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Geoengineering the Climate: An Overview of Solar Radiation Management Options

Geoengineering the Climate: An Overview of Solar Radiation Management Options

Full Title: Geoengineering the Climate: An Overview of Solar Radiation Management Options
Author(s): William C.G. Burns
Publisher(s): N/A
Publication Date: March 1, 2012
Full Text: Download Resource
Description (excerpt):

The feckless response of the global community to climate change has led to  increasingly serious consideration of the potential role of geoengineering as a potential  means to avert a “climate emergency,” such as rapid melting of the Greenland and  West Antarctic ice sheets, or as a stopgap measure to buy time for effective emissions  mitigation responses. The overarching purpose of climate geoengineering proposals is to intervene in the climate system by deliberately modifying the Earth’s energy balance  to reduce potential temperature increases and ultimately stabilize temperatures at levels  lower than currently projected. A number of recent studies have concluded that  geoengineering schemes could potentially mitigate the climatic impacts associated with a  doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide levels from pre-industrial levels.

Climate geoengineering options can be divided into two broad categories: solar  radiation management (SRM) methods and carbon dioxide removal (CDR) methods.

This article will focus solely on SRM methods. The primary rationale for doing so  is a personal belief that CDR schemes are less likely to prove viable as a response to  climate change, and thus are far less likely to be deployed. The purpose of this article is to provide an overview of the primary SRM  geoengineering options currently being discussed in the science and policy communities  as a means of framing the remaining articles in this issue. In this pursuit, the article  examines the potential effectiveness of the main schemes being discussed, and discusses  potential negative impacts of these approaches in terms of specific technologies and  more generally.

 

All statements and/or propositions in discussion prompts are meant exclusively to stimulate discussion and do not represent the views of OurEnergyPolicy.org, its Partners, Topic Directors or Experts, nor of any individual or organization. Comments by and opinions of Expert participants are their own.

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