feedback (warming releases stored methane and CO$_2$ from frozen Arctic soils)

REMEMBER: ‘Enhanced greenhouse effect’ is the VCAA-preferred term for human-caused climate change via GHG emissions. Always distinguish it from the natural greenhouse effect, which is beneficial. Note the distinction: the natural GHE is the mechanism; the enhanced GHE is what happens when that mechanism is amplified by human emissions.

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