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Published online on June 4, 2007, 10.1073/pnas.0700419104 OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE


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Environmental Sciences-Physical Sciences
Transient climate-carbon simulations of planetary geoengineering

( carbon cycle | climate change | geoengineering | climate forcing | managing solar radiation )

H. Damon Matthews {dagger} and Ken Caldeira

Department of Global Ecology, Carnegie Institution of Washington, 290 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305

Edited by David M. Karl, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI, and approved April 25, 2007 (received for review January 16, 2007)

Geoengineering (the intentional modification of Earth's climate) has been proposed as a means of reducing CO2-induced climate warming while greenhouse gas emissions continue. Most proposals involve managing incoming solar radiation such that future greenhouse gas forcing is counteracted by reduced solar forcing. In this study, we assess the transient climate response to geoengineering under a business-as-usual CO2 emissions scenario by using an intermediate-complexity global climate model that includes an interactive carbon cycle. We find that the climate system responds quickly to artificially reduced insolation; hence, there may be little cost to delaying the deployment of geoengineering strategies until such a time as "dangerous" climate change is imminent. Spatial temperature patterns in the geoengineered simulation are comparable with preindustrial temperatures, although this is not true for precipitation. Carbon sinks in the model increase in response to geoengineering. Because geoengineering acts to mask climate warming, there is a direct CO2-driven increase in carbon uptake without an offsetting temperature-driven suppression of carbon sinks. However, this strengthening of carbon sinks, combined with the potential for rapid climate adjustment to changes in solar forcing, leads to serious consequences should geoengineering fail or be stopped abruptly. Such a scenario could lead to very rapid climate change, with warming rates up to 20 times greater than present-day rates. This warming rebound would be larger and more sustained should climate sensitivity prove to be higher than expected. Thus, employing geoengineering schemes with continued carbon emissions could lead to severe risks for the global climate system.


Author contributions: H.D.M. and K.C. designed research; H.D.M. performed research; H.D.M. and K.C. analyzed data; and H.D.M. wrote the paper.

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Freely available online through the PNAS open access option.

{dagger}To whom correspondence should be sent at the present address: Department of Geography, Planning, and Environment, Concordia University, 1455 de Maisonneuve Boulevard West, Montreal, QC, Canada H3G 1M8.

H. Damon Matthews, E-mail: dmatthew{at}alcor.concordia.ca

www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.0700419104
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