https://www.annualreviews.org/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-environ-112321-081911

*Authors*
Edward A. Parson, and David W. Keith

*August 21, 2024*

*Abstract*
Solar geoengineering, also called sunlight reflection or solar radiation
modification (SRM), is a potential climate response that would cool the
Earth's surface and reduce many other climate changes by scattering on
order 1% of incoming sunlight back to space. SRM can only imperfectly
correct for elevated greenhouse gases, but it might complement other
climate responses to reduce risks, while also bringing new risks and new
challenges to global governance. As climate alarm and calls for effective
near-term action mount, SRM is attracting sharply increased attention and
controversy, with many calls for expanded research and governance
consultations along with ongoing concerns about risks, misuse, or
overreliance. We review SRM's history, methods, potential uses and impacts,
and governance needs, prioritizing the approach that is most prominent and
promising, stratospheric aerosol injection. We identify several
policy-relevant characteristics of SRM interventions and identify four
narratives that capture current arguments over how SRM might be developed
or used in socio-political context to either beneficial or destructive
effect, with implications for near-term research, assessment, and
governance activity.

*Source: Annual Reviews*

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