The fourth research paper to come from SRMGI’s DECIMALS Fund was published 
in Environmental Research Letters today and its conclusions are striking. 
Odoulami 
et al <https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/abbf13/meta> 
explores 
how SRM might affect the chances of Day Zero droughts in Cape Town – the 
kind of drought that nearly caused the city to run out of water in 2018. It 
finds that, at least under the GLENS deployment scenario, SRM could reduce 
the likelihood of Day Zero droughts by up to 90% compared to a world of 
very high warming (RCP8.5). The authors are also clear that uncertainties 
are large at this early stage and different scenarios, models, or locations 
might return different results.

This is the second SRM research paper to come from the team based at the 
University of Cape Town, following Pinto et al 
<https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2019GL086047> in 
January.

For anyone not already familiar with it, the DECIMALS Fund 
<https://www.srmgi.org/decimals-fund/> is the world’s first SRM modelling 
fund aimed exclusively at developing countries. It supports teams in 
Argentina, Bangladesh, Benin, Indonesia, Iran, Ivory Coast, Jamaica and 
South Africa as they research how SRM could affect their regions. 

Andy

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