Greenhouse gases (GHGs) are gases in Earth’s atmosphere that trap heat, causing a “greenhouse effect.” They allow sunlight to enter the atmosphere but prevent some of the heat from escaping back into space, which leads to warming of the planet.
Major Greenhouse Gases:
- Carbon dioxide (CO₂): Released through burning fossil fuels (oil, gas, coal), deforestation, and some industrial processes.
- Methane (CH₄): Emitted during the production and transport of coal, oil, and natural gas. Also comes from livestock and other agricultural practices.
- Nitrous oxide (N₂O): Released from agricultural activities, waste management, and industrial processes.
- Fluorinated gases (CFCs, HFCs, PFCs, SF₆): Synthetic gases used in industry, typically in refrigeration, insulation, and aerosols. They are extremely potent GHGs.
Effect on the Environment:
- Global Warming: GHGs contribute to the warming of the Earth’s atmosphere, raising global temperatures, which can lead to more extreme weather patterns like heatwaves, droughts, and stronger storms.
- Ice Melt and Sea-Level Rise: The warming leads to the melting of polar ice caps and glaciers, contributing to rising sea levels, which can flood coastal regions.
- Ocean Acidification: CO₂ dissolves in oceans, forming carbonic acid, which lowers the pH of seawater. This harms marine life, especially organisms with calcium carbonate shells or skeletons (like corals and shellfish).
- Ecosystem Disruption: Changes in temperature and precipitation patterns affect ecosystems, leading to shifts in species distributions, disruptions in food chains, and loss of biodiversity.
Mitigating Greenhouse Gas Emissions:
- Reducing fossil fuel use
- Increasing renewable energy sources (solar, wind, hydro)
- Enhancing energy efficiency
- Protecting and expanding forests (carbon sinks)
- Developing carbon capture and storage technologies