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Major Environmental Disasters

7 min readjune 18, 2024

K

Krish Gupta

Harrison Burnside

Harrison Burnside

K

Krish Gupta

Harrison Burnside

Harrison Burnside


AP Environmental Science ♻️

252 resources
See Units

Why Do I Need to Know These?

  • On your AP exam in May, various multiple choice questions will often either directly or indirectly test your understanding of these disasters.
  • The College Board does not provide us with a list of required disasters that will be on the exam :( However, the CED does reference some disasters in some of the key concepts that you must learn for the course :) 
  • In this guide, we will outline what disasters you should know for the FRQ and MCQ sections of your AP Environmental Science Exam !!
    • These disasters and possible solutions/preventions may immensely help you to prepare for your Propose an Environmental Solution FRQ !

What Are These Major Environmental Disasters?

This is the list that we at Fiveable have created! While it would be helpful to have an understanding of other disasters, these are the 10 disasters you should focus on:
  1. Chernobyl, Ukraine (Unit 6)
  2. Three Mile Island, Pennsylvania (Unit 6)
  3. Fukushima, Japan (Unit 6)
  4. Kuwaiti Oil Fire, Kuwait (Unit 6)
  5. Exxon Valdez, Alaska (Unit 6)
  6. Great Smog, London (Unit 7)
  7. Bhopal, India (Unit 8)
  8. Love Canal, New York (Unit 8)
  9. Minamata Bay, Japan (Unit 8)
  10. Great Barrier Reef Bleaching, Australia, Pacific Ocean (Unit 9)

Unit 6 - Energy Resources - Disasters

Chernobyl, Ukraine

What Happened?
In 1986, the largest Nuclear Energy disaster occurred in Chernobyl, USSR. During a safety check, there was a spark in power which led to a reactor vessel rupture and explosion where the roof blew off the building and released a radioactive cloud. A wide area surrounds Chernobyl, Ukraine in present-day where nobody tries to live due to the high rates of cancer and defects of birth. There is a high radiation level around.
That radiation drifted to the west of the plant all the way from Russia towards Eastern then towards Western Europe. Since 1986, tons of kids in the thousands have been diagnosed with many different forms of cancer, especially those within a twenty mile radius. The reactor involved, Reactor Number 4, has been sealed off with a concrete wall to prevent radiation from spreading. 
How Could We Have Fixed It?
Create safety regulations for Nuclear Power Plants that allow frequent government inspections.

Three Mile Island, Pennsylvania

What Happened?
"Nuclear Nightmare," screamed the April 9, 1979, cover of TIME magazine.
In Three Mile Island Pennsylvania on March 28, 1979, near the major city of Harrisburg, PA, a nuclear reactor went into partial meltdown. The feed pump for water in the nuclear reactor broke and the non-nuclear cooling system of reactor 2 of the nuclear energy power-plant failed. This caused cooling water to drain away from the reactor resulting in partial melting of the reactor core. 
This partial nuclear meltdown, since it occurred in the USA, caused the country to go into a media feeding frenzy state where the public distrusted the government's control and regulation on nuclear reactors. In the USA, even today, nuclear energy is low on our portfolio because of the public fear associated with Three Mile Island.
How Could We Have Fixed It?
Create safety regulations for Nuclear Power Plants that allow frequent government inspections.

Fukushima Daiichi Reactor, Japan

What Happened?
On March 11, 2011, a huge 9.0 magnitude earthquake hit the coast of Japan causing a 15 meter tsunami to be created off the coast. The 15 meter tsunami caused 3 reactor’s cooling systems to be damaged as well as the power control supply to be damaged. Radioactive materials (the core of those 3 reactors) released tons of radiation around the Fukushima Daiichi Reactor.
The disaster caused radioactive materials to contaminate 11,580 square miles.
Land 12 miles from the power plant was considered exclusion zones and unfit for human habitation. The exclusion zones resulted in abandonment of cities.

Exxon Valdez, Alaska

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/66/Exval.jpeg/250px-Exval.jpeg

Source: Wikipedia Commons

What Happened?
On March 24, 1989, in the Prince William Sound off the coast of Alaska, a large oil tanker, the Exxon Valdez, collided with the Blight Reef. The collision caused 10.8 million gallons of oil to be spilled into the Sound. This spill is considered the largest US oil spill in history. The oil spread almost 500 miles off of the spill site to go on to stain thousands of miles of coastline.
The spill also greatly reduced the biodiversity of the Sound. Hundreds of thousands of birds, fish, seals, otters and other animals would perish as a result of the oil in the water.
How Could We Have Fixed It?
Require oil tankers to have double-layered walls where oil is stored. This would allow for a puncture in one wall to still have another layer of protection from oil spills.

