https://eos.org/meeting-reports/how-will-earth-respond-to-plans-for-carbon-dioxide-removal

How Will Earth Respond to Plans for Carbon Dioxide Removal?

First Workshop of the Carbon Dioxide Removal Model Intercomparison Project;
Potsdam, Germany, 20–22 September 2016
[image: Smokestacks puffing gas]Smokestacks puffing gas. At a September
2016 workshop in Potsdam, Germany, participants discussed current and
future experiments for the Carbon Dioxide Removal Model Intercomparison
Project and Earth system response to negative emissions. Credit: Curran
Kelleher
<https://www.flickr.com/photos/10604632@N02/1383478361/in/photolist-37fFVc-6yYFAh-iyNVi-s2hVy-5sCyLi-7D16u9-8jTFcg-dsgvCF-5mvfti-EkPzS-9cPDvA-ETGWf-n5AWAB-7q4z-5dGUaH-e5qLT-9cLxng-5qDqEs-dsgEYY-5qDqg5-4gJRYu-4QFzXN-9qEc32-dsgEDE-zLosH-7nxdo7-3FGMH-aEmp-dcswo-7rM7c-b72dS-8KttGK-9Mp2U-7hQhY-PxiW4-PwQuQ-5TfyK-5F1FTk-mMd7yS-Xh8Me-8YCUDw-6m3fe4-aWaXH-aWaSz-aVs3K-aVsdd-aWaML-j8pqDb-ej4LUE-gfiyvh>

By Andrew Lenton <[email protected]>, David Keller, and Patrik Pfister 22
March 2017

The recent Paris Agreement (21st Conference of the Parties (COP21
<https://eos.org/articles/landmark-paris-climate-accord-comes-into-force>))
recognized that carbon dioxide removal (CDR), or negative emissions, may be
required to limit global warming to the agreed target of less than 2°C. In
this context, there is an urgent need to assess how CDR could help mitigate
climate change or even reverse it. In response to COP21 and to better
understand the potential risks and benefits of different options, the
Carbon Dioxide Removal Model Intercomparison Project (CDR-MIP
<http://www.kiel-earth-institute.de/CDR_Model_Intercomparison_Project.html>)
was created to coordinate and advance our understanding of CDR in the Earth
system.
Negative emissions may be required to limit global warming to the agreed
target of less than 2°C.

The inaugural CDR-MIP workshop
<http://www.kiel-earth-institute.de/meetings.html> in Potsdam, Germany,
brought together experts in Earth systems and integrated assessment
modeling to investigate CDR-MIP simulations and discuss new experiments and
their design. Participants presented results on the first CDR-MIP
experiment (C1) on climate reversibility and worked to finalize the designs
of additional phase 1 CDR-MIP experiments (C2, C3, and C4). The workshop
also sought to link the experiments to upcoming policy-relevant assessments
like the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change special report
<https://www.ipcc.ch/report/sr15/> on global warming of 1.5°C.

Results from the C1 experiments found that peak carbon dioxide (CO2) in the
atmosphere precedes peaks in all climate variables and may alter the
spatial patterns of climate variability. After peak CO2, some climate
variables (e.g., temperature) return quickly to their preindustrial value.
Other variables, like ocean overturning circulation
<https://eos.org/research-spotlights/major-ocean-circulation-pattern-at-risk-from-greenland-ice-melt>,
which plays a critical role in controlling weather and climate, peak
several decades later and can take hundreds to thousands of years to return
to their preindustrial value. These results have profound implications for
the emission trajectories needed to reach the goals of the COP21 agreement
and maintain key ecosystem services such as food production. The results
may also inform social responses and strategies for adapting to a changing
climate.
[image: CDR-MIP C1 results showing the response of the Earth system to
increasing and decreasing atmospheric CO2 levels.]Experimental results from
the first experiment of the Carbon Dioxide Removal Model Intercomparison
Project (CDR-MIP C1), showing the response of the Earth system to
increasing and decreasing atmospheric CO2 levels from preindustrial to 4
times the preindustrial concentration of CO2. Credit: BERN3D-LPX model

Future C2 experiments will quantify the efficiency and response of the
Earth system to direct CO2 air capture, with a particular focus on
carbon-climate feedbacks. One remaining experiment will focus on afforestation
and reforestation
<http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/sres/land_use/index.php?idp=47>—extending
and restoring forest cover (C3). Another involves ocean alkalinity
injection, simulating enhancing natural weathering by adding
alkalinity-altering materials such as calcium oxide and olivine to the
ocean to enhance its capacity to draw CO2 out of the atmosphere (C4).

Given the increasing interest in CDR methods not included in the phase 1
experiments, participants also discussed additional experiments. Among the
possibilities, they examined the feasibility of experiments focusing on
bioenergy carbon capture and storage, which underpin many proposed
low-carbon pathways. It was also widely acknowledged that there is an
increasing demand for future experimental designs that combine different
CDR techniques. One option involved collaborations with the Geoengineering
Model Intercomparison Project
<https://eos.org/meeting-reports/understanding-how-climate-engineering-can-offset-climate-change>
to
combine CDR with solar radiation management methods. Likewise, non-CO2
greenhouse
gas removal was also seen as an important topic to investigate.
They examined the feasibility of experiments focusing on bioenergy carbon
capture and storage, which underpin many proposed low-carbon pathways.

The data generated by the CDR-MIP will be publicly available. We encourage
other communities, like those working on adaptation and biological impacts,
to use the data to explore the potential future response of the Earth
system to CDR. We welcome other modeling groups interested in submitting
simulations to join CDR-MIP.

We acknowledge support for this workshop from the Institute for Advanced
Sustainability Studies and a German Research Foundation (DFG) grant (KE
2149/1-1) and thank Vivian Scott for help in preparing the manuscript.
CDR-MIP is jointly led by David Keller, Andrew Lenton, Naomi Vaughan, and
Vivian Scott.

—Andrew Lenton (email: [email protected]), Oceans and Atmosphere,
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Hobart,
Australia; and Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Co-operative Research
Centre, Hobart, Australia; David Keller, GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean
Research, Kiel, Germany; and Patrik Pfister, Climate and Environmental
Physics, Physics Institute, University of Bern, Switzerland; and Oeschger
Center for Climate Change Research, University of Bern, Switzerland
Citation: Lenton, A., D. Keller, and P. Pfister (2017), How will Earth
respond to plans for carbon dioxide removal?, Eos, 98,
https://doi.org/10.1029/2017EO068385. Published on 22 March 2017.

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