“…For example, the widely observed eruption of Mount Pinatubo in June 1991 injected around 18 Tg SO 2 into the stratosphere (Guo et al, 2004) and reduced global and annual average surface temperatures by 0.5 • C for 2 years following the eruption (Soden et al, 2002), while other large, explosive eruptions of the past century reduced global average temperatures by 0.1-0.2 • C (Robock and Mao, 1994). A key limitation of the analogy to geoengineering is the transient nature of volcanic perturbations compared to the hypothetically continuous deployment of sulfate geoengineering (Duan et al, 2019;Robock et al, 2008Robock et al, , 2013. Differences between the impacts of volcanic eruptions and sulfate geoengineering could also arise from the choice of material injected in the latter (sulfur dioxide, SO 2 , versus sulfate directly) and the choice of injection locations, both of which could result in different aerosol distributions.…”