World Climate and Climate Change
1. Learning Objectives
After reading these notes, you will be able to:
2. Approaches to Climate Classification
π 1. Empirical Classification
Based on observed data, particularly on temperature and precipitation. Koeppen’s scheme is the most famous empirical classification. It is data-driven β uses actual measured values.
π¬ 2. Genetic Classification
Attempts to organise climates according to their causes. Focuses on the origin and reasons behind the climate type rather than just observed data.
π― 3. Applied Classification
Classification done for a specific purpose β for example, for agriculture, aviation, or military use. It is customised to suit a particular practical application.
3. Koeppen’s Scheme of Climate Classification
A, C, D, E = Humid climates | B = Dry climates.
Small letters for dryness: f = no dry season, m = monsoon, w = winter dry, s = summer dry.
Small letters for temperature severity: a, b, c, d.
For B (Dry): S = steppe/semi-arid, W = desert.
π Five Major Climatic Groups β Koeppen
| Group | Name | Key Characteristic |
|---|---|---|
| A | Tropical Humid | Average temperature of the coldest month β₯ 18Β°C |
| B | Dry Climates | Potential evaporation exceeds precipitation |
| C | Warm Temperate (Mid-latitude) | Coldest month avg temp: above β3Β°C but below 18Β°C |
| D | Cold Snow Forest | Average temperature of coldest month is β3Β°C or below |
| E | Cold Climates | Average temperature for all months is below 10Β°C |
π All Climate Types β Quick Reference Table
| Group | Type | Code | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Tropical wet | Af | No dry season |
| Tropical monsoon | Am | Monsoonal, short dry season | |
| Tropical wet and dry | Aw | Winter dry season | |
| B | Subtropical steppe | BSh | Low-latitude semi-arid |
| Subtropical desert | BWh | Low-latitude arid/dry | |
| Mid-latitude steppe | BSk | Mid-latitude semi-arid | |
| Mid-latitude desert | BWk | Mid-latitude arid/dry | |
| C | Humid subtropical | Cfa | No dry season, warm summer |
| Mediterranean | Cs | Dry hot summer | |
| Marine west coast | Cfb | No dry season, cool summer | |
| D | Humid continental | Df | No dry season, severe winter |
| Subarctic | Dw | Winter dry, very severe | |
| E | Tundra | ET | No true summer |
| Polar ice cap | EF | Perennial ice |
4. Group A β Tropical Humid Climates
π§οΈ Af β Tropical Wet Climate
Found near the equator. Major areas: Amazon Basin (South America), western equatorial Africa, islands of East Indies. Significant rainfall every month β thunder showers in the afternoon. Temperature uniformly high; annual range negligible. Max temp ~30Β°C; Min ~20Β°C. Tropical evergreen forests with dense canopy and large biodiversity.
π¦οΈ Am β Tropical Monsoon Climate
Found over Indian sub-continent, North-Eastern South America, Northern Australia. Heavy rainfall in summer; winter is dry. Short dry season. Characteristic of monsoon regions.
πΏ Aw β Tropical Wet and Dry Climate
Occurs north and south of Af type. Found in Brazil (north and south of Amazon), Sudan, south of Central Africa. Annual rainfall less and variable compared to Af/Am. Wet season shorter; dry season longer; drought more severe. Temperature high throughout year; diurnal range greatest in dry season. Deciduous forest and tree-shredded grasslands.
5. Group B β Dry Climates
6. Group C β Warm Temperate (Mid-Latitude) Climates
πΎ Cwa β Humid Subtropical (dry winter)
Occurs poleward of Tropic of Cancer and Capricorn. Found mainly in North Indian plains and South China interior plains. Similar to Aw climate except temperature in winter is warm. Dry winter, hot summer.
π« Cs β Mediterranean Climate
Occurs around Mediterranean Sea, west coast of continents in subtropical latitudes (30Β°β40Β°). Examples: Central California, Central Chile, SW and SE Australia. Under subtropical high in summer β westerly wind in winter. Characterised by hot dry summer and mild rainy winter. Summer avg ~25Β°C; winter below 10Β°C. Annual precipitation: 35β90 cm.
π± Cfa β Humid Subtropical (no dry season)
On eastern parts of continents in subtropical latitudes. Air masses generally unstable β rainfall throughout the year. Areas: Eastern USA, southern/eastern China, southern Japan, NE Argentina, eastern Australia. Annual precipitation: 75β150 cm. Thunderstorms in summer, frontal precipitation in winter. Summer mean ~27Β°C; winter 5Β°β12Β°C.
π Cfb β Marine West Coast Climate
Located poleward from Mediterranean climate on west coast. Areas: NW Europe, west coast N. America (north of California), southern Chile, SE Australia, New Zealand. Due to marine influence, temperature is moderate. Summer: 15Β°β20Β°C; winter: 4Β°β10Β°C. Annual and daily temperature ranges are small. Precipitation throughout the year β 50β250 cm.
7. Group D β Cold Snow Forest Climates
βοΈ Df β Cold Climate with Humid Winters
Occurs poleward of marine west coast climate and mid-latitude steppe. Winters are cold and snowy. Frost-free season is short. Annual temperature ranges are large. Weather changes are abrupt and short. Poleward, winters are more severe.
π¨οΈ Dw β Cold Climate with Dry Winters
Occurs mainly over Northeastern Asia. Development of pronounced winter anticyclone and its weakening in summer β monsoon-like reversal of wind. Winter temperatures extremely low β many locations below freezing for up to 7 months. Precipitation in summer. Annual precipitation: 12β15 cm (very low).
8. Group E β Polar Climates
πΏ ET β Tundra Climate
Named after the types of vegetation β low growing mosses, lichens and flowering plants. Region of permafrost β subsoil is permanently frozen. Short growing season and water logging support only low growing plants. During summer, tundra regions have very long duration of daylight.
π§ EF β Ice Cap Climate
Occurs over interior Greenland and Antarctica. Even in summer, temperature is below freezing point. Receives very little precipitation. Snow and ice accumulate β mounting pressure β deformation of ice sheets β they break β move as icebergs floating in Arctic and Antarctic waters. Example: Plateau Station, Antarctica (79Β°S).
9. Climate Change
π°οΈ Evidence of Climate Change (Past Records)
- Geological records: Show alternation of glacial and inter-glacial periods. Geomorphological features in high altitudes/latitudes show traces of advances and retreats of glaciers.
- Sediment deposits in glacial lakes: Reveal occurrence of warm and cold periods.
- Tree rings: Provide clues about wet and dry periods.
- Historical records: Describe vagaries in climate.
- India: Rajasthan desert experienced wet and cool climate around 8,000 B.C.; period 3,000β1,700 B.C. had higher rainfall; Harappan civilisation (2,000β1,700 B.C.) centred in this region.
- Geological past: Earth was warm 500β300 million years ago (Cambrian, Ordovician, Silurian periods). Last major peak glacial period was ~18,000 years ago. Present inter-glacial period started 10,000 years ago.
π° Climate in the Recent Past
- The 1990s recorded the warmest temperature of the century and some of the worst floods around the world.
- 1967β1977: Worst devastating drought in the Sahel region, south of the Sahara desert.
- 1930s: Severe drought in southwestern Great Plains of USA β called the dust bowl.
- Europe witnessed warm and dry conditions in 10thβ11th centuries when Vikings settled in Greenland.
- Europe witnessed “Little Ice Age” from 1550 to ~1850.
- 1885β1940: World temperature showed an upward trend. After 1940, rate of increase slowed down.
π Causes of Climate Change
π Sunspot Activities
Sunspots = dark and cooler patches on the Sun that increase and decrease cyclically. When sunspots increase β cooler, wetter weather, greater storminess. When sunspots decrease β warm and drier conditions. (These findings are not statistically significant.)
π Millankovitch Oscillations
Astronomical theory β infers cycles in variations in Earth’s orbital characteristics around the Sun, wobbling of the Earth, and changes in Earth’s axial tilt. All these alter the amount of insolation received from the Sun β bearing on climate.
π Volcanism
Volcanic eruptions throw up lots of aerosols into the atmosphere. Aerosols remain in atmosphere for a considerable period β reduce Sun’s radiation reaching Earth’s surface. After Pinatoba and El Cion eruptions, average temperature of Earth fell to some extent for some years.
