Ficha de revisão: Climate Change, Globalization, and Geopolitics

Climate Change, Globalization, and Geopolitics - Revision Sheet

1. 📌 Essentials

  • Climate change involves physical risks (disasters, warming) and transition risks (shift to green economy).
  • Major emitters: US, China; 10% responsible for 50% of emissions.
  • Natural capital (land, fisheries) is finite; climate impacts threaten yields and resources.
  • Arctic melting opens new shipping routes and resource claims, increasing geopolitical tensions.
  • Global supply chains (GVCs) rely on JIT, containerization, and risk spreading across borders. Maritime zones: territorial waters, EEZ (200 nautical miles), deep-sea zones like Clarion-Clipperton.
  • Digital sovereignty is contested: Big Tech dominance, splinternet, Chinese Great Firewall, Russian Runet.
  • EU GDPR (2018) and Digital Services Act (2023) regulate data privacy and platform accountability.
  • Geopolitical hotspots: Arctic, South China Sea, cyber boundaries.
  • Climate mitigation strategies: reduce fossil fuel use, improve efficiency, invest in renewables.

2. 🧩 Key Structures & Components

  • Greenhouse gases (GHGs) — trap heat, cause global warming.
  • Natural capital — land, forests, fisheries, finite and vulnerable.
  • Supply chains (GVCs) — interconnected production networks spanning multiple countries.
  • Shipping routes — Panama Canal, Suez Canal, Arctic passages.
  • Maritime zones — territorial waters, EEZ, continental shelves.
  • Big Tech companies — Google, Amazon, Meta, Apple; dominate digital economy.
  • Chinese internet infrastructure — Great Firewall, censorship, surveillance.
  • Russian Runet — sovereign internet law, data localization.
  • EU regulations — GDPR, DSA for data and platform governance.
  • Arctic sovereignty zones — EEZs, continental shelves, strategic control areas.

3. 🔬 Functions, Mechanisms & Relationships

  • Climate change increases extreme weather, disrupts ecosystems, damages infrastructure.
  • Transition risks: policy shifts, technological innovations, market changes reduce fossil fuel demand.
  • Supply chains: JIT minimizes inventory but increases vulnerability to disruptions.
  • Shipping & maritime zones:
    • Territorial waters (12 nautical miles)
    • EEZ (200 nautical miles): exclusive resource rights
    • Deep-sea zones: mineral-rich areas like Clarion-Clipperton
  • Geopolitical tensions:
    • Arctic: sovereignty disputes over new routes/resources
    • South China Sea: territorial claims, artificial islands
  • Digital sovereignty:
    • Big Tech’s influence shapes global information flow
    • Chinese and Russian controls restrict internet access and content
    • Splinternet: fragmentation of global internet due to nationalism/regulation
  • Regulations:
    • GDPR enforces data privacy
    • DSA holds platforms accountable for illegal content and user safety
  • Climate mitigation:
    • Reduce high-carbon consumption
    • Switch to renewable energy
    • Invest in carbon capture and green tech

4. Comparative Table

ItemKey FeaturesNotes / Differences
Climate RisksPhysical (disasters, warming), Transition (policy shifts)Disasters cause economic/human losses
Natural CapitalLand, fisheries, resources; finite and depletingClimate reduces yields, resource conflicts
Shipping & RoutesPanama, Suez, Arctic passagesArctic opening creates new routes, disputes
Maritime ZonesTerritorial waters, EEZ, deep-sea zonesEEZ extends 200 nautical miles; resource rights
Digital PowerBig Tech dominance, splinternet, censorshipUS, China, Russia control digital borders
RegulationsGDPR (2018), DSA (2023)Data privacy, platform accountability

5. 🗂️ Hierarchical Diagram (ASCII)

Climate Change & Geopolitics
 ├─ Climate Risks
 │    ├─ Physical Disasters
 │    └─ Transition Risks
 ├─ Natural Capital
 │    ├─ Land & Forests
 │    └─ Fisheries & Resources
 ├─ Supply Chains
 │    ├─ GVCs & JIT
 │    └─ Risk Spreading
 ├─ Maritime Zones
 │    ├─ Territorial Waters
 │    ├─ EEZ
 │    └─ Deep-sea Resources
 └─ Digital Sovereignty
      ├─ Big Tech & Internet Control
      ├─ Chinese Firewall
      └─ Russian Runet

6. ⚠️ High-Yield Pitfalls & Confusions

  • Confusing territorial waters with EEZ boundaries.
  • Overestimating the stability of supply chains; JIT increases vulnerability.
  • Misunderstanding the scope of the Arctic’s geopolitical importance.
  • Assuming all digital regulation is uniform; GDPR vs. DSA vs. Chinese controls.
  • Mistaking the causes of splinternet fragmentation; nationalism vs. technical reasons.
  • Underestimating the impact of climate change on human health and migration.
  • Overlooking the influence of fossil fuel reserves on geopolitics.
  • Confusing the legal frameworks for land borders and maritime zones.

7. ✅ Final Exam Checklist

  • Understand the difference between physical and transition climate risks.
  • Recognize major emitters and their per capita emissions.
  • Know the concept of natural capital and its depletion.
  • Describe how supply chains operate and their vulnerabilities.
  • Identify key maritime zones and their legal significance.
  • Explain the concept of the splinternet and major actors.
  • Summarize Chinese and Russian internet control strategies.
  • Recall EU regulations: GDPR and DSA.
  • Understand Arctic geopolitics and resource disputes.
  • Be familiar with climate mitigation strategies and technologies.
  • Recognize the geopolitical implications of melting ice and new shipping routes.
  • Know the impact of infrastructure disruptions on global trade.
  • Be aware of the role of fossil fuels in international conflicts.
  • Understand the hierarchical organization of climate, trade, and digital systems.
  • Be prepared to analyze cause-effect relationships between climate change and geopolitics.

Teste seu conhecimento

Teste seu conhecimento sobre Climate Change, Globalization, and Geopolitics com 10 perguntas de múltipla escolha com correções detalhadas.

1. What is a primary physical risk associated with climate change?

2. Which two countries are the major emitters responsible for half of global greenhouse gases?

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Revisar com flashcards

Memorize os conceitos chave de Climate Change, Globalization, and Geopolitics com 10 flashcards interativos.

Wildfires — CO2 emissions?

8.6 billion tonnes annually

Climate change — risks?

Disasters, warming, resource threats.

Arctic — geopolitical opportunity?

New routes and resource claims

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