Stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) is a potential method of climate intervention to reduce climate risk as decarbonization efforts continue. Two recent Earth system modeling experiments depict policy-relevant SAI scenarios with similar temperature targets (near 1.5°C), but with deployment delayed by 10 years between experiments. This relatively short delay leads to highly distinct profiles of ecological risk from climate speeds. Climate speeds when global temperature is maintained with SAI are indistinguishable on a planetary scale from those experienced under preindustrial conditions. In contrast, the delayed SAI deployment produces very large climate speeds far beyond natural variability and robustly greater in magnitude over land than no-SAI climate change with present policy. Examining the global area exposed to threshold climate speeds facilitates evaluation of relative ecological risk among future climate scenarios. Our results support discussion of tradeoffs and timescales in future climate intervention scenario design and decision-making.