Back to ESS Topics
6.2.41 min read

Impacts on human systems

IB Environmental Systems and Societies • Unit 6

7-day free trial

Know exactly what to write for full marks

Practice with exam questions and get AI feedback that shows you the perfect answer — what examiners want to see.

Start Free Trial

Food and water security

Big idea: Climate change threatens food security and water security through changing rainfall, temperatures, and extreme events.

Impacts on agriculture

  • Changed growing conditions: Some crops may fail; growing zones shift poleward
  • Water stress: Drought reduces yields; changed monsoon patterns affect irrigation
  • Extreme weather damage: Floods, storms, heatwaves destroy crops
  • New pests and diseases: Warmer temperatures allow expansion to new areas
  • Soil degradation: Increased erosion from intense rainfall; desertification
Impacts are uneven — some regions may benefit (longer growing seasons), but most will face challenges. LEDCs are often most vulnerable.

Water resources

  • Glacier melt: Initially more water, then less as glaciers disappear
  • Changed precipitation: Some regions drier, others wetter; more flooding
  • Groundwater depletion: Increased demand during droughts
  • Saltwater intrusion: Sea level rise contaminates coastal aquifers
  • Water quality: Higher temperatures increase algal blooms
Exam tip: Essay questions often ask about impacts on societies. Structure your answer by sector: food, water, health, infrastructure, economy.

Health, infrastructure and displacement

Big idea: Climate change affects human health directly (heat, disasters) and indirectly (disease, nutrition). It also threatens infrastructure and may force millions to relocate.

Health impacts

  • Heat-related illness: Heatstroke, dehydration, cardiovascular stress
  • Vector-borne diseases: Malaria, dengue expanding to new areas
  • Waterborne diseases: Flooding spreads cholera, typhoid
  • Air quality: Higher temperatures increase ground-level ozone; wildfire smoke
  • Malnutrition: Reduced crop yields affect food availability
  • Mental health: Climate anxiety, trauma from disasters, displacement stress

Infrastructure and displacement

  • Coastal flooding: Threatens ports, cities, roads in low-lying areas
  • Permafrost thaw: Damages buildings, roads, pipelines in Arctic regions
  • Storm damage: More intense hurricanes/cyclones destroy infrastructure
  • Climate refugees: People forced to move due to sea level rise, drought, or disasters
  • Economic costs: Damage repair, lost productivity, insurance costs
Climate justice issue: Those who contributed least to climate change (LEDCs, small island nations) often face the worst impacts and have the fewest resources to adapt.
Exam tip: In discuss or evaluate questions, consider who is affected and discuss equity issues.

Make these notes count

Reading notes is just the start. Test yourself with IB-style questions and get feedback that shows you what examiners want.