Task 6 Global Warming (a133921)

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FACULTY OF ENGINEERING AND BUILT ENVIRONMENT DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL AND STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING KKKH 4284 SUSTAINABLE URBAN PLANNING TASK 6 : GLOBAL WARMING LECTURER: PROF. IR. DR. RIZA ATIQ ABDULLAH BIN O.K. RAHMAT DR. MUHAMAD NAZRI BIN BORHAN DR. NORLIZA BINTI MOHD AKHIR NAME : NOR IZHAM BIN NOHANAZI MATRIC NO. : A133921 DEPARTMENT : JKAS/4

Transcript of Task 6 Global Warming (a133921)

Page 1: Task 6  Global Warming  (a133921)

FACULTY OF ENGINEERING AND BUILT ENVIRONMENT

DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL AND STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING

KKKH 4284

SUSTAINABLE URBAN PLANNING

TASK 6 : GLOBAL WARMING

LECTURER:

PROF. IR. DR. RIZA ATIQ ABDULLAH BIN O.K. RAHMAT

DR. MUHAMAD NAZRI BIN BORHAN

DR. NORLIZA BINTI MOHD AKHIR

NAME : NOR IZHAM BIN NOHANAZI

MATRIC NO. : A133921

DEPARTMENT : JKAS/4

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PROBLEM :

Supposed you are living in a coastal city. The city administrator has noticed that the mean

sea level has been rising for the past 50 years. The raising is small but over a long period of

time it may cause problems in the city centre as the level of that part of the city is quite low. If

you are hired as a consultant, write a plan of action on what can be done to reduce or

mitigate the problems. Your report must include Mitigation and Adaptation measures.

Introduction

Global warming is the term used to describe a gradual increase in the average temperature of

the Earth’s atmosphere and its oceans, a change that is believed to be permanently changing

the Earth’s climate. Even though it is an ongoing debate, it is proved by the scientists that the

planet is warming. The 29th century is experiencing a continued increase of Earth’s mean

atmospheric temperature by about 1.4 degrees and about two thirds of it occurring since

1980. This is global warming is affecting the nature’s balance and has a huge impact on life

like continued heat waves, and sudden occurrence of storms and floods. Don’t we see time to

time the epidemics that are devastating to human life and the flooding of the farm lands that

puts economy in a deep hole?

Scientific evidence indicates that since 1950, the world’s climate has been warming, primarily

as a result of emissions from non-stop burning of fossil fuels and the razing of tropical forests.

Since the industrial revolution till this day, there is a constant emission of the carbon into the

atmosphere, everything we do we leave carbon footprints. It is a man made cause of the

global warming. The global emissions jumped 3 percent in 2011 and jump another 2.6

percent in 2012, researchers reported.

Solutions

In order to plan the action on what can be done to reduce or mitigate the problems, first of all

the impacts of the global warming to the town must be identified. As the city is just nearby the

coastal area and there is a significant increment on the mean sea level, the impacts to the city

might be severe. Moreover due to the most of the part of city is quite low, shoreline erosion,

coastal flooding, and water pollution affect man-made infrastructure and coastal ecosystems

might be occur in the future. The impacts of climate change are likely to worsen many

problems that coastal areas already face.

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The major problems faced by the town are as follow

Natural protections against damaging storm surges are increasingly threatened. Barrier

islands, beaches, sand dunes, salt marshes, mangrove stands, and mud and sand flats

retreat in land as sea level rises, unless there are obstructions along the retreat path. If

they cannot move, these natural protections are washed over or drowned.

High tides and storm surges riding on ever-higher seas are more dangerous to people

and coastal infrastructure.

Many shorelines have sea walls, jetties, and other artificial defenses to protect

roads, buildings, and other vital coastal resources. In these areas, sea-level rise

increases erosion of stranded beaches, wetlands, and engineered structures

MITIGATION

Mitigation of global warming involves taking actions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions

and to enhance sinks aimed at minimize the impact of global warming to the coastal city and

reducing the extent of global warming. The mitigations lie on our daily activities and needs.

