What is climate change?

Climate change refers to a large-scale, long-term shift in the planet's weather patterns and average temperatures

Since the mid-1800s, humans have contributed to the release of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the air by burning vast amounts of fossil fuels – coal, oil, gas – to move around, heat buildings and make stuff.  This, along with deforestation and some agricultural practices, has led to increased amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

When greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide build in the atmosphere, they act like a blanket around the earth. When sunlight (mostly short-wave radiation) hits this blanket, it passes straight through and continues until it reaches the surface of the planet.

The earth then absorbs this sunlight and emits a different type of light, longer-wave infrared radiation, back out to space. As it leaves the atmosphere, the infrared radiation also hits the greenhouse gas blanket. Most of it goes straight through, but some of it is absorbed and goes back down to earth. This traps the infrared radiation and causes the surface to heat – a process we call the 'greenhouse effect’.

It is crucial to understand that the greenhouse effect is critical to life on earth. Without a blanket of greenhouse gases trapping in heat, the temperature would be bitterly cold, and humans would be unable to survive. However, by adding extra greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, humans have created an enhanced greenhouse effect.

Watch these short videos for an explanation about greenhouse gas and why even a small rise in temperature is a huge problem.

Why is this happening?

The greenhouse gas blanket is now thicker and is absorbing more infrared radiation than before. In other words, the greenhouse effect is stronger and, instead of keeping the earth at a stable temperature, it is causing the planet to heat up. The average temperature of planet earth has increased by around 1°C so far, mostly in the last 40 years and with the 20 warmest years ever recorded happening in the last 22 years.

Human activity is the main driver of climate change whether it’s from releasing greenhouse gases and aerosols into the atmosphere, high rates of consumerism, changing the use of land, increase in travel or what we eat and when. This has a range of impacts on the climate system, ecosystems, and people.

Changes to the climate system include:

Rising ocean levels – Rising temperatures are causing glaciers and ice sheets to melt, adding more water to the oceans and causing the ocean level to rise. Oceans absorb 90% of the extra heat from global warming: warmer water expands, and so our oceans are taking up more space.

Ocean acidification – Ocean acidification occurs when the ocean absorbs carbon dioxide and becomes more acidic. It is often called the 'evil twin' of climate change.

Extreme weather events – Climate change is causing many extreme weather events to become more intense and frequent, such as heatwaves, droughts, and floods.

Plastic is one of the most greenhouse gas intensive industries in the manufacturing sector – and the fastest growing. Greenhouse gas emissions from plastic are accelerating climate breakdown and threatening our ability to maintain a survivable climate.

Can it be stopped?

We need to do something, and a comprehensive report from the UN tells us what and when we need to do it.  (Short answer: a lot, soon.)

Thousands of expert climate scientists from across the world have modeled how much carbon dioxide and warming our climate can cope with.  They show that there is a very big difference between the warming carrying on to produce an average temperature rise of 2°C versus 1.5°C (remember we have already had about 1°C  already).

To keep warming to 1.5°C,  rather than the vastly more damaging 2°C  or beyond, we need to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions by around 45% by 2030 (from 2010 levels) and to net-zero by 2050, at the latest.

When the reductions are made is as important as the scale of the reductions. If we reduce our CO2 emissions by 20% by 2030 we are heading for a 2°C rise.  However, the current global commitments to reducing greenhouse gas emissions don’t put us on the path to keeping warming under 2°C.

 FAQs

The question most frequently asked is ‘What Can I Do To Help?’ Changes we can make can be confusing and overwhelming so a good place to start is by understanding your own carbon footprint and which areas of your lifestyle you can make changes to.
Then click on ‘What You Can Do’ in the navigation tabs and take a how you can make one small change...then another!