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Preparing for a Changing Climate Implications for

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Preparing for a Changing Climate Implications for Coastal/Marine Sectors in the Northeast Climate is weather over the long-term Climate Change is how weather ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Preparing for a Changing Climate Implications for


1
Preparing for a Changing Climate
Implications for Coastal/Marine Sectors in the
Northeast
2
A joint project of Clean Air Cool Planet,
Cornell University Department of Horticulture,
the Tellus Institute, and University of Vermont
Cooperative Extension Service funded in part by
a grant from The Hunt Foundation.
3
Climate
  • is weather over the long-term
  • Climate Change
  • is how weather changes over the long-term
  • its measured in decades

4
What is global warming?
  • Increases in global average temperature,
    translating into regional climate change
  • Rising temperatures
  • Changing precipitation
  • Extreme weather events

5
Causes of global warming
  • Emissions of major Greenhouse gases such as
    carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous
    oxide (N2O)
  • Emissions of other greenhouse gases like
    hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, sulfur
    hexafluoride
  • Greenhouse gas emissions are predominantly from
    human activities, although there is a slight role
    of natural sources
  • Warming is primarily due to carbon dioxide
    emissions

6
Sources of carbon dioxide
  • Electric generation
  • Transportation
  • Space and water heating
  • Other industrial/manufacturing

7
Atmospheric CO2 over time
8
Temperature is rising worldwide
Annual temperature trends 1976 - 1999
9
Northern Hemisphere Temperatures
10
Surface Temperatures, 1000 to 2100
11
Change in surface temperatures
Temperature range, degrees C
Source UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change
12
Global warming leads to other environmental
impacts
  • - Ice cap melting
  • - Changes in
    growing season
  • -Shifts in
    species

13
Annual precipitation trends 1900 - 2000
14
Percent of the USA with above Normal Proportion
of Total Annual Precipitation From 1-day Extreme
Events (gt2)
15
Changes in Sea Level 2000 -2500
16
Changes in the Northeastover the past 100 years
  • Average winter temperature increase of 1.8
    degrees F
  • Rhode Island and New Hampshire have experienced
    2-3 times the national average of warming
  • Sea-levels have risen 10-25 cm.

17
Why its important for the New England region to
act
  • Climate change already affects many sectors,
    including coastal and marine
  • CO2 stays in the atmosphere 100 years
  • We can limit the extent of climate change
  • Prepare for positive and negative effects

18
Major environmental impacts
  • Changes in temperature, precipitation and sea
    level rise will also produce impacts in
  • Forestry
  • Industry and energy
  • Agriculture
  • Human health


19
Potential Coastal/Marine Impacts from Global
Warming
  • Global Warming will have impacts on
  • - Coastal habitats and coastal development
  • - Water quality
  • Fisheries
  • Aquaculture
  • - Biodiversity

20
Potential positive effects
  • As sea levels rise, estuaries will become larger
    and extend further upstream
  • - Flooding of land around estuaries may
    replenish nutrients taken from soil by
    agriculture
  • - Aquaculture may benefit from the shallow
    environment provided at the edges of the estuary

21
Potential negative effects
  • - Higher sea levels
  • - Erosion of coastal areas
  • - Damage to estuaries
  • - Decline in water quality
  • - Decreasing yield for fisheries
  • - Decrease in marine biodiversity/ migration of
    species
  • - Increase in extreme weather events

22
Negative Impacts on Coastal Habitats and
Development
  • Sea Level
  • Global Warming melts ice caps
  • and expands water, resulting in
  • a rising sea level.
  • Sea levels are already rising off New England
    coasts

23
SRES Sea-Level Rise
24
Negative Impacts on Coastal Habitats and
Development
  • Sea Level
  • Rising sea levels
  • Erode beaches
  • Intensify flooding
  • Increase salinity of
  • bays, rivers, and
  • groundwater tables
  • Inundate low-lying lands such as wetlands

25
Negative Impacts on Coastal Habitats and
Development
  • Erosion
  • Coastal erosion is caused by
  • Storms
  • Precipitation
  • Sea level rise

26
Negative Impacts on Coastal Habitats and
Development
  • Coastal erosion results in
  • Property damage
  • Beach erosion
  • Higher insurance costs
  • Negative impacts on tourism

27
Negative Impacts on Coastal Habitats and
Development
  • Erosion property damage

28
Negative Impacts on Coastal Habitats and
Development
  • Estuaries
  • Estuaries are extremely important to
  • New England coastal zones.

