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GEOGRAPHY 101

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Title: GEOGRAPHY 101


1
GEOGRAPHY 101
  • Environ-mental
  • Geography
  • Day 15....

2
Housekeeping Items
  • Just a reminder that, if you are interested in
    learning more about climate change, see the
    lecture by Jeff Lewis on the web site.
  • I got the answers to the two questions from
    Tuesday regarding methane from permafrost and
    nitrogen in the atmosphere.
  • Unless you got an extension, the LCAs are due
    today.
  • We will start off today by doing the debate on
    BC's carbon tax.

3
Air Pollution
  • Air pollution has existed for a long time, but
    has grown a lot worse since the Industrial
    Revolution. Why would it have existed in
    pre-industrial times, and why would it have
    tended to be less severe (there were exceptions)?
  • In addition to a population much larger than in
    ancient times, the human population has become
    highly urban, and consumption rates have risen
    dramatically.
  • Also in the last 100 years, we have brought
    thousands of new synthetic chemicals into use in
    modern agricultural and industrial applications,
    with waste residues entering respiratory systems,
    food chains and ecosystems.

4
Types of Air Pollution
  • Air pollutants enter the atmosphere both as gases
    and as particles. Primary pollutants include
    cigarette smoke, auto exhaust, forest fires,
    discharge gases and particles.
  • Secondary pollutants arise from mixing higher in
    the atmosphere and chemical alteration and
    change, an example of which would be acid rain
    (the primary contributors being sulfur dioxide
    and nitrogen oxides).

5
Major Air Pollutants
  • Sulfur dioxide- from fossil fuels (e.g. coal
    plants) harmful to buildings human health, and
    a source of acid rain
  • Nitrogen oxides- from high temperature combustion
    (cars and power plants) harmful to human health
    and source of acid rain
  • Carbon monoxide- by-product of fossil fuel
    combustion colourless, odourless gas that
    inhibits of absorption of oxygen by the blood
  • Carbon dioxide- released from burning of fossil
    fuels, forests and other vegetation contributes
    to climate change
  • Particulates- includes soot, lead, ash and
    pollen solid liquid airborne particles that
    contribute to a variety of diseases, including
    asthma, emphysema lung cancer.

6
Major Air Pollutants
  • Hydrocarbons- carbon-based gases emitted from
    cars, home heating industry when combustion is
    incomplete health hazard as primary pollutant
    and contribute to ground-level ozone
  • Oxidants- caused by interaction of sunlight and
    hydro-carbons causes everything from eye
    irritation to cancer
  • Acid deposition- rain, snow, or dry dust lowers
    pH in freshwater lakes and streams and damages
    forests
  • Synthetic compounds- manufactured organic
    compounds such as CFCs, DDT, PCBs, and dioxins
  • Radioactive substances- radon from coal-burning
    plants and waste from nuclear plants, causing
    cancer genetic alterations.

7
Sources of Air Pollution
  • The chart on p. 225 shows the contributions that
    humans make to the different types of pollution
    3 (or more) of the carbon dioxide to 100 of
    synthetic compounds. Sulfur dioxide has both
    natural and human sources. Natural sources
    include gas exchanges involving phytoplankton.
  • Most pollutants have harmful consequences when
    absorbed by ecosystem components, for obvious
    reasons. Carbon dioxide is the exception.

8
Sources of Air Pollution
  • If natural uptake of pollutants doesn't increase,
    then an imbalance occurs. Some people have
    described pollution as a resource in the wrong
    place. Their strategy resource recovery
    involves finding ways to avoid expelling
    pollutants into the environment, and instead
    treating them as valuable resources.
  • One such strategy is called eco-industrial
    networking. This involves clustering industries
    together and using the wastes from one industry
    as a raw material for another.

9
Sources of Air Pollution
  • Both developed and developing nations contribute
    significantly to air pollution from motor
    vehicles, power plants, and industrial plants in
    the wealthy nations. Most of this is from fossil
    fuel combustion the less complete the
    combustion, the more the pollution.
  • The U.S. is the leading producer of CO2, both in
    total and on a per capita basis, though China
    will overtake it on a total output basis in the
    not-too-distant future.

