Materials . This volcano released huge quantities of stratospheric sulfur aerosols and contributed greatly to understanding of the subject. Various forms of
sulfur were proposed as the injected substance, as this is in part how volcanic eruptions cool the planet. One study calculated the impact of injecting sulfate particles, or
aerosols, every one to four years into the
stratosphere in amounts equal to those lofted by the
volcanic eruption of Mount Pinatubo in 1991, but did not address the many technical and political challenges involved in potential solar geoengineering efforts. Use of gaseous
sulfuric acid appears to reduce the problem of aerosol growth.
Delivery Various techniques have been proposed for delivering the aerosol or precursor gases. but a later metastudy suggests a new aircraft would be needed but easy to develop. •
Military aircraft such as the F15-C variant of the
F-15 Eagle have the necessary
flight ceiling, but limited payload. Military tanker aircraft such as the
KC-135 Stratotanker and
KC-10 Extender also have the necessary ceiling at latitudes closer to the poles and have greater payload capacity. • Modified
artillery might have the necessary capability, but requires a polluting and expensive propellant charge to loft the payload.
Railgun artillery could be a non-polluting alternative. •
High-altitude balloons can be used to lift precursor gases, in tanks, bladders or in the balloons' envelope.
Injection system The latitude and distribution of injection locations has been discussed by various authors. While a near-equatorial injection regime will allow particles to enter the rising leg of the
Brewer-Dobson circulation, several studies have concluded that a broader, and higher-latitude, injection regime will reduce injection mass flow rates and/or yield climatic benefits. Concentration of precursor injection in a single longitude appears to be beneficial, with condensation onto existing particles reduced, giving better control of the size distribution of aerosols resulting. The long residence time of
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere may require a millennium-timescale commitment to aerosol injection if aggressive emissions abatement is not pursued simultaneously.
Welsbach seeding (metal oxide particles) Welsbach seeding is a patented solar radiation modification method, involving seeding the
stratosphere with small (10 to 100
micron) metal oxide particles (
thorium dioxide,
aluminium oxide). The purpose of the Welsbach seeding would be to "(reduce) atmospheric warming due to the greenhouse effect resulting from a greenhouse gases layer," by converting radiative energy at near-
infrared wavelengths into radiation at far-infrared wavelengths, permitting some of the converted radiation to escape into space, thus cooling the atmosphere. The seeding as described would be performed by airplanes at altitudes between 7 and 13 kilometres. The method was patented by
Hughes Aircraft Company in 1991, US patent 5003186. Quote from the patent: "This invention relates to a method for the reduction of global warming resulting from the greenhouse effect, and in particular to a method which involves the seeding of the earth's stratosphere with Welsbach-like materials." This is not considered to be a viable option by current geoengineering experts.
Cost A study in 2020 looked at the cost of SAI through to the year 2100. It found that relative to other climate interventions and solutions, SAI remains inexpensive. However, at about $18 billion per year per degree Celsius of warming avoided (in 2020 USD), a solar geoengineering program with substantial climate impact would lie well beyond the financial reach of individuals, small states, or other non-state potential rogue actors. relative to the expected costs of both unabated climate change and aggressive mitigation. Early studies suggest that stratospheric aerosol injection might have a relatively low direct cost. One analysis estimated the annual cost of delivering 5 million tons of an
albedo enhancing aerosol to an altitude of 20 to 30 km is at US$2 billion to 8 billion, an amount which they suggest would be sufficient to offset the expected warming during the next century. In comparison, the annual cost estimates for climate damage or emission mitigation range from US$200 billion to 2 trillion. Because larger particles are less efficient at cooling and drop out of the sky faster, the unit-cooling cost is expected to increase over time as increased dose leads to larger, but less efficient, particles by mechanism such as coalescence and
Ostwald ripening. Assume RCP8.5, -5.5 W/m2 of cooling would be required by 2100 to maintain 2020 climate. At the dose level required to provide this cooling, the net efficiency per mass of injected aerosols would reduce to below 50% compared to low-level deployment (below 1W/m2). At a total dose of -5.5 W/m2, the cost would be between 55–550 billion USD/yr when efficiency reduction is also taken into account, bringing annual expenditure to levels comparable to other mitigation alternatives. ==Advantages ==