π Anthropogenic Effect
Most important anthropogenic effect β increasing concentration of greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere, which is likely to cause global warming. Human activity = main driver of recent rapid climate change.
10. Greenhouse Effect and Global Warming
βοΈ Primary Greenhouse Gases (GHGs)
π² COβ β Important Points
- Largest concentration of GHGs in atmosphere is carbon dioxide.
- Emission mainly from fossil fuel combustion (oil, gas, coal).
- Forests and oceans are the sinks for COβ β forests use COβ in growth.
- Deforestation due to changes in land use also increases COβ concentration.
- Time taken for atmospheric COβ to adjust = 20β50 years. Rising at about 0.5% annually.
- Doubling of COβ over pre-industrial level is used as an index for estimating climate change in climatic models.
π³οΈ Ozone Hole
π Kyoto Protocol
π‘οΈ Effects of Global Warming
- The annual average near-surface air temperature of the world is approximately 14Β°C.
- Greatest warming in the 20th century during 1901β44 and 1977β99 β each period rose by about 0.4Β°C.
- In between, there was a slight cooling β more marked in the Northern Hemisphere.
- Globally averaged annual mean temperature at end of 20th century was about 0.6Β°C above that at end of 19th century.
- Seven warmest years in 1856β2000 were all recorded in the last decade. 1998 was the warmest year β probably for the whole millennium.
- Rise in sea level due to melting of glaciers and ice-caps and thermal expansion of the sea β may inundate large parts of coastal areas and islands.
- Effect of global warming may not be uniform everywhere. Once set in, it will be difficult to reverse.
Summary β Quick Revision
3 Approaches: Empirical (observed data β Koeppen), Genetic (causes), Applied (specific purpose). Koeppen’s is the most widely used β developed 1918, based on temperature and precipitation.
5 Koeppen Groups: A (Tropical, coldest month β₯18Β°C), B (Dry, evaporation > precipitation), C (Warm Temperate, coldest month β3Β° to 18Β°C), D (Cold Snow Forest, coldest month β€ β3Β°C), E (Polar, all months <10Β°C).
Group A types: Af (tropical wet, near equator, no dry season, evergreen forests), Am (monsoon, Indian subcontinent, heavy summer rain), Aw (wet and dry, deciduous forest and grasslands).
Group B types: BS (steppe/semi-arid), BW (desert). Subtropical (h) = 15Β°β35Β°; Mid-latitude (k) = 35Β°β60Β°. Highest temperature: 58Β°C at Al Aziziyah, Libya (1922).
Group C types: Cwa (humid subtropical, N. Indian plains), Cs (Mediterranean β hot dry summer, mild rainy winter), Cfa (humid subtropical, eastern continents), Cfb (marine west coast, moderate temperature).
Group D: Df (humid winter, NW Europe/N. America), Dw (dry winter, NE Asia β monsoon reversal, annual precip only 12β15 cm). Group E: ET (tundra, permafrost, low plants), EF (ice cap, interior Greenland and Antarctica, always below freezing).
Causes of Climate Change: Sunspot activities (cyclical), Millankovitch oscillations (orbital changes), Volcanism (aerosols reduce insolation), Anthropogenic (GHGs β most important today).
Primary GHGs: COβ (largest, from fossil fuels, rising 0.5%/yr), CFCs (destroys ozone), CHβ, NβO, Oβ. Forests and oceans = COβ sinks. COβ adjustment time = 20β50 years.
Ozone Hole: CFCs destroy ozone in stratosphere over Antarctica β UV rays pass through troposphere. Kyoto Protocol (1997, effective 2005) β 141 nations, 35 industrialised countries to cut emissions 5% below 1990 levels by 2012.
Global Warming facts: World avg temperature ~14Β°C. Greatest warming: 1901β44 and 1977β99 (+0.4Β°C each). By end of 20th century: +0.6Β°C above 19th century. 1998 = warmest year ever. Sea level rise due to glacier melt and thermal expansion of sea = major concern.
Important Terms to Remember
- Empirical Classification: Climate classification based on observed data β especially temperature and precipitation. Koeppen’s scheme is the most famous example.
- Genetic Classification: Classification based on the causes of climate rather than observed data.
