Poster's note : This paper helps suggest a level of SRM geoengineering
which would be required to balance warming induced by aerosol mitigation

http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/8/3/034008

Environmental Research Letters Volume 8 Number 3
Nathan P Gillett and Knut Von Salzen 2013 Environ. Res.
Lett. 8 034008 doi:10.1088/1748-9326/8/3/034008

The role of reduced aerosol precursor emissions in driving near-term warming

Letter

The representative concentration pathway (RCP) scenarios all assume
stringent emissions controls on aerosols and their precursors, and hence
include progressive decreases in aerosol and aerosol precursor emissions
through the 21st century. Recent studies have suggested that the resultant
decrease in aerosols could drive rapid near-term warming, which could
dominate the effects of greenhouse gas (GHG) increases in the coming
decades. In CanESM2 simulations, we find that under the RCP 2.6 scenario,
which includes the fastest decrease in aerosol and aerosol precursor
emissions, the contribution of aerosol reductions to warming between 2000
and 2040 is around 30%. Moreover, the rate of warming in the RCP 2.6
simulations declines gradually from its present-day value as GHG emissions
decrease. Thus, while aerosol emission reductions contribute to gradual
warming through the 21st century, we find no evidence that aerosol emission
reductions drive particularly rapid near-term warming in this scenario. In
the near-term, as in the long-term, GHG increases are the dominant driver
of warming.

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