https://www.silverlining.ngo/climate-intervention

ENHANCING NATURAL PROCESSES FOR COOLING CLIMATE COULD REDUCE WARMING

While the origin of climate change is greenhouse gases, the direct cause of
stress on ecosystems, infrastructure, and people is increased heat energy
trapped in the atmosphere. Scientific assessments to date, including a 2015
report
<https://www.nap.edu/catalog/18988/climate-intervention-reflecting-sunlight-to-cool-earth>
by the National Academy of Sciences, have found that the most promising
approaches to rapidly reducing this heat energy are related to one way that
nature regulates the planet’s temperature: the reflection of sunlight from
clouds and particles in the atmosphere. Early modeling studies suggest that
increasing the reflection of sunlight from the atmosphere by just 1% could
offset a doubling of CO2 in the atmosphere, or the equivalent of several
degrees of warming.

The most sophisticated modeling study to date of one approach to increasing
sunlight reflection used a global climate model to simulate Earth’s surface
temperatures in a scenario of high emissions against a scenario in which
particles are dispersed in the stratosphere to increase sunlight reflection
from 2024-2100.  In the scenario with this type of “solar climate
intervention”, all parts of the world had temperatures close to today’s and
conditions that were safer for people.

There are considerable risks to these approaches, including changes in
precipitation, atmospheric circulation and clouds, that must be better
understood to determine whether this approach merits serious consideration
as a climate response. These risks must be assessed and weighed against the
escalating risks of warming.
------------------------------
PROMINENT CLIMATE INTERVENTION APPROACHES ARE BASED ON OBSERVATIONS FROM
NATURE

Approaches for increasing the reflection of sunlight, sometimes called
“solar climate intervention” or “solar geoengineering,” recommended for
research by scientists are based on phenomena that have been observed in
the natural system.

*Marine Cloud Brightening*

Today, particles from pollution and their brightening effect on clouds in
the lower atmosphere are thought to be producing a significant cooling
effect that offsets some warming. The IPCC estimates this “cloud-aerosol”
cooling effect to be somewhere between 0.5 and 1.1°C.  Specifically,
emissions from ships have a marked effect on the brightness of ocean
clouds, that can be seen in observations from space as “ship-tracks.” One
proposed approach to cooling climate is to spray salt mist from sea water,
from ships or autonomous vessels, into regions of susceptible marine
stratocumulus clouds in a way that optimizes the cloud-aerosol effect.
Studies suggest that by brightening 10-25% of these clouds (representing
3-5% of the ocean’s surface), it may be possible to offset a doubling of
CO2. But the magnitude of the effect is uncertain without more research,
and effects on weather and circulation are an area of concern.

*Stratospheric Intervention*

In 1991, emissions from the eruption of Mount Pinatubo cooled the planet by
0.5 °C for nearly two years, leading to a recovery of Arctic ice during the
period. Scientists have proposed that there may be more optimized ways to
disperse particles in the stratosphere—possibly with cleaner materials—to
produce a similar cooling effect. Historical observations provide a high
degree of confidence in the cooling that can be produced in this way, and
uncertainties center on the risks, particularly as they might unfold over
time periods longer than the lifespan of particles in the stratosphere (a
year or two). In particular, scientists hope to explore the effect on the
chemistry of the stratosphere that might lead to damage to the ozone layer
or changes in atmospheric circulation. Related to this, researchers hope to
study both the effects of material released by volcanoes (SO2) and other
materials that may have more favorable properties (calcium carbonate or
diamonds).

*Cirrus Cloud Thinning*

Cirrus clouds in the upper troposphere reflect more sunlight back to Earth
than they reflect out to space, so by 'thinning' the reflective capacity of
these clouds more light could be released from below into space. This could
be done by injecting particles into cirrus clouds that catalyze the
formation of ice crystals in the clouds, causing them to precipitate and
'thin.' This approach does not have a natural or anthropogenic analog, and
thus would require considerable experimentation to determine if the
behavior predicted by the theory occurs in the physical world.
------------------------------
IMPERATIVE FOR RESEARCH

There are a number of emerging research efforts to determine the
feasibility and risks of climate interventions to help slow Earth's
warming. But research is very nascent, and scientists think it could take a
decade of research to evaluate these approaches, including both specific
research in interventions and accelerating observations and predictions of
the Earth system. This work is imperative so that policymakers and members
of society are equipped to assess the risk and benefits of these approaches
against escalating near-term climate risks and the need to ensure safety.

Explore current climate intervention research efforts here
<https://www.silverlining.ngo/research-efforts>.

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