|
Mitigation Option
|
Net Implementation Cost
|
Potential Emission Mitigation (t CO2 equivalent per year)
|
|
Low stratospheric soot
|
Low
|
8 billion to 25 billion
|
|
Low stratospheric dust, aircraft delivery
|
Low
|
8 billion to 80 billion
|
|
Stratospheric dust (guns or balloon lift)
|
Low
|
4 trillion or amount desired
|
|
Cloud stimulated by provision of cloud
condensation nuclei
|
Low
|
4 trillion or amount desired
|
|
Stimulation of ocean biomass with iron
|
Low to moderate
|
7 billion or amount desired
|
|
Stratospheric bubbles (multiple balloons)
|
Low to moderate
|
4 trillion or amount desired
|
|
Space mirrors
|
Low to moderate
|
4 trillion or amount desired
|
|
Atmospheric CFC removal
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
|
NOTE: The feasibility and possible side-effects of
these geoengineering options are poorly understood. Their possible
effects on the climate system and its chemistry need considerably
more study and research. They should not be implemented without
careful assessment of their direct and indirect consequences.
|
|
Cost-effectiveness estimates are categorized as
either savings (for less than 0), low (0 to $9/t CO2 equivalent), moderate ($10 to $99/t
CO2 equivalent), or high (>$100/t
CO2 equivalent). Potential emission
savings (which in some cases include not only the annual emissions,
but also changes in atmospheric concentrations already in the
atmospherestock) for the geoengineering options are also
shown. These options do not reduce the flow of emissions into the
atmosphere but rather alter the amount of warming resulting from
those emissions. Mitigation options are placed in order of
cost-effectiveness.
|
|
The CO2-equivalent
reductions are determined by calculating the equivalent reduction
in radiative forcing.
|
|
Here and throughout this report, tons are
metric.
|