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Water stores and flows

IB Environmental Systems and Societies • Unit 4

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Water and climate regulation

Big idea: Water is Earth's thermostat. It absorbs, stores, and redistributes heat around the planet, keeping temperatures stable enough for life.

How water regulates temperature

  • High specific heat capacity — water absorbs large amounts of heat with only a small temperature change (oceans act as heat sinks)
  • Latent heat — evaporation absorbs heat (cooling), condensation releases heat (warming)
  • Ocean currents — redistribute heat from the equator to the poles (e.g., the Gulf Stream warms western Europe)
  • Water vapour as a greenhouse gas — traps heat in the atmosphere (can act as a positive feedback during warming)
  • Albedo — ice/snow reflect sunlight (cooling), open water absorbs sunlight (warming)
For outline-style answers, give several distinct points (one per sentence), such as: high specific heat capacity, latent heat transfer, ocean currents, water vapour as a greenhouse gas, and albedo effects from ice/snow.

Water and the carbon cycle connection

Oceans also regulate climate by acting as carbon sinks. They absorb about 25% of human CO2 emissions, but this contributes to ocean acidification (see 4.4).

Water regulates climate through: (1) absorbing heat, (2) transporting heat via currents, (3) transferring heat via evaporation/condensation, (4) reflecting sunlight when frozen, and (5) absorbing CO2.

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