10
Sources of Air Pollution
  • Photochemical smog is a major problem in cities
    with large numbers of vehicles. The current
    number of cars in the world is 600 million, but
    the number is rising quickly. China is expected
    to have gone from 350,000 in 1985 to 140 million
    by 2020!
  • In Canada, studies have attributed 5800 premature
    deaths annually in Ontario to air pollution
    (mainly from cars), 17,000 hospital admissions
    and 60,000 emergency room visits. In addition,
    there is 1 billion in lost productivity. In
    Atlanta, Georgia, when cars were banned from the
    center of the city during the Olympics, asthma
    admissions to local hospitals dropped by almost
    half. Worldwide air pollution kills over 4
    million people per year.

11
Not Everyone Sees the Proliferation of Cars as a
Good Thing...
12
Sources of Air Pollution
  • In addition to brown smog attributable to cars
    and trucks, there is also grey smog deriving
    from industry and power plants. It is a mixture
    of sulfur dioxide, droplets of sulfuric acid, and
    particulates.
  • In addition, tiny particles from the burning of
    diesel fuels (trucks, buses, etc.) so-called
    PM-10 (10 micrometers or less) are extremely
    hazardous to human health.

13
Sources of Air Pollution
  • One particularly serious air pollutant was and is
    CFCs chlorofluorocarbons. These were used as
    propellants in spraycans of various kinds, as
    solvents and as cooling agents. It was
    discovered, beginning in the '80s, that they were
    the main cause of the decline in the ozone layer
    over the poles. The ozone shield high in the
    atmosphere is essential for protecting us from UV
    rays. Each molecule of CFCs can destroy 100s of
    1000s of ozone molecules, and they remain in the
    atmosphere for 75 to 110 years.

14
Sources of Air Pollution
  • CFCs also contribute to climate change.
    Fortunately, at a meeting in Montreal in the late
    1980s, more than 70 countries agreed to phase
    them out, though there is still an active black
    market in the substance. (For more details on
    CFCs and ozone depletion, see p. 228.)
  • DDT is another controversial organic chemical.
    Banned in the U.S. And other developed nations
    after Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, it still has
    value in the battle against malaria, though it
    concentrates in food chains.

15
Sources of Air Pollution
  • In addition to industrial and transportation
    sources for air pollution, agriculture also
    contributes (through livestock, soil erosion and,
    secondarily, fertilizer application), as does
    forestry activity.
  • The most prominent air pollution regions in the
    world are displayed on p. 229. Mexico City and
    major Chinese cities have some of the worst urban
    air pollution in the world. And in Athens,
    nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxides are eroding
    precious ancient monuments.

16
Urban Thermal Inversion(warm air over cool,
keeping pollutants in)
17
Thermal Inversions
  • The London smog episode of 1952, brought on by an
    inversion, and fueled by car exhaust, factory
    pollution, and coal heat in homes, led to the
    deaths of 4000 people in less than a week.

18
Long-Range Transport of Pollutants
  • Another way in which climate and weather interact
    with air pollution is in the long-range transport
    of contaminants.
  • Examples include the movement of CFCs to
    Antarctica, the transport of air pollutants and
    toxic chemicals from Asia (China and India) to
    North America, the movement of industrial toxins
    from the Midwest to the Arctic and Quebec, and
    the spread of radioactivity from the Chernobyl
    disaster around Europe. Pollution does not stop
    at national borders!

19
Urban Air Pollution
  • Because of the use of toxic materials in
    buildings, indoor air quality is a concern.
    Another problem can be the leakage of radon from
    the ground into buildings through basements.
    Also the closed nature of many buildings (with
    automatic heating and air conditioning) means
    that some buildings suffer from sick building
    syndrome bad air from building materials, but
    also the circulation of germs.
  • More broadly, urban sprawl exacerbates urban air
    pollution and can be partly remedied through more
    investment in transit and more cluster
    development.

20
Urban Air Pollution
  • Cities with the lowest density and most
    automobile dependence in North America (L.A.,
    Houston, Atlanta) often have the worst air
    pollution. The Clean Air Act, and actions by the
    Clinton administration, forced some urban regions
    to clean up their act and to invest in light
    rail and other forms of transit, and to consider
    air pollution and energy consumption issues in
    how they planned and managed their environments.
  • By clustering land uses together and considering
    land use and transportation together, the number
    of trips can be reduced and the mode can be
    altered.
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