http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/projects/gmrc/

CLIMATE & GLOBAL
DYNAMICS

Research
Interdisciplinary Projects
GMRC
GEOENGINEERING MODELING RESEARCH CONSORTIUM

Mission
The mission of the Geoengineering Modeling Research Consortium (GMRC) is to
identify and prioritize critical research gaps in climate modeling with
specific significance to geoengineering, and to coordinate amongst U.S.
researchers to close those gaps through collaborative model assessment and
development efforts.

Vision
Solar geoengineering is rapidly gaining interest in research and policy
arenas, yet there are numerous critical gaps in our understanding of the
physical effects of solar radiation management on the climate. Solar
geoengineering acts on the climate in a way which is somewhat different
from greenhouse gases or other more commonly-modeled or observed climate
forcers. As such, these gaps might not be addressed by existing climate
modeling efforts. Responsible decision support requires that these gaps be
closed. Computer modeling can not only aid in closing these gaps, but also
in identifying future priorities for additional research avenues, such as
laboratory or field experiments.

Through the GMRC, we aim to build a collaborative environment amongst U.S.
researchers interested in solar geoengineering whereby these key
uncertainties can be identified and addressed through modeling. This has
the added advantage that any single researcher or group may have limited
time and multiple competing priorities, but by pooling resources on high
priority problems, steady progress can be made in answering critical
questions about solar geoengineering. GMRC activities will complement and
interface with existing solar geoengineering research efforts, such as the
Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP), with each project
informing others for mutual benefit.

Scope
The GMRC will coordinate modeling efforts by U.S.-based research teams to
reveal — and close — gaps in process-level and climatic understanding of
the effects of stratospheric aerosol geoengineering. Collaborations with
non-U.S. researchers will be pursued as needed. The ultimate aim is that
findings produced by GMRC researchers will enable society-relevant
applications such as policy development and impacts studies, although the
GMRC will not directly conduct research in those areas.

Steering Committee
Sebastian Eastham, MIT [ [email protected] ]
David Keith, Harvard University [ [email protected] ]
Ben Kravitz, Indiana University [ [email protected] ]
Jadwiga (Yaga) Richter, NCAR [ [email protected] ]
Karen Rosenlof, NOAA [ [email protected] ]
Lili Xia, Rutgers University [ [email protected] ]
Jean-Francois Lamarque, NCAR *ex-officio
Members
American University, Valentina Aquila
California Institute of Technology, Tapio Schneider
Colorado State University, Jim Hurrell, Jeff Pierce
Cornell University, Doug MacMartin, Daniel Visioni
Harvard University, Coleen Golja, Peter Irvine, David Keith, Debra
Weisenstein
Indiana University, Ben Kravitz
MIT, Sebastian Eastham
NASA, Peter Colarco
NCAR, Katie Dagon, John Fasullo, Jean-François Lamarque, Gerald Meehl, Mike
Mills, Jadwiga (Yaga) H. Richter, Isla Simpson, Simone Tilmes, Joe Tribbia
NOAA, Amy Butler, David Fahey, Larry Horowitz, Vaishali Naik, Karen Rosenlof
PNNL, Phil Rasch
Princeton University, Gabe Vecchi
MIT, Sebastian Eastham
Rutgers University, Alan Robock, Lili Xia
Meetings & Workshops
1st GMRC Workshop: May 20-21, 2019, NCAR Boulder, CO [ Meeting Synthesis
PDF ]
2nd GMRC Workshop: Fall 2019, Harvard University, Boston, MA

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