http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2015JD023269/abstract

A Comparison of Temperature and Precipitation Responses to Different Earth
Radiation Management Geoengineering Schemes

Authors
J. Crook,
L.S. Jackson,
S.M. Osprey,
P.M. Forster

14 August 2015
doi: 10.1002/2015JD023269

Abstract

Earth radiation management has been suggested as a way to rapidly
counteract global warming in the face of a lack of mitigation efforts,
buying time and avoiding potentially catastrophic warming. We compare six
different radiation management schemes that use surface, troposphere and
stratosphere interventions in a single climate model in which we projected
future climate from 2020 to 2099 based on RCP4.5. We analyze the surface
air temperature responses to determine how effective the schemes are at
returning temperature to its 1986-2005 climatology and analyze
precipitation responses to compare side effects. We find crop albedo
enhancement is largely ineffective at returning temperature to its
1986-2005 climatology. Desert albedo enhancement causes excessive cooling
in the deserts and severe shifts in tropical precipitation. Ocean albedo
enhancement, sea-spray geoengineering, cirrus cloud thinning and
stratospheric SO2 injection have the potential to cool more uniformly, but
cirrus cloud thinning may not be able to cool by much more than 1 K
globally. We find that of the schemes potentially able to return surface
air temperature to 1986-2005 climatology under future greenhouse gas
warming, none has significantly less severe precipitation side effects than
other schemes. Despite different forcing patterns, ocean albedo
enhancement, sea-spray geoengineering, cirrus cloud thinning and
stratospheric SO2 injection all result in large scale tropical
precipitation responses caused by Hadley cell changes and land
precipitation changes largely driven by thermodynamic changes. Widespread
regional scale changes in precipitation over land are significantly
different from the 1986-2005 climatology and would likely necessitate
significant adaptation despite geoengineering.

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