http://www.springerlink.com/content/022322t527122332/

Fail-safe solar radiation management geoengineering
Takanobu Kosugi

Abstract
To avoid dangerous changes to the climate system, the global mean
temperature must not rise more than 2 °C from the 19th century level.
The German Advisory Council on Global Change recommends maintaining
the rate of change in temperature to within 0.2 °C per decade. This
paper supposes that a geoengineering option of solar radiation
management (SRM) by injecting aerosol into the Earth’s stratosphere
becomes applicable in the future to meet those temperature conditions.
However, a failure to continue the use of this option could cause a
rapid temperature rebound, and thus we propose a principle of SRM use
that the temperature conditions must be satisfied even after SRM
termination at any time. We present economically optimal trajectories
of the amounts of SRM use and the reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2)
emissions under our principle by using an economic model of climate
change. To meet the temperature conditions described above, the SRM
must reduce radiative forcing by slightly more than 1 W/m2 at most,
and industrial CO2 emissions must be cut by 80 % by the end of the
21st century relative to 2005, assuming a climate sensitivity of 3 °C.
Lower-level use of SRM is required for a higher climate sensitivity;
otherwise, the temperature will rise faster in the case of SRM
termination. Considering potential economic damages of environmental
side effects due to the use of SRM, the contribution of SRM would have
to be much smaller.
Keywords  Albedo enhancement – Climate change – Climate policy –
Global warming – Integrated assessment model – Stratospheric aerosol
injection – Termination problem – Uncertainty

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