29
Negative Impacts on Coastal Habitats and
Development
  • Estuaries are breeding grounds for
  • approximately 50 of ocean fish, including
  • Shrimp
  • Menhaden
  • Sea trout
  • Croker
  • Red drum
  • Flounder

30
Negative Impacts on Coastal Habitats and
Development
  • Estuaries
  • - Warming temperatures and changing salinity of
    estuaries make them inhospitable to current
    inhabitants with narrow temperature tolerances.
  • - Other estuarine species, like oysters, are put
    at risk by increased salinity from rising seas
    and drought.

31
Negative Impacts on Water Quality
  • Water quality is declining due to
  • Warmer seas
  • Industrialization
  • Pollution/Poor waste management
  • Erosion
  • Increased precipitation

32
Negative Impacts on Water Quality
  • Warmer seas allow for a faster spread of
    pathogens and an increase in harmful algal blooms
  • Poorly treated waste and run-offs pollute rivers
    and estuaries
  • Erosion releases toxins into coastal areas
  • Increased precipitation results in nutrient
    overloading and eutrophication.

33
Negative Impacts on Fisheries
  • Temperature rises may result in negative impacts
    on fisheries

34
Negative Impacts on Fisheries
  • Changes in sea temperature may cause fish with
    narrow temperature toleration to migrate out of
    the region.
  • Warming may prevent the return of vulnerable
    species, such as cod.
  • Declining water quality may increase the number
    of fish die-offs.
  • Warming oceans may increase acidity of oceans
    which will have adverse affects on shelled
    species and shellfish fisheries

35
Negative Impacts on Biodiversity
  • Climate change is putting marine biodiversity at
    risk.
  • A decline in water quality, increase in erosion,
    and rise in temperature may cause many marine
    species to die out of the New England region.

36
Negative Impacts on Biodiversity
  • Fish are not the only species at risk..
  • Shorebirds and seabirds are at risk as feeding
    areas disappear
  • Sea turtle species become more vulnerable as they
    are exposed to increases in pollution, disease,
    and loss of nesting beaches
  • The Northern Right Whale is threatened by
    extinction because of its inability to adapt to
    sudden environmental shifts

37
Impacts on Industries
  • Fisheries will be effected by the loss of marine
    species
  • Tourism, which accounts for over 6 billion in
    New England economy annually, will be affected by
    coastal erosion, loss of beaches, damage to
    shoreline properties, etc..
  • Whale watching industry may be threatened by the
    possible loss of the Northern Right Whale
  • Aquaculture may suffer from an increase in algal
    blooms and disease

38
What can we do?
  • Slow global warming by reducing greenhouse gases
  • 2) Decrease pollution entering rivers and
    estuaries
  • 3) Build our capacity to cope and adapt

39
Reducing greenhouse gasesGeneral Options
  • Reduce fossil fuel use
  • Improve waste management
  • Capture more carbon in plant biomass

40
Adapting to climate change
  • By changing methods, techniques, varieties, we
    can learn to live with our new climate
  • Who adapts?
  • Autonomous adaptation (private action)
  • Planned adaptation (public action)
  • How do they adapt?
  • Reactive adaptation
  • Anticipatory adaptation

41
Four General Adaptation Strategies
  • Bear the losses
  • Baseline response of doing nothing.

42
Four General Adaptation Strategies
2. Share the losses Many different systems from
community based mechanism to taxation and
federally funded relief and rehabilitation.
43
Four General Adaptation Strategies
3. Modify the threat by minimizing other stresses
to ecosystems
44
Four General Adaptation Strategies
4. Continue to learn more about how to prepare
for future changes in the environment
45
Adapting to climate change Options for NE marine
  • Bear losses?
  • Share losses?
  • Modify the threat?
  • Learn more to help prevent or reduce
  • current and future impacts?

46
Conclusions
  • Mounting scientific evidence that global warming
    is already occurring
  • Temperature changes evident in New England
  • New Englands marine sector is particularly
    vulnerable to climate change
  • Variety of marine strategies exist for adapting
    to climate change

47
Where can you learn more?
  • About global warming
  • www.cleanair-coolplanet.org
  • About adaptation and mitigation
  • www.cornell.edu/horticulture
  • www.tellus.org
  • About renewable energy www.doe.gov/nrel

48
Preparing for a Changing Climate
  • A joint presentation of
  • Clean Air Cool Planet
  • The Tellus Institute
  • Cornell University Department of Horticulture
  • University of Vermont Extension
  • Partial funding for this presentation made
    possible
  • by a grant from
  • The Hunt Foundation
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