Poster's note : paper seemingly not released yet. Hopefully authors will
provide a copy.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/plan-to-avert-global-warming-by-cooling-planet-artificially-could-cause-climate-chaos-9043962.html

Plan to avert global warming by cooling planet artificially 'could cause
climate chaos'

Proposal to inject tiny reflective particles into the upper atmosphere to
block out sunlight could lead to droughts, warn scientists

Wednesday 08 January 2014

A controversial proposal to cool the planet artificially by injecting tiny
reflective particles into the upper atmosphere which block out sunlight
would cause droughts and climate chaos in the poorest countries of the
world, a study has found.

One of the more serious plans to “geoengineer” the global climate would in
effect create another climate catastrophe that would result in misery for
millions of people, according to a computer model of the plan.Some climate
researchers have suggested that mimicking the cooling effects of volcanic
eruptions with massive injections of sulphate particles into the atmosphere
may be necessary in an emergency if global temperatures and carbon dioxide
levels continue to rise unabated.It is known that the sulphate particles
produced by volcanoes, which are relatively quickly washed out of the
atmosphere, can reduce incoming solar radiation significantly, and so cause
average global temperatures to dip.However, a study by scientists at
Reading University has found that the effect of a massive and continuous
injection of sulphates into the air would be to alter the rainfall patterns
over vast regions of the world, notably Africa, South America and Asia
which could as a result be devastated by drought.“We have shown that one of
the leading candidates for geo-engineering could cause a new unintended
side-effect over a large part of the planet,” said Andrew Charlton-Perez of
the University of Reading, a co-author of the study published in the
journal Environmental Research Letters.“The risks from this kind of
geo-engineering are huge. A reduction in tropical rainfall of 30 per cent
would, for example, quickly dry out Indonesia so much that even the wettest
years after a man-made intervention would be equal to drought conditions
now,” Dr Charlton-Perez said.“The ecosystems of the tropics are among the
most fragile on Earth. We would see changes happening so quickly that there
would be little time for people to adapt.“Discussion of geo-engineering
often prompts heated debate, but very often there is a lack of
understanding of what putting large amounts of aerosol in the stratosphere
will do to the complex climate system. Our findings should help to fill in
some of the gaps about one of the leading candidates,” he said.Volcanoes,
such as the Mount Pinatubo eruption in 1991, can cool average global
temperatures significantly for short periods, but to reverse the expected
4C rise in global temperatures as a result of global warming would need
large quantities of sulphate aerosols to be injected into the upper
atmosphere over the course of several years.“To reduce global temperatures
enough to counter effects of global warming would require a massive
injection of aerosol – the small particles that reflect sunlight back into
space. This would be equivalent to a volcanic eruption five times the size
of that of Mount Pinatubo every year,” said Angus Ferraro of Exeter
University.“Previous predictions of how stratospheric aerosol injection
would affect climate were based on a number of assumptions. By actually
modelling what would happen if aerosol were to be pumped into the
atmosphere around the equator, we have revealed a new impact of
geo-engineering on tropical climate,” Dr Ferraro said.“As well as
reflecting some of the incoming energy from the sun and cooling surface
temperature, the aerosol also absorbs some of the heat energy coming from
the surface which warms the stratosphere. We have shown for the first time
that warming the stratosphere makes the troposphere below more stable,
weakening upward motion and reducing the amount of rainfall at the
surface,” he said.Professor Ellie Highwood of University of Reading, a
co-author of the study said that there is an understandable desire to
explore alternatives to deep-cuts in carbon dioxide emissions, which do not
seem to be materialising as a result of the failure of countries to reach a
binding international agreement.“Climate scientists agree that cutting
carbon emissions is still necessary to curb the damaging effects of future
climate change. However, since such cuts are far from certain to
materialise, proponents of geo-engineering research argue that whatever the
world decides on its carbon emissions, it would be prudent to explore
alternatives that might help us in the decades ahead,” Professor Highwood
said.“On the evidence of this research, stratospheric aerosol
geo-engineering is not providing world leaders with any easy answers to the
problem of climate change,” she said.

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