The Runaway Greenhouse: implications for future climate change, geoengineering and planetary atmospheres
Colin Goldblatt, Andrew J. Watson

TL;DR
This paper reviews the runaway greenhouse phenomenon, its implications for Earth's future, planetary atmospheres, and the potential for human activities to trigger such a climate catastrophe, highlighting current scientific understanding and uncertainties.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of the physical limits, likelihood, and potential triggers of a runaway greenhouse, emphasizing gaps in current knowledge and implications for climate policy and planetary science.
Findings
Unlikely to trigger a runaway greenhouse with current greenhouse gases
Most evidence suggests a full runaway is impossible under present conditions
Hot and steamy atmospheres are poorly understood, limiting certainty
Abstract
The ultimate climate emergency is a "runaway greenhouse": a hot and water vapour rich atmosphere limits the emission of thermal radiation to space, causing runaway warming. Warming ceases only once the surface reaches ~1400K and emits radiation in the near-infrared, where water is not a good greenhouse gas. This would evaporate the entire ocean and exterminate all planetary life. Venus experienced a runaway greenhouse in the past, and we expect that Earth will in around 2 billion years as solar luminosity increases. But could we bring on such a catastrophe prematurely, by our current climate-altering activities? Here we review what is known about the runaway greenhouse to answer this question, describing the various limits on outgoing radiation and how climate will evolve between these. The good news is that almost all lines of evidence lead us to believe that is unlikely to be…
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