Please welcome Cornell Professor Doug MacMartin in conversation on Solar 
Radiation Management at the HPAC meeting this Thursday, October 19 4:30 - 6:00 
PM EDT. 

Please circulate this invitation to interested colleagues. 

 https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88954851189?pwd=WVZoeTBnN3kyZFoyLzYxZ1JNbDFPUT09
 

Title: Model Simulations of Climate Interventions Aiming to Offset Future 
Warming: Insights and Uncertainties
 
Speaker: Professor. Douglas MacMartin, Cornell University
 
Talk Overview: 

Decadal-average global warming is approaching 1.2 C and it is likely that the 
1.5 C goal from the Paris Agreement will be passed in the next decade or so. 
Global warming is now being experienced through the increasing likelihood of 
severe weather, more intense storms, destabilization of major glacial streams, 
increasing rate of rise of sea level, and more, all driven by the ongoing 
emissions of greenhouse gas emissions. 

With the present and projected pace of emissions mitigation, global warming is 
projected to at least double before net-zero emissions are reached up to a few 
decades after mid-century, with corresponding increased impacts and risks. 

With all nations committed to the goal of keeping global warming to no more 
than 1.5 C and climate intervention becoming the only option for preventing 
further warming, modeling studies have started looking at climate intervention 
scenarios that would offset further warming, stabilizing the climate at 1.5C, 
or restoring back to 1.0C or lower.  

Doug will report on the status of climate stabilization studies using 
stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI), providing an overview of what would be 
involved, including options such as more polar-focused deployments, what the 
resulting stabilized climate would be like and how long it might take to reach 
a desired cooling, what the key uncertainties are and how they might compare to 
the types of consequences that might trigger calls for intervention, and what 
research is needed to provide the firmer information needed for early rather 
than late-stage emergency intervention to be considered as a potential policy 
scenario.
 
Biography (from https://www.mae.cornell.edu/faculty-directory/douglas-macmartin)
Douglas MacMartin is an Associate Professor in the Sibley School of Mechanical 
and Aerospace Engineering at Cornell University. 

His research focuses on Sunlight Reflection Methods (SRM, also known as climate 
engineering, solar geoengineering, or climate intervention), with the aim of 
helping to develop the knowledge base necessary to support informed future 
societal decisions in this challenging and controversial field. 

He has published extensively on the subject, and in addition to public and 
academic presentations has provided briefings to the UN Environment Program and 
testimony to the US Congress, and he was a member of the US National Academies 
panel that made recommendations on both research and governance in March 2021. 

Doug received his Ph.D. in Aeronautics and Astronautics from MIT in 1992; 
previous positions include United Technologies Research Center (1994-2000) and 
the California Institute of Technology (2000-2015). His research is funded by 
NSF and by the Cornell Atkinson Center for a Sustainable Future.
 
Herb Simmens
Author of A Climate Vocabulary of the Future
“A SciencePoem and an Inspiration.” Kim Stanley Robinson
@herbsimmens
HerbSimmens.com

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