- Applied Classification: Classification done for a specific practical purpose such as agriculture, aviation or military use.
- Koeppen’s Scheme: Most widely used climate classification β developed by V. Koeppen in 1918. Uses capital letters (A, B, C, D, E) for groups and small letters for sub-types. Based on mean annual and mean monthly temperature and precipitation.
- Tropical Wet Climate (Af): Found near equator. Rainfall every month. Uniformly high temperature. Annual range negligible. Tropical evergreen forests. Amazon Basin, W. equatorial Africa, East Indies.
- Tropical Monsoon Climate (Am): Heavy rainfall in summer, dry winter. Found over Indian sub-continent, NE South America, N. Australia.
- Tropical Wet and Dry Climate (Aw): Wet season shorter, dry season longer. Deciduous forests and grasslands. North and south of Amazon in Brazil, Sudan, Central Africa.
- Dry Climates (B): Potential evaporation exceeds precipitation. BS = steppe/semi-arid. BW = desert. h = subtropical (hot), k = mid-latitude (cold).
- Mediterranean Climate (Cs): Hot dry summer, mild rainy winter. Along west coasts of continents at 30Β°β40Β° latitude. Central California, Central Chile, around Mediterranean Sea.
- Marine West Coast Climate (Cfb): Poleward of Mediterranean climate, west coast of continents. Moderate temperature due to marine influence. Precipitation throughout the year.
- Cold Snow Forest Climate (D): Northern Hemisphere, 40Β°β70Β° N. Df = humid winter, Dw = dry winter (NE Asia, monsoon reversal, extremely cold winters).
- Tundra Climate (ET): Poleward beyond 70Β°. Permafrost β subsoil permanently frozen. Low growing mosses, lichens, flowering plants. Very long summer daylight.
- Ice Cap Climate (EF): Interior Greenland and Antarctica. Temperature below freezing even in summer. Icebergs form when ice sheets break. Very little precipitation.
- Permafrost: Subsoil that is permanently frozen β found in tundra regions. Limits plant growth to low growing vegetation only.
- Climate Change: The variation in Earth’s global climate over time. Natural and continuous process. Evidence from geological records, tree rings, sediment deposits, historical records.
- Sunspots: Dark and cooler patches on the Sun that increase and decrease cyclically. Linked to variations in solar output and associated weather changes.
- Millankovitch Oscillations: Astronomical theory β cycles in variations in Earth’s orbital characteristics, wobbling of Earth, and changes in Earth’s axial tilt β alter insolation received.
- Aerosols: Tiny particles thrown into the atmosphere by volcanic eruptions. Remain in atmosphere for a long time, reducing solar radiation reaching Earth’s surface β causing temporary cooling.
- Greenhouse Effect: Process by which greenhouse gases absorb and re-emit long-wave radiation from Earth’s surface, warming the lower atmosphere. Named after analogy to a glass greenhouse.
- Greenhouse Gases (GHGs): Gases that absorb long-wave radiation β COβ, CFCs, CHβ, NβO, Oβ. COβ has the largest concentration. CFCs are the most effective per molecule.
- Carbon Dioxide (COβ): Most abundant GHG. From fossil fuel combustion. Forests and oceans are sinks. Rising at 0.5% annually. Adjustment time in atmosphere = 20β50 years.
- Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs): Products of human activity. Drift into stratosphere and destroy ozone. Large-scale ozone depletion over Antarctica = ozone hole.
- Ozone Hole: Depletion of ozone concentration in the stratosphere β mainly over Antarctica β caused by CFCs. Allows harmful UV radiation to reach Earth’s surface.
- Global Warming: Increasing trend in Earth’s average temperature due to rising GHG concentrations. World avg ~14Β°C. By end of 20th century: 0.6Β°C above 19th century levels. 1998 = warmest year on record.
- Kyoto Protocol: International agreement proclaimed in 1997, effective 2005. Ratified by 141 nations. Bound 35 industrialised countries to reduce GHG emissions by 5% below 1990 levels by 2012.
- Dust Bowl: Severe drought in the southwestern Great Plains of the USA in the 1930s β a historical example of climate variability affecting human life.
- Little Ice Age: A period of significant cooling experienced in Europe from approximately 1550 to 1850 β a historical example of natural climate change.
