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Mitigation strategies

IB Environmental Systems and Societies • Unit 6

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What is mitigation?

Big idea: Mitigation = reducing the cause. We try to prevent climate change from getting worse by cutting greenhouse gas emissions.

Mitigation vs adaptation

Mitigation

  • Addresses the CAUSE
  • Reduces GHG emissions
  • Prevents future warming
  • Benefits everyone globally
  • Requires global cooperation

Adaptation

  • Addresses the EFFECTS
  • Adjusts to changes already happening
  • Reduces vulnerability
  • Benefits specific regions/groups
  • Can be done locally
Both are needed! Mitigation slows the problem; adaptation helps us cope with changes that are already unavoidable.

Categories of mitigation

  • Reducing emissions: Switch to renewables, improve efficiency, change behaviour
  • Removing carbon: Afforestation, carbon capture and storage (CCS), direct air capture
  • Avoiding emissions: Prevent deforestation, reduce waste, shift diets
Exam tip: The distinguish between mitigation and adaptation question is extremely common. Learn the key differences and be able to give examples of each.

Specific mitigation strategies

Big idea: Mitigation strategies range from technological solutions (renewables, CCS) to behaviour changes (diet, transport) to policy measures (carbon taxes, regulations).

Energy sector

  • Renewable energy: Solar, wind, hydroelectric, geothermal, tidal — zero emissions in operation
  • Nuclear power: Low carbon but controversial (waste, safety, cost)
  • Energy efficiency: Better insulation, efficient appliances, LED lighting
  • Smart grids: Balance supply and demand, reduce waste

Carbon removal and storage

  • Afforestation/reforestation: Trees absorb CO₂ through photosynthesis
  • Carbon capture and storage (CCS): Capture CO₂ from power plants, store underground
  • Direct air capture: Machines that extract CO₂ directly from atmosphere (expensive)
  • Soil carbon sequestration: Agricultural practices that store carbon in soil

Other sectors

  • Transport: Electric vehicles, public transport, cycling, efficient vehicles
  • Agriculture: Reduced meat consumption, improved livestock management, less fertiliser
  • Industry: Process efficiency, material recycling, fuel switching
  • Buildings: Green building standards, passive heating/cooling
Exam tip: For evaluation questions, consider pros and cons of each strategy: cost, feasibility, time scale, effectiveness, side effects.

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