https://www.nature.com/articles/s43017-019-0004-7

Uncertainty and the basis for confidence in solar geoengineering research
Ben Kravitz & Douglas G. MacMartin
Nature Reviews Earth & Environment volume 1, pages64–75(2020)Cite this
article

Abstract
Solar geoengineering is an emerging topic in climate-change discussions. To
support future decisions on the deployment of this technology, society
requires better estimates of its environmental impacts and limitations. As
solar geoengineering has never been deployed, conclusions about its
climatic effects are primarily obtained through models and natural
analogues. As such, our confidence in projections of solar geoengineering,
the basis for that confidence and how our confidence can be improved is
limited. In this Perspective, we review our current understanding of
uncertainty and risk in solar geoengineering via stratospheric aerosols.
Using a risk-register framework, we illustrate key uncertainties, such as
sub-grid-scale mixing or effects of stratospheric heating, investigations
of which should be prioritized to transition the field to a mission-driven
research agenda. We conclude with recommendations for possible avenues of
research, including targeted model intercomparisons and appropriately
governed small-scale field experiments.

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