https://www.c2g2.net/would-solar-radiation-modification-increase-or-decrease-overall-risk/

Would solar radiation modification increase or decrease overall risk?

*Guest post by Tyler Felgenhauer, Govindasamy Bala, Mark Borsuk, Matthew
Brune, Inés Camilloni, Jonathan Wiener, and Jianhua Xu*

A key consideration in deciding whether to pursue solar radiation
modification (SRM) to offset global warming should be a comparison of the
extent of climate risk that the technology is able to reduce against the
severity of any countervailing risks that it may engender.
*SRM as a potential risk reduction strategy *

It may not be widely appreciated that even if humanity were to achieve
significant reductions in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions atmospheric
concentrations would continue to rise. Only net-zero emissions (NZE) would
flatten GHG concentration trajectories. Even after NZE were to be achieved,
however, a changed climate would persist for decades to centuries because
of the long lifetime of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Thus, in addition
to aggressive emissions reductions, carbon dioxide removal (CDR) will need
to be a key piece of a broader response portfolio intended to bring down
global mean surface temperature. Further, adaptation will be necessary to
mitigate damages from residual warming. Some climate scientists have
suggested that it may also be worth considering some form of solar
radiation modification (SRM) as a means for reducing some climate risks
while societies pursue these other measures.   Many analyses of GHG
emissions reductions, CDR, and SRM tend to focus on their effects on global
temperature, but a broader “risk-risk analysis” can help to identify and
assess a wider array of relevant risks.
*What is SRM?*

SRM refers to a range of large-scale approaches that increase the amount of
sunlight that is reflected back to space. For example, a method called
stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) would involve the intentional release
of highly reflective fine particles, such as sulfate aerosols, into the
stratosphere. The idea is that the resulting reduction in solar radiation
reaching the Earth’s surface would offset some or all of the warming caused
by GHG concentrations. Thus, rather than addressing the root cause of
climate change by attempting to slow or reverse GHG accumulation in the
atmosphere, SRM is intentional anthropogenic climate change of another
form. Once the necessary technology and infrastructure are developed, SAI
in particular could be a fairly inexpensive means of cooling the Earth
relatively quickly and at a global scale. (Other proposed SRM options
include brightening of low-level marine clouds through injection of
sea-salt aerosols, increasing the reflectivity of the Earth’s surface
through various means, or even placing mirrors in space.) SAI would not
completely offset climate change in all regions and all seasons and would
need to be deployed continuously, as its effects are only temporary. The
approach may also be risky because of the potential for unexpected
interactions with the climate and the possible introduction of new
biophysical and societal risks. Decisions regarding the possible
development or deployment of SAI or other forms of SRM may thus come down
to the question of whether these approaches increase or decrease overall
risk, and for whom.
*Risk vs. risk*

Our research team recently presented <https://bit.ly/SRM-Risk-Risk> an
analytical framework for comparing the climate change risks in a future
world without SAI against the aggregate of residual and newly generated
risks in a future world that includes SAI as part of a portfolio of climate
risk mitigation approaches. Such a framework was explicitly called for by the
recent U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine
report, “Reflecting Sunlight: Recommendations for Solar Geoengineering and
Research Governance.”
<https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/25762/reflecting-sunlight-recommendations-for-solar-geoengineering-research-and-research-governance>
The
framework’s further development and use would enable more comprehensive
evaluation and enactment of various possible climate change management
strategies. By identifying and comparing the extent to which these
strategies impact climate as the target risk, introduce novel
countervailing risks of their own, and potentially generate other
co-benefits, the risk-risk framework
<https://www.worldcat.org/title/risk-versus-risk-tradeoffs-in-protecting-health-and-the-environment/oclc/32202338>
can
aid in policy deliberation and minimize the heuristics and biases that can
cloud sound decision making.

