A review of climate geoengineering proposals

Climate geoengineering proposals seek to rectify the current radiative imbalance via either (1) reducing incoming solar radiation (solar radiation management) or (2) removing CO2 from the atmosphere and transferring it to long-lived reservoirs (carbon dioxide removal). For each option, we discuss it...

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Published in:Climatic Change
Main Authors: Vaughan, N. E., Lenton, T. M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/28579/
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-011-0027-7
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spelling ftuniveastangl:oai:ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk:28579 2023-06-06T11:58:12+02:00 A review of climate geoengineering proposals Vaughan, N. E. Lenton, T. M. 2011-12 https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/28579/ https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-011-0027-7 unknown Vaughan, N. E. and Lenton, T. M. (2011) A review of climate geoengineering proposals. Climatic Change, 109 (4). pp. 745-790. ISSN 1573-1480 doi:10.1007/s10584-011-0027-7 Article PeerReviewed 2011 ftuniveastangl https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-011-0027-7 2023-04-13T22:31:33Z Climate geoengineering proposals seek to rectify the current radiative imbalance via either (1) reducing incoming solar radiation (solar radiation management) or (2) removing CO2 from the atmosphere and transferring it to long-lived reservoirs (carbon dioxide removal). For each option, we discuss its effectiveness and potential side effects, also considering lifetime of effect, development and deployment timescale, reversibility, and failure risks. We present a detailed review that builds on earlier work by including the most recent literature, and is more extensive than previous comparative frameworks. Solar radiation management propsals are most effective but short-lived, whilst carbon dioxide removal measures gain effectiveness the longer they are pursued. Solar radiation management could restore the global radiative balance, but must be maintained to avoid abrupt warming, meanwhile ocean acidification and residual regional climate changes would still occur. Carbon dioxide removal involves less risk, and offers a way to return to a pre-industrial CO2 level and climate on a millennial timescale, but is potentially limited by the CO2 storage capacity of geological reservoirs. Geoengineering could complement mitigation, but it is not an alternative to it. We expand on the possible combinations of mitigation, carbon dioxide removal and solar radiation management that might be used to avoid dangerous climate change. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification University of East Anglia: UEA Digital Repository Climatic Change 109 3-4 745 790
institution Open Polar
collection University of East Anglia: UEA Digital Repository
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language unknown
description Climate geoengineering proposals seek to rectify the current radiative imbalance via either (1) reducing incoming solar radiation (solar radiation management) or (2) removing CO2 from the atmosphere and transferring it to long-lived reservoirs (carbon dioxide removal). For each option, we discuss its effectiveness and potential side effects, also considering lifetime of effect, development and deployment timescale, reversibility, and failure risks. We present a detailed review that builds on earlier work by including the most recent literature, and is more extensive than previous comparative frameworks. Solar radiation management propsals are most effective but short-lived, whilst carbon dioxide removal measures gain effectiveness the longer they are pursued. Solar radiation management could restore the global radiative balance, but must be maintained to avoid abrupt warming, meanwhile ocean acidification and residual regional climate changes would still occur. Carbon dioxide removal involves less risk, and offers a way to return to a pre-industrial CO2 level and climate on a millennial timescale, but is potentially limited by the CO2 storage capacity of geological reservoirs. Geoengineering could complement mitigation, but it is not an alternative to it. We expand on the possible combinations of mitigation, carbon dioxide removal and solar radiation management that might be used to avoid dangerous climate change.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Vaughan, N. E.
Lenton, T. M.
spellingShingle Vaughan, N. E.
Lenton, T. M.
A review of climate geoengineering proposals
author_facet Vaughan, N. E.
Lenton, T. M.
author_sort Vaughan, N. E.
title A review of climate geoengineering proposals
title_short A review of climate geoengineering proposals
title_full A review of climate geoengineering proposals
title_fullStr A review of climate geoengineering proposals
title_full_unstemmed A review of climate geoengineering proposals
title_sort review of climate geoengineering proposals
publishDate 2011
url https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/28579/
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-011-0027-7
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation Vaughan, N. E. and Lenton, T. M. (2011) A review of climate geoengineering proposals. Climatic Change, 109 (4). pp. 745-790. ISSN 1573-1480
doi:10.1007/s10584-011-0027-7
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-011-0027-7
container_title Climatic Change
container_volume 109
container_issue 3-4
container_start_page 745
op_container_end_page 790
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