We must tackle in these issues as these are the main contributor for greenhouse gases which

lead to global warming. The scopes including the energy efficiency, transportation, forest

management and the most important thing is sustainable development.

i. Ensuring Sustainable Development

The countries of the world from the most to the least developed vary dramatically in their

contributions to the problem of climate change and in their responsibilities and capacities

to confront it. A successful global compact on climate change must include financial

assistance from richer countries to poorer countries to help make the transition to low-

carbon development pathways and to help adapt to the impacts of climate change.

i. Greening Transportation

The transportation sector's emissions have increased at a faster rate than any other energy-

using sector over the past decade. A variety of solutions are at hand, including improving

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efficiency in all modes of transport, switching to low-carbon fuels, and reducing vehicle

miles travelled through smart growth and more efficient mass transportation systems.

ii. Boosting Energy Efficiency

The energy used to power, heat, and cool our homes, businesses, and industries is the

single largest contributor to global warming. Energy efficiency technologies allow us to

use less energy to get the same or higher level of production, service, and comfort. This

approach has vast potential to save both energy and money, and can be deployed quickly.

iii. Reviving Up Renewables

Renewable energy sources such as solar, wind, geothermal and bioenergy are available

around the world. Multiple studies have shown that renewable energy has the

technical potential to meet the vast majority of our energy needs. Renewable technlogies

can be deployed quickly, are increasingly cost-effective, and create jobs while reducing

pollution.

iv. Phasing Out Fossil Fuel Electricity

Dramatically reducing our use of fossil fuels especially carbon-intensive coal is essential

to tackle climate change. There are many ways to begin this process. Key action steps

include: not building any new coal-burning power plants, initiating a phased shutdown of

coal plants starting with the oldest and dirtiest, and capturing and storing carbon emissions

from power plants. While it may sound like science fiction, the technology exists to store

carbon emissions underground. The technology has not been deployed on a large scale or

proven to be safe and permanent, but it has been demonstrated in other contexts such as

oil and natural gas recovery. Demonstration projects to test the viability and costs of this

technology for power plant emissions are worth pursuing.

v. Developing and Deploying New Low-Carbon and Zero-Carbon Technologies

Research into and development of the next generation of low-carbon technologies will be

critical to deep mid-century reductions in global emissions. Current research on battery

technology, new materials for solar cells, harnessing energy from novel sources

like bacteria and algae, and other innovative areas could provide important break

throughs.

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vi. Managing Forests and Agriculture

Forestation can be of great help in this regard. Planting more trees and reducing timber

cuts worldwide will help restore the imbalance. Taken together, tropical deforestation and

emissions from agriculture represent nearly 30 percent of the world's heat-trapping

emissions. We can fight global warming by reducing emissions from deforestation and

forest degradation and by making our food production practices more sustainable.

ADAPTATION

Adaptations is the action or process of adapting or being adapted. Thus, the adaption shall be

the strategy to cater the risk of sea level rising to a critical level.

i. Expanded rainwater harvesting; water storage and conservation techniques; water re-

use; desalination; water-use and irrigation efficiency.

ii. Adjustment of planting dates and crop variety; crop relocation; improved land

management, e.g. erosion control and soil protection through tree planting Relocation;

seawalls and storm surge barriers; dune reinforcement; land acquisition and creation of

marshlands/wetlands as buffer against sea level rise and flooding; protection of

existing natural barriers.

iii. Heat-health action plans; emergency medical services; improved climate-sensitive

disease surveillance and control; safe water and improved sanitation.

iv. Diversification of tourism attractions and revenues; shifting ski slopes to higher

altitudes and glaciers; artificial snow-making.

v. Ralignment/relocation; design standards and planning for roads, rail and other

infrastructure to cope with warming and drainage.

vi. Strengthening of overhead transmission and distribution infrastructure; underground

cabling for utilities; energy efficiency; use of renewable sources; reduced dependence

on single sources of energy.

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CONCLUSION

Climate change mitigation and adaptation will need to be dealt and involves complex

interaction of citizens, governmental, non-governmental organisations and businesses.

Although there is some uncertainty around when we will experience various climate changes,

planners can today anticipate their trajectories and begin thinking ahead about how to prevent

catastrophic impacts.