Removing Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Using Large Land Areas Will Change Earth Albedo And Force Climate
ORAL
Abstract
When large surface areas of the Earth are altered, radiative forcing due to changes in surface reflectance can drive climate change. Yet to achieve the necessary scale to remove the substantial amounts of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere relevant for ameliorating climate change, enhanced rock weathering (ERW) will need to be applied to very large land areas. We show that surface albedo modification (SAM) associated with ERW can easily overwhelm the radiative forcing from the decrease of atmospheric carbon dioxide over years or even decades. A change in albedo as small as parts per thousand has a radiative impact comparable to the removal of 10 tons of carbon dioxide per hectare. SAM via ERW can be either cooling or warming. We identify some of the many questions raised by radiative forcing due to ERW.
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Publication: Taylor, W., Marston, B., Rosner, R. & Wurtele, J. "Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Removal: A Physical Science Perspective," PRX Energy 4, 017001 (2025) and https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.01885
Presenters
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John Bradley Marston
- Brown University