https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10584-023-03561-w

*Authors*
Michael S. Diamond, Kelly Wanser & Olivier Boucher

Climatic Change volume 176, Article number: 96 (2023)

*04 July 2023*

*Abstract*
As the world struggles to limit warming to 1.5 or 2 °C below pre-industrial
temperatures, research into solar climate interventions that could
temporarily offset some amount of greenhouse gas-driven global warming by
reflecting more sunlight back out to space has gained prominence. These
solar climate intervention techniques would aim to cool the Earth by
injecting aerosols (tiny liquid or solid particles suspended in the
atmosphere) into the upper atmosphere or into low-altitude marine clouds.
In a new development, “cooling credits” are now being marketed that claim
to offset a certain amount of greenhouse gas warming with aerosol-based
cooling. The science of solar climate intervention is currently too
uncertain and the quantification of effects insufficient for any such
claims to be credible in the near term. More fundamentally, however, the
environmental impacts of greenhouse gases and aerosols are too different
for such credits to be an appropriate instrument for reducing climate risk
even if scientific uncertainties were narrowed and robust monitoring
systems put in place. While some form of commercial mechanism for solar
climate intervention implementation, in the event it is used, is likely,
“cooling credits” are unlikely to be a viable climate solution, either now
or in the future.

*Source: SpringerLink*

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