https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2023EGUGA..2513893M/abstract

*Authors*
Martinez Montero, Marina
<https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/search/q=author:%22Martinez+Montero%2C+Marina%22&sort=date%20desc,%20bibcode%20desc>
; Crucifix, Michel
<https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/search/q=author:%22Crucifix%2C+Michel%22&sort=date%20desc,%20bibcode%20desc>
; Brede, Nuria
<https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/search/q=author:%22Brede%2C+Nuria%22&sort=date%20desc,%20bibcode%20desc>
; Botta, Nicola
<https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/search/q=author:%22Botta%2C+Nicola%22&sort=date%20desc,%20bibcode%20desc>
; Couplet, Victor
<https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/search/q=author:%22Couplet%2C+Victor%22&sort=date%20desc,%20bibcode%20desc>

Publication:
EGU23, the 25th EGU General Assembly, held 23-28 April, 2023 in Vienna,
Austria and Online. Online at https://egu23.eu/, id. EGU-13893
 Pub Date: *May 2023* DOI:

10.5194/egusphere-egu23-13893
<https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/link_gateway/2023EGUGA..2513893M/doi:10.5194/egusphere-egu23-13893>


*Abstract*

Decisions are usually taken sequentially in climate change policy: every
certain amount of years, new agreements and promises are made about
greenhouse gas emission reduction etc. In the intersection of decision
theory and climate science, sequential decision problems can be formulated
and solved, to find optimal sequences of policies and support policy makers
with some advice.There are, however, many uncertainties affecting the
outcome of these optimisations. Since these decision problems tend to be
very simple in comparison with the complexity of the real world, knowing
how different uncertainties affect optimal policies might be more important
than what the optimal policy comes out to be. In this work, we explore how
some uncertainties affect optimal policies and the possible trajectories
associated with those optimal policies. For this aim we formulate a
sequential decision problem with a single "global" policy maker. The
decision problem starts with the world state in 2020 and decisions are
taken every 10 years till 2100. The policy maker has options regarding CO2
emissions reduction, geoengineering in the form of solar radiation
modification and carbon dioxide removal.We simulate the effects of the
decisions on the world's state with SURFER. SURFER is a simple and fast
model featuring a carbon cycle responsive to positive and negative
emissions, it allows for geoengineering and accounts for sea level rise
from ice sheets (containing tipping points) and from ocean expansion and
glacier melt. SURFER has been shown to reproduce the globally averaged
behavior of earth system models and models of intermediate complexity from
decades to millennia. As opposed to some optimal decision problems in the
context of climate change which use integrated assessment models of the
climate and the economy, here, with the aim of transparency and simplicity,
we consider only a climate model. We define a modular and transparent cost
function that contains what the policy maker cares about. This function is
a linear sum of costs associated with: green transition, geoengineering use
and risks, temperature and ocean acidification damages and long term sea
level rise commitments.Using this decision problem we investigate how
different kinds of uncertainties affect the sequence of optimal policies
obtained and the optimal trajectories associated with those optimal
policies. We consider three different kinds of uncertainties: uncertainties
in the priorities of the decision maker (i.e., in the reward, cost or
utility function), uncertainties on some physical parameters (in
particular, climate sensitivity and ice sheet tipping points) and political
uncertainty (policymaker's decisions may not be implemented).
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