Poster's note: interesting alternative deployment model, in which
termination shock risk is potentially much reduced. It would be useful to
get a biologist's perspective on this, as there's a potential risk of a
large excess of extinctions over a scenario in which temperatures were more
robustly supressed. (Swapping termination shock for extermination shock??)

Solar geoengineering to limit the rate of temperature change

Douglas G. MacMartin, Ken Caldeira, David W. Keith
DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2014.0134
Published 17 November 2014

Abstract

Solar geoengineering has been suggested as a tool that might reduce damage
from anthropogenic climate change. Analysis often assumes that
geoengineering would be used to maintain a constant global mean
temperature. Under this scenario, geoengineering would be required either
indefinitely (on societal time scales) or until atmospheric CO2
concentrations were sufficiently reduced. Impacts of climate change,
however, are related to the rate of change as well as its magnitude. We
thus describe an alternative scenario in which solar geoengineering is used
only to constrain the rate of change of global mean temperature; this leads
to a finite deployment period for any emissions pathway that stabilizes
global mean temperature. The length of deployment and amount of
geoengineering required depends on the emissions pathway and allowable rate
of change, e.g. in our simulations, reducing the maximum approximately
0.3°C per decade rate of change in an RCP 4.5 pathway to 0.1°C per decade
would require geoengineering for 160 years; under RCP 6.0, the required
time nearly doubles. We demonstrate that feedback control can limit rates
of change in a climate model. Finally, we note that a decision to terminate
use of solar geoengineering does not automatically imply rapid temperature
increases: feedback could be used to limit rates of change in a gradual
phase-out.

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