Concerns grow over effects of solar geoengineering
The latest studies on solar geoengineering to tackle climate change
are reinforcing the case for a global governance system and further
study before deployment, as they show that the approach may have little
effect on preventing rainfall changes in the tropics — and may even lead
to widespread drought in Africa. Several geoengineering initiatives plan
to tackle climate change by cutting incoming sunlight, through methods
such as spreading reflective aerosols in the stratosphere.
But without also removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, such
plans would fail to fully mitigate change in rainfall in the tropics, a
study published in Nature Geoscience last week
Using a series of climate models, the authors show that even if
global temperatures do not rise, the rise in carbon dioxide alone will
disrupt rainfall patterns. This is because much future rainfall change
in the tropics is expected to happen independently of surface warming;
instead it will be driven by a shift in atmospheric vertical motions,
induced by a rise in carbon dioxide.
"Our atmosphere is continuously trapping and losing heat
through infrared radiation from the sun. This is what drives circulation
of the atmosphere that is responsible for rainfall," says Steven
Sherwood, co-author of the study and a meteorologist at the Climate
Change Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Australia.
Increased carbon dioxide traps more infrared radiation, which heats up
the atmosphere, adds Sandrine Bony, lead author of the study and a
climatologist at the Pierre & Marie Curie University in Paris, France.
The expected changes in tropical rainfall vary greatly from region to
region. "But whatever the changes, societies globally are vulnerable to
them," she says.
"This study shows that many different models are pointing in the same
direction," says Guojun Gu, a meteorologist at the University of
Maryland, United States, who was not involved in this paper and is
sceptical about the benefits of geoengineering.
Meanwhile another study, published in Nature Climate Change (31
March), finds that aerosol projects could badly affect some areas of the
developing world and calls for further study to assess possible impacts
before consensus on global governance can be reached.
Spraying fine particles into the upper atmosphere could cause calamitous
drought in the Sahel region of Africa, the authors report.
They note that major volcanic eruptions — which act as natural
geoengineering models as they spew fine particles into the atmosphere —
in the northern hemisphere from 1900 to 2010 preceded three of the four
driest summers in the region.
But rainfall may increase in the Sahel region if fine particles were
spread in the southern hemisphere, they say.
The authors conclude that "a global governance agreement for
geoengineering is essential before any practical geoengineering system
is deployed".
"It is clear that reducing greenhouse gases emissions is the first, most
fundamental, and most essential element of reducing harms from climate
change," says Edward Parson, a law professor and co-director of the
Emmett Center on Climate Change and the Environment at the University of
California, Los Angeles.
"Geoengineering is at best a partial or second choice."
In another paper, published in Science (14 March), Parson and
David Keith, a physicist at Harvard University, argue for
internationally coordinated and transparent research on geoengineering.
"In our paper we do not advocate geoengineering," Parson says. "Instead
we advocate research into geoengineering so the capability is available
and tested. Recognising that geoengineering may cause harm, and that it
cannot reverse all effects of climate change, does not negate the value
of having the capability available."
Link to full study in Nature Geoscience
Link to full study in Nature Climate Change
Link to full study in Science
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