Unit 7 - Air Pollution - Disasters

Great Smog, London

What Happened?
In the height of the Industrial Revolution in London, in December of 1952, gray (industrial) smog laid on top of the city of London so thick that many people died from respiratory illness. The winter of 1952 was unusually cold and caused additional coal combustion and many people transported themselves only by car. This caused the smog with a combination of black soot, sticky particles of tar and gaseous sulphur dioxide. During December of 1952, a thermal inversion also occurred over the city of London. This resulted in the heaviest winter smog that ever occured in the history of Industrialization and Coal-Burning.
DON’T CONFUSE the smog (gray) of London with photochemical (brown) smog. Photochemical smog is caused by NOx, NOT SOx from Coal Burning.
How Could We Have Fixed It?
Introduce new revisions and amendments to the Clean Air Act. Require multiple kinds of scrubbers to filter out pollutants coming from Industrial Coal-Burning Factories.

Unit 8 - Aquatic/Terrestrial Pollution, Waste, and Toxicity - Disasters

Bhopal, India

What Happened?
A chemical plant in Bhopal, India had an exothermic reaction due to a poisonous gas cloud escaping from that plant. The Union Carbide Pesticide Factory Poisonous Gas Cloud contained 45 tons of MIC, also known as methyl isocyanate, and the cloud covered over 30 square miles of land in and around Bhopal.
Thousands of people died within a few hours of the gas cloud escaping. In the next few months, about 15,000 more people died from complications. In total, about 500,000 people died or were severely injured by the poisonous gas cloud. A very very high number of children around Bhopal have been born and have lived with many different birth defects and defects. The Union Chemical Company paid over $1 billion in litigation as compensation to families that were affected.
How Could We Have Fixed It?
Create government regulations that control the storage of hazardous chemicals. Also require that buildings that hold chemicals or other toxic substances be built to withstand an earthquake of a magnitude of >6.0 and other natural disasters.

Love Canal, New York

What Happened?
The Hooker Chemical Company buried about 21,000 tons of toxic industrial waste underground in Niagara Falls, New York in the early 1950s. By 1978, the Niagara Falls School District had built an elementary school that attracted many housing developments in the working class neighborhood of Love Canal, Niagara Falls, New York. This neighborhood was built right on top of the buried toxic waste.
By 1978, the problem was very apparent. Hundreds of families sold their homes to the government to the federal government for pennies on the dollar. Everybody evacuated the area after concerns were found that many kids were suffering birth defects and endocrine disruption from the chemicals under the ground. The chemicals contaminated the drinking water fountains in the school and got many families sick and killed many people.
How Did We Fix It?
We developed the CERCLA Superfund Disaster Program to help pay for the cleanup of toxic waste sites that have been abandoned.

Minamata Bay, Japan

What Happened?
In 1956, many people in Minamata Bay, Japan were diagnosed with a new disease called Minamata Disease. The symptoms included fatigue, convulsions, loss of motor functions, and slurred speech. A few years later, an investigation concluded that the disease was the result of industrial waste poisoning by the Chisso Corporation. Large amounts of mercury and other toxic heavy metals were found in the Bay’s Waterways and in the fish. Fish is a huge part of the Japanese diet, so many Minamatans got the Minamata Disease bio-magnified to them through many types of fish from the bay.
How Could We Have Fixed It?
We could have created legislation that requires open ocean fisheries to check their fish for mercury levels before selling them at markets.

Unit 9 - Global Change - Disasters

Great Barrier Coral Reef Bleaching, Australia, Pacific Ocean

What Happened?
Right now, due to Ocean Acidification, coral reefs are becoming stressed and the algae that it depends for food and color die out. This is leaving an underlying white or bleached skeleton of calcium carbohydrate that makes the Coral “Bleached”. 10% of all of the world’s coral reefs are becoming bleached which causes them to die out leading to a loss of biodiversity at coral reefs in the ocean. Coral reefs are some of the most productive aquatic biomes that have habitats for all sorts of different fish species. 
How Could We Have Fixed It?
We can reduce our burning of coal and we can increase our dependence on renewable energy sources like Solar and Wind. Reducing the burning of coal as a fossil fuel allows for less SOx to be in the atmosphere which causes less acid rain to happen. Less acid rain will lead to less ocean acidification.
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