"Radiation management" refers to the deliberate human intervention to control the amount of sunlight and heat that reaches the Earth's surface, usually to counteract the effects of global warming. It involves various techniques such as reflecting sunlight back into space or removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere to reduce the planet's temperature.
Full definition
The effort there [with the solar
radiation management] is to just reduce the amount of incoming sunlight.
On the other side, not the carbon dioxide removal side, we've got the solar
radiation management side which, arguably, historically has been a more controversial area.
And one has to ask how rational and responsible it is to include
solar radiation management in a «portfolio of responses» to global warming, as this report does.
Most research studies investigating the consequences of introducing these sunlight - reflecting aerosols high in the atmosphere, known as solar
radiation management geoengineering (SRM), have investigated the consequences of equal changes in incoming solar radiation across the world using global climate models.
While in his writing he argues that potential solar
radiation management schemes like stratospheric sulphate aerosol injection may be too problematic to consider, he says «in my own heart, I do have doubts.»
By tailoring geoengineering efforts by region and by need, a new model promises to maximize the effectiveness of solar
radiation management while mitigating its potential side effects and risks.
«I think the main message is that it would be very challenging to detect either a short - term experiment or a long - term deployment of solar
radiation management unless it was a pretty large signal,» she said.
Carbon Brief reported on Kravitz's presentation about solar
radiation management during a geoengineering conference in Berlin, Germany.
I've written that it's unlikely we'll ever see solar -
radiation management because no one will ever agree where to set the thermostat and no country will have such a direct national interest that it will proceed unilaterally.
Kinda like a canopy capping the growth of clouds but still creating shade and solar
radiation management at higher and lower levels.
And Doug, when the «weather domination», climate engineering, cloud seeding, solar
radiation management bs, and poisoning of all life on earth is exposed to all, things could get ugly, real fast.
Michael has just completed his MSc in Atmospheric Science at UVic, where his research focused on the climate impacts of
shortwave radiation management geoengineering.
Read my opinion article posted here at Yale environment 360, which includes a scenario of the year 2028 when the first solar
radiation management intervention scheme is sanctioned by the UN Secutiry Council.
Nevertheless, interpretative resources that have been described in relation to a range of geoengineering technologies, (including solar
radiation management proposals), through earlier, and less situated, social science literatures, are also traced from this place - based experience of geoengineering.
While solar
radiation management aims to reduce the severity of climate impacts, unlike carbon removal, it does not address the source of the problem: increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
Rather, solar
radiation management seeks to reduce the amount of radiation that reaches Earth, such as by brightening clouds, injecting reflective particles into the atmosphere or even installing mirrors in space.
Carbon removal and solar
radiation management come with very different risks, potential impacts, research needs and costs, but neither is exempt from controversy.
However, the risks of solar
radiation management outweigh its benefits, prompting the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to completely reject it.
This workshop, building on a 2015 meeting on disclosure mechanisms for solar
radiation management convened in Ottawa, [1] was designed to move such a clearinghouse from principle to practice.
The popular book Superfreakonomics, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner, argues that the prospect of solar
radiation management makes mitigation unnecessary: economics renders moral concerns redundant: «For anyone who loves cheap and simple solutions, things don't get much better.
The article posits that, ``... as SRM [solar
radiation management] techniques become more widely known, they are more likely than CDR [carbon dioxide removal] techniques to elicit negative public reactions.»
«The world's most recognized geoengineer, Dr. David Keith, has stated on the record a goal of putting 10,000,000 to 20,000,000 tons of aluminum nanoparticles into the atmosphere annually as part of the solar
radiation management operations»:
What I'm also concerned about is the way in which this solar
radiation management technology as a branch of geoengineering is being aggressively pushed now.
At the chapter of bad ideas, solar
radiation management by injecting sulphates in the atmosphere is probably one of the worst.
Middle size states, large corporations, and at least a few billionaires have it in their power to launch
solar radiation management programs.
A popular example of this is called solar
radiation management (SRM).
Because of the signal to noise problem, said Seidel, the impacts of solar
radiation management can be hard to see.
The report from an international team of researchers used 12 models to determine what might happen if the planet used so - called solar
radiation management (SRM) or atmospheric shading by injecting water vapor or sulfates into the atmosphere to offset 1 percent annual increases in CO2 concentrations for 50 years, then abruptly stopped the experiment.
Other recent research on geoengineering using solar
radiation management has also found that if the practice did begin but was then stopped, it could lead to rapid climate change with potentially hazardous consequences (ClimateWire, Nov. 27, 2013).
The potential risks — and benefits — of solar
radiation management (SRM) are substantial.
Climate engineering, an application of geoengineering, is the deliberate and large - scale intervention in Earth's climatic system with the aim of reducing global warmingClimate engineering has two categories of technologies - carbon dioxide removal and solar
radiation management.
Phrases with «radiation management»