http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10584-013-0769-5

If climate action becomes urgent: the importance of response times for
various climate strategies

Detlef P. van Vuuren, Elke Stehfest

Abstract

Most deliberations on climate policy are based on a mitigation response
that assumes a gradually increasing reduction over time. However,
situations may occur where a more urgent response is needed. A key question
for climate policy in general, but even more in the case a rapid response
is needed, is: what are the characteristic response times of the response
options, such as rapid mitigation or solar radiation management (SRM)? This
paper explores this issue, which has not received a lot of attention yet,
by looking into the role of both societal and physical response times. For
mitigation, technological and economic inertia clearly limit reduction
rates with considerable uncertainty corresponding to political inertia and
societies’ ability to organize rapid mitigation action at what costs. The
paper looks into a rapid emission reductions of 4–6 % annually. Reduction
rates at the top end of this range (up to 6 %) could effectively reduce
climate change, but only with a noticeable delay. Temperatures could be
above those in the year of policy introduction for more than 70 years, with
unknown consequences of overshoot. A strategy based on SRM is shown to have
much shorter response times (up to decades), but introduces an important
element of risk, such as ocean acidification and the risk of extreme
temperature shifts in case action is halted. Above all, the paper
highlights the role of response times in designing effective policy
strategies implying that a better understanding of these crucial factors is
required.

This article is part of a special issue on "Geoengineering Research and its
Limitations" edited by Robert Wood, Stephen Gardiner, and Lauren
Hartzell-Nichols.

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