Dear Phil,

I wouldn't phrase it as drastically. If
-- emission reductions are implemented "with gusto"
-- CDR works fairly well
-- climate sensitivity is not on the higher end of current estimates
the 1.5 degrees goal is still within reach (see the most ambitious
scenarios of the recent IPCC AR6 WG1, e.g. SRM fig 4). If furthermore
-- tipping points and other nastiness is indeed limited below 1.5 degrees
there is some hope that even without SRM earth remains liveable, though we
would still have serious problems with e.g. sea level rise.

The question is, do we dare to bet on all these conditions? If not, then we
should seriously consider SRM but meanwhile keep reducing emissions as much
as we can.
It is a bit frightening that the only scenario in IPCC AR6 WG1 SPM fig 4
that has a* chance* to stay below 1.5deg (depends on climate sensitivity)
assumes we will have massive net negative emissions from ca 2055, while we
still don't know whether such negative emissions are feasible at the
required scale: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-018-05938-3.

Best
Claudia

ps: I've tried to word these thoughts in a simple way here:
https://www.uu.nl/en/news/chemotherapy-for-the-climate-the-need-for-risk-risk-balancing-in-assessing-solar-geoengineering



Op vr 6 mei 2022 om 16:55 schreef Phil M <[email protected]>:

> Hi, I've heard that SRM is necessary because neither emissions reductions
> nor GHG removal strategies, even if enacted globally with gusto, can
> possibly impact rising temperatures before we won't have an ecosystem left
> that can support human life, or most other life for that matter. So it's
> really about not having enough time left to NOT turn to SRM, which also
> voids the moral hazard argument as well. But I haven't been able to find
> any hard research confirming this. Has anyone found such research?
>
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