Impacts on Places & People (SL IB Geography)

Revision Note

Jacque Cartwright

Expertise

Geography Content Creator

Effects on People & Places

  • Employment
    • Loss of job opportunities due to changes in tourism and agriculture
    • Tourism may decline in some areas for example ski resorts may close due to the lack of reliable snow
    • Coastal resorts may be at risk of flooding leading to the closure
    • Decline in fishing in some areas due to changing ocean temperatures
    • Farmers either change the crop they grow or livestock they raise or face having to leave farming
  • Homes 
    • Increased flooding due to sea level rise and increased frequency and severity of storms will lead to displacement of large numbers of people
    • Homes in low-lying areas may have to be abandoned or need additional defences against sea level rise
    • Moving settlements or improving flood defences will be costly
  • Social 
    • Global warming is leading to increased human migration, particularly from low-lying islands
      • Some residents of Kiribati, South Pacific, have already abandoned their homes and claiming environmental refugee status 
      • The UN’s refugee agency, estimates that 1.2 billion people could be displaced globally by 2050 due to climate change and natural disasters
    • Problems such as hunger and conflict will increase as resources decline or change, which will also drive economic, social and cultural changes
      • LICs are more likely to be affected by changes as they are economically and technologically held back
      • 65% of workers in Bangladesh are involved in agriculture, however, this industry is threatened by floods and sea level rise

Health Hazards

  • Climate change can impact human health in various ways
  • Heatwaves, extreme weather events, changes in disease vectors (e.g. mosquitos), and reduced air quality can all have negative health consequences, including heat-related illnesses, respiratory problems, and the spread of infectious diseases
    • Just a 2°C rise in temperature would allow mosquitos to breed in previously cooler regions
    • Italy has experienced cases of malaria since 2017 when it was previously a malaria-free area
    • An additional 280 million people may be affected by malaria
    • Water-borne diseases are more likely to spread
  • Heat waves may lead to:
    • Heat stroke, dehydration and sunburn increase during heat waves
    • Stagnant air during heat waves increases air pollution levels:
    • Respiratory diseases increase and those suffering from respiratory illnesses such as asthma may be more affected 
  • Increased temperatures negatively affect people with cardiopulmonary diseases
  • Diets may be restricted by food shortages leading to malnutrition and famine
  • Milder winters may lead to fewer winter-related deaths

Tourism & Ocean Transport Routes

  • Ocean transport routes account for 90% of global trade
  • New sea routes will open up as sea ice melts, although this will also cause geo-political issues in deciding on which country has sovereignty claims over the waters 
  • The new routes will reduce the time taken between ports 
    • Until 2009, the Arctic ice pack stopped shipping between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans through the Arctic Ocean throughout most of the year
    • Global warming has made the Northwest Passage (NWP) more navigable through the ice, making the distance travelled up to 40% shorter than previously
    • Although, emissions from ships will impact the pristine Arctic environment
  • However, existing routes will see a reduction in trade
    • Egypt could lose 60% of its trade through the Suez Canal from use of the Arctic NWP
  • Ports will have to adjust to rising sea levels, some will be able to dock larger ships as they become deeper, whilst others will be engulfed
  • Trade routes are threatened by intensifying storms through increased wind speeds, wave heights and precipitation
  • Tourism will also change as:
    • Summer seasons are extended
    • Tourist resorts will have to move as sea levels rise
    • Extreme weather will damage infrastructure, erode and submerge beaches
    • Ocean acidification threatens natural attractions such as coral reefs
    • Winter sports decline as snow and ice disappear 
    • Climate change leads to changes in biodiversity, affecting eco-tourism

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Jacque Cartwright

Author: Jacque Cartwright

Jacque graduated from the Open University with a BSc in Environmental Science and Geography before doing her PGCE with the University of St David’s, Swansea. Teaching is her passion and has taught across a wide range of specifications – GCSE/IGCSE and IB but particularly loves teaching the A-level Geography. For the last 5 years Jacque has been teaching online for international schools, and she knows what is needed to pass those pesky geography exams.