As climate change accelerates, scientists are exploring geoengineering—deliberate interventions in Earth’s systems—to slow or reverse its effects. Polar regions, especially the Arctic and Antarctic, are warming at alarming rates, prompting proposals for targeted geoengineering. However, a recent study led by the University of Exeter warns that such interventions may cause severe and unintended consequences.
Polar Geoengineering
Polar geoengineering refers to climate interventions specifically designed to protect polar ice and ecosystems. Proposed techniques include:
Concerns
Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI) carries the highest termination risk among polar geoengineering methods. If SAI is suddenly stopped after deployment, reflective aerosols rapidly leave the atmosphere and global temperatures rebound swiftly to levels dictated by greenhouse gas concentrations—a phenomenon termed “termination shock”. This abrupt warming can destabilize global climate systems, dramatically increase precipitation, and result in profound ecological and societal disruptions. Other methods, while risky, do not pose as immediate or extreme a risk of catastrophic rebound as SAI does.
Highlights