Termination shock from solar geoengineering could worsen climate costs

Solar geoengineering might reduce the economic impacts of climate change, but abruptly halting it could trigger a rapid temperature rebound known as termination shock, potentially causing greater damage than unchecked warming. Researchers warn that this risk underscores the need for sustained international cooperation. Without emission cuts, global temperatures could rise 4.5°C by 2100, leading to $868 billion in damages.

A new study highlights the double-edged nature of solar radiation modification (SRM), a proposed method to combat climate change by injecting sulphur dioxide aerosols into the stratosphere to reflect sunlight and cool the planet. While SRM could limit warming to 2.8°C above pre-industrial levels if started in 2020, thereby halving projected economic losses from $868 billion to around $434 billion by 2100, the dangers emerge if the program ends prematurely.

Francisco Estrada of the National Autonomous University of Mexico and his team modeled scenarios showing that a sudden termination in 2030 would cause temperatures to rebound by 0.6°C over eight years. This rapid spike, termed termination shock, could exceed $1 trillion in damages by century's end, surpassing the costs of unabated warming. "It would be much worse if we have a termination shock than if we did nothing," Estrada stated.

The research emphasizes not just total warming but its speed, as fast changes leave little adaptation time and risk tipping points like ice sheet collapse. Gernot Wagner of Columbia University praised the approach: "Solar geoengineering is riskier than it looks at first glance."

Real-world efforts, such as Make Sunsets releasing over 200 sulphur dioxide balloons—including in Mexico, prompting a ban threat—and Stardust raising $75 million to lobby the US, illustrate growing interest. A New Scientist survey found two-thirds of scientists anticipate large-scale SRM this century. However, sustaining it requires at least 100 aircraft dispersing millions of tonnes of aerosols annually, uninterrupted by conflicts or disruptions.

The study concludes SRM benefits only with termination risks below a few tenths of a percent yearly or a gradual phase-out over 15 years. In low-emission futures, up to 10% risk might be tolerable. Estrada described a "governance paradox": effective global mitigation would obviate the need for SRM, yet SRM demands such cooperation. Chad Baum of Aarhus University noted that funding research, like from The Degrees Initiative, aids vulnerable nations without sliding toward deployment. Wagner urged more studies on trade-offs amid rising emissions.

Makala yanayohusiana

Climate scientists analyzing implausible high-emissions scenarios on digital screens in a lab setting.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Climate-scenario designers move away from RCP8.5 in next-generation modeling framework

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI Imethibitishwa ukweli

A new scenario framework for CMIP7—the standardized set of emissions pathways used by many climate modelers and referenced in IPCC assessments—concludes that CMIP6’s highest-emissions pathway, SSP5-8.5 (and its earlier counterpart, RCP8.5), has become “implausible” given recent energy-cost trends, climate policy developments and emissions patterns.

New research indicates that a limited nuclear conflict between India and Pakistan could harm the ozone layer as severely as a larger war between the United States and Russia.

Imeripotiwa na AI

An international team led by MIT scientists has identified higher-than-expected leakage from industrial feedstock chemicals as a key factor slowing the ozone layer's recovery. Their analysis estimates this could delay return to 1980 levels by up to seven years, from 2066 to 2073. Researchers urge tighter controls under the Montreal Protocol to address the issue.

Researchers at Columbia University have identified the precise mechanism by which rising carbon dioxide levels cool the upper atmosphere. The finding accounts for decades of observed stratospheric cooling amid surface warming. Their study appears in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Jumapili, 28. Mwezi wa sita 2026, 03:35:20

Environment minister warns of enormous economic damage from heat

Ijumaa, 19. Mwezi wa sita 2026, 08:06:45

Study links hotter nights to trillions in lost earnings

Alhamisi, 11. Mwezi wa sita 2026, 05:25:28

Indirect gases drive 15 percent of global warming

Jumanne, 5. Mwezi wa tano 2026, 10:00:39

Satellite reentries pollute Earth's upper atmosphere with metals

Jumatatu, 13. Mwezi wa nne 2026, 19:12:36

AMOC collapse could release 640 billion tonnes of CO2

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa