https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/20/15461/2020/
Atmos. Chem. Phys., 20, 15461–15485, 2020
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-20-15461-2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons
Attribution 4.0 License.

Research article | 11 Dec 2020

Tropical Pacific climate variability under solar geoengineering: impacts on
ENSO extremes
Abdul Malik et al.
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Received: 18 Dec 2018 – Discussion started: 07 Jan 2019 – Revised: 29 Aug
2020 – Accepted: 18 Oct 2020 – Published: 11 Dec 2020
Abstract
Many modelling studies suggest that the El Niño–Southern Oscillation
(ENSO), in interaction with the tropical Pacific background climate, will
change with rising atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations. Solar
geoengineering (reducing the solar flux from outer space) has been proposed
as a means to counteract anthropogenic climate change. However, the
effectiveness of solar geoengineering concerning a variety of aspects of
Earth's climate is uncertain. Robust results are particularly challenging
to obtain for ENSO because existing geoengineering simulations are too
short (typically ∼ 50 years) to detect statistically significant changes in
the highly variable tropical Pacific background climate. We here present
results from a 1000-year-long solar-geoengineering simulation, G1, carried
out with the coupled atmosphere–ocean general circulation model HadCM3L. In
agreement with previous studies, reducing the solar irradiance (4 %) to
offset global mean surface warming in the model more than compensates the
warming in the tropical Pacific that develops in the 4 × CO2 scenario. We
see an overcooling of 0.3 ∘C and a 0.23 mm d−1 (5 %) reduction in mean
rainfall over the tropical Pacific relative to preindustrial conditions in
the G1 simulation, owing to the different latitudinal distributions of the
shortwave (solar) and longwave (CO2) forcings. The location of the
Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) in the tropical Pacific, which moved
7.5∘ southwards under 4 × CO2, is restored to its preindustrial position.
However, other aspects of the tropical Pacific mean climate are not reset
as effectively. Relative to preindustrial conditions, in G1 the
time-averaged zonal wind stress, zonal sea surface temperature (SST)
gradient, and meridional SST gradient are each statistically significantly
reduced by around 10 %, and the Pacific Walker Circulation (PWC) is
consistently weakened, resulting in conditions conducive to increased
frequency of El Niño events. The overall amplitude of ENSO strengthens by 9
%–10 % in G1, but there is a 65 % reduction in the asymmetry between cold
and warm events: cold events intensify more than warm events. Notably, the
frequency of extreme El Niño and La Niña events increases by ca. 60 % and
30 %, respectively, while the total number of El Niño events increases by
around 10 %. All of these changes are statistically significant at either
95 or 99 % confidence level. Somewhat paradoxically, while the number of
total and extreme events increases, the extreme El Niño events become
weaker relative to the preindustrial state, while the extreme La Niña
events become even stronger. That is, such extreme El Niño events in G1
become less intense than under preindustrial conditions but also more
frequent. In contrast, extreme La Niña events become stronger in G1, which
is in agreement with the general overcooling of the tropical Pacific in G1
relative to preindustrial conditions

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