Our implementation of the risk-risk framework demonstrated the value of
this approach for assessing SRM, and laid the groundwork for more detailed
further analyses; still, we offered the following preliminary findings:

   - As a supplement to GHG emissions reductions, CDR, and adaptation, SRM
   has the potential to yield large direct benefits to humans and natural
   ecosystems by lessening the near-term damages of climate change and
   lowering the chances of crossing catastrophic climate tipping points.
   - SRM could pose countervailing risks to biophysical systems, including
   changes in stratospheric ozone and surface UV radiation, acid rain, and
   unintended changes in temperature and precipitation patterns. The extent of
   these risks could be controlled to some degree by appropriate design and
   governance of implementation.
   - SRM may also pose countervailing risks to societal systems, including
   the risk of international conflict, the risk of rapid climate change
   resulting from unplanned sudden termination, and the risk of delaying or
   discouraging GHG emissions mitigation. Here too, the extent of these risks
   would depend on the design and governance of implementation.
   - SRM could provide co-benefits, including an increase in diffuse
   sunlight, possibly benefitting some crops and ecosystems, and slightly
   reduced tropospheric ozone in the mid and high latitudes. However, these
   effects are likely to be small, uncertain, and unlikely to play a
   significant role in risk-risk tradeoffs.
   - More extensive use of SRM may yield greater reductions in many
   temperature-related climate risks but is also likely to increase the level
   of countervailing risks. The sooner and greater we make GHG emissions
   reductions, the less need there may be for SRM, thereby likely reducing
   overall risk exposure (subject to any countervailing risks of emission
   reduction).
   - Risk-risk analysis can help focus climate change risk management on
   broader societal objectives, rather than on temperature goals alone. This
   can be important, as many climate impacts do not scale directly with
   temperature.
   - Existing international governance aimed at addressing climate change
   and its impacts appears to be inadequately designed for addressing SRM and
   its distinctive characteristics. Governance of SRM may need to restrain the
   imposition of global risks through hasty or unwise unilateral action, which
   is a different challenge than mobilizing collective action to reduce GHG
   emissions. Thus, it may be necessary to draw on lessons from a wider array
   of international agreements and institutions.

The specific benefits and risks of SRM implementation would depend on a
number of other decisions, including the particular objectives being
pursued, the emission pathway and adaptation plans being followed, and the
governance framework in place. Conceptually, the emissions pathway and
anticipated adaptive capacity would determine the level of residual climate
risk that might be addressed by SRM. Decisions and governance on SRM should
then seek to simultaneously minimize the combination of these climate risks
and the climate and countervailing risks posed by SRM. To make these
tradeoffs explicit across a range of policy portfolios, in our report we
consider three specific climate risk management scenarios with different
relative contributions of mitigation and SRM. The specific response
patterns of climate and countervailing risks to varying levels of SRM are
not currently well known and are likely to depend on the particular
technology, deployment strategy, and governance mechanisms employed.
Determining these patterns of risk response to SRM levels should be a
research topic of high priority.
*Authors**Tyler Felgenhauer is Director of Climate Research at the Duke
Center on Risk, Duke University.**Govindasamy Bala is Professor at the
Centre for Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, Indian Institute of Science.**Mark
Borsuk is Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Pratt School of
Engineering, and Co-Director of the Duke Center on Risk, Duke
University.**Matthew
Brune is a Research Fellow at the Duke Center on Risk, at Duke
University.**Inés
Camilloni is Profesor at Universidad de Buenos Aires, Facultad de **Ciencias
Exactas y Naturales, Departamento de Ciencias de la Atmósfera y **los
Océanos and CONICET – Universidad de Buenos Aires. Centro de **Investigaciones
del Mar y la Atmósfera.**Jonathan B. Wiener is the Perkins Professor of Law
and Professor of Environmental Policy and Public Policy, at the Law School,
Nicholas School, and Sanford School, and Co-Director of the Duke Center on
Risk, at Duke University.**XU Jianhua is Associate Professor in the
Department of Environmental Management, College of Environmental Sciences
and Engineering and Institute for Global Health and Development at Peking
University.*

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