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A
two-pronged approach to stabilizing climate, with cuts in greenhouse
gas emissions as well as injections of climate-cooling sulfates,
could prove more effective than either approach used separately.
This is the finding of a new study by Tom Wigley of the National
Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), published in the September
14 issue of Science. Wigley calculates the impact of injecting
sulfate particles, or aerosols, every one to four years into the
stratosphere in amounts equal to those lofted by the volcanic
eruption of Mt. Pintabuto in 1991. If found to be environmentally
and technologically viable, such injections could provide a "grace
period" of up to 20 years before major cutbacks in greenhouse gas
emissions would be required, he concludes.
"A combined approach to climate stabilization has a number of
advantages over either employed separately," says Wigley. His study
was supported by the National Science Foundation, NCAR's primary
sponsor.
The Science paper does not endorse any particular approach to
reducing climate change, nor is it intended to address the many
technical and political challenges involved in potential
geoengineering efforts. Instead, it analyzes whether the
much-discussed idea of injecting sulfates into the stratosphere
could, in fact, slow down global warming and therefore provide more
time for society to reduce the emissions of carbon dioxide.
If climate change were addressed only through mitigation (emissions
reduction), then massive cuts in emissions would be needed in order
to keep temperatures from rising more than 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit
(2.0 degrees Celsius) over present levels. This amount of warming
has often been cited as a benchmark of dangerous climate change.
Given the difficulties of making such massive cuts, scientists
recently have begun to reexamine a variety of schemes proposed over
the last few decades to reduce the impact of climate change through
global-scale technological fixes. These approaches are often
referred to as geoengineering. One strategy first proposed in the
1970s is to inject large amounts of sun-blocking sulfate particles
into the stratosphere via aircraft or other means. The idea would be
to cool the climate for a year or more with each injection, much as
the largest volcanic eruptions do.
"Geoengineering could provide additional time to address the
economic and technological challenges faced by a mitigation-only
approach," says Wigley.
A model experiment with two scenarios
Using a computer model to track sunlight and other energy flowing
into and out of the Earth system, Wigley examined two scenarios that
project the impact of emissions on climate from now to the year
2400. In one scenario, total emissions would have to start dropping
immediately, and would have to be cut by around 50 percent in the
next 50 years, in order to keep global climate from warming by more
than the 2 degrees C benchmark. An alternative scenario, the
"overshoot" approach, allows a period of increasing total emissions,
extending to the 2030s, before stringent cutbacks begin.
To see how geoengineering might change this picture, Wigley took the
overshoot scenario and added three frequencies of Pinatubo-scale
injections of sulfates into the stratosphere. The frequencies were
equivalent to an eruption every year, every two years, and every
four years. In all three cases, global temperature stayed
approximately constant for the next 40 to 50 years. After 2050, the
cumulative effect of greenhouse gases produced a slow temperature
rise, though it was muted by the injections.
Injections on a scale equal to Pinatubo were examined because that
volcanic eruption did not seriously disrupt the climate system
beyond a short-term cooling, says Wigley.
No panacea
Geoengineering is not a panacea, Wigley notes. For example, carbon
dioxide from fossil fuel burning has led to an increased
acidification of Earth's oceans. Even if geoengineering could help
limit global warming, the oceans would continue to acidify as
greenhouse-gas emissions climb, threatening certain marine
ecosystems.
Mitigation alone can potentially solve both the warming and ocean
acidification problems, but it has its own set of difficulties, says
Wigley. The rapid emissions reductions required to keep below the 2
degree C warming threshold would be costly, perhaps unacceptably so,
and would pose severe technological challenges.
"A relatively modest geoengineering investment could reduce the
economic and technological burden on mitigation by deferring the
need for immediate or near-future cuts in carbon dioxide emissions,"
Wigley says.
From
ScienceDaily
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