https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/22/4557/2022/

Stratospheric ozone response to sulfate aerosol and solar dimming climate
interventions based on the G6 Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project
(GeoMIP) simulationsSimone Tilmes, Daniele Visioni, Andy Jones, James
Haywood, Roland Séférian, Pierre Nabat, Olivier Boucher, Ewa Monica
Bednarz, and Ulrike Niemeier

*Abstract*

This study assesses the impacts of stratospheric aerosol intervention (SAI)
and solar dimming on stratospheric ozone based on the G6 Geoengineering
Model Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP) experiments, called G6sulfur and
G6solar. For G6sulfur, an enhanced stratospheric sulfate aerosol burden
reflects some of the incoming solar radiation back into space to cool the
surface climate, while for G6solar, the reduction in the global solar
constant in the model achieves the same goal. Both experiments use the high
emissions scenario of SSP5-8.5 as the baseline experiment and define
surface temperature from the medium emission scenario of SSP2-4.5 as the
target. In total, six Earth system models (ESMs) performed these
experiments, and three out of the six models include interactive
stratospheric chemistry. The increase in absorbing sulfate aerosols in the
stratosphere results in a heating of the lower tropical stratospheric
temperatures by between 5 to 13 K for the six different ESMs, leading to
changes in stratospheric transport, water vapor, and other related changes.
The increase in the aerosol burden also increases aerosol surface area
density, which is important for heterogeneous chemical reactions. The
resulting changes in the springtime Antarctic ozone between the G6sulfur
and SSP5-8.5, based on the three models with interactive chemistry, include
an initial reduction in total column ozone (TCO) of 10 DU (ranging between
0–30 DU for the three models) and up to 20 DU (between 10–40 DU) by the end
of the century. The relatively small reduction in TCO for the multi-model
mean in the first 2 decades results from variations in the required sulfur
injections in the models and differences in the complexity of the chemistry
schemes. In contrast, in the Northern Hemisphere (NH) high latitudes, no
significant changes can be identified due to the large natural variability
in the models, with little change in TCO by the end of the century.
However, all three models with interactive chemistry consistently simulate
an increase in TCO in the NH mid-latitudes up to 20 DU, compared to
SSP5-8.5, in addition to the 20 DU increase resulting from increasing
greenhouse gases between SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5. In contrast to G6sulfur,
G6solar does not significantly change stratospheric temperatures compared
to the baseline simulation. Solar dimming results in little change in TCO
compared to SSP5-8.5. Only in the tropics does G6solar result in an
increase of TCO of up to 8 DU, compared to SSP2-4.5, which may counteract
the projected reduction in SSP5-8.5. This work identifies differences in
the response of SAI and solar dimming on ozone for three ESMs with
interactive chemistry, which are partly due to the differences and
shortcomings in the complexity of aerosol microphysics, chemistry, and the
description of ozone photolysis. It also identifies that solar dimming, if
viewed as an analog to SAI using a predominantly scattering aerosol, would
succeed in reducing tropospheric and surface temperatures, but any
stratospheric changes due to the high forcing greenhouse gas scenario,
including the potential harmful increase in TCO beyond historical values,
would prevail.

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