https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2023/egusphere-2023-117/

*Authors*
Yan Zhang <[email protected]>, Douglas G. MacMartin, Daniele Visioni, Ewa
Bednarz, and Ben Kravitz
How to cite. Zhang, Y., MacMartin, D. G., Visioni, D., Bednarz, E., and
Kravitz, B.: Introducing a Comprehensive Set of Stratospheric Aerosol
Injection Strategies, EGUsphere [preprint],
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2023-117, 2023.
*Received*: 28 Jan 2023 – *Discussion started: 02 Mar 2023*

Abstract. Stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) comes with a wide range of
possible design choices, such as the location and timing of the injection.
Different injection strategies can yield different climate responses;
therefore, making informed future decisions on SAI requires an
understanding of the range of possible climate outcomes. Yet to date, there
has been no systematic exploration of a comprehensive set of SAI
strategies. This limits the ability to determine which effects are robust
across different strategies and which depend on specific injection choices,
or to determine if there are underlying trade-offs between different
climate goals.

This study systematically explores how the choice of SAI strategy affects
climate responses. Here, we introduce four hemispherically-symmetric
injection strategies, all of which are designed to maintain the same global
mean surface temperature: an annual injection at the equator (EQ), an
annual injection of equal amounts of SO2 at 15° N and 15° S (15N+15S), an
annual injection of equal amounts of SO2 at 30° N and 30° S (30N+30S), and
a polar injection strategy that injects equal amounts of SO2 at 60° N and
60° S only during spring in each hemisphere (60N+60S). We compare these
four hemispherically-symmetric SAI strategies with a more complex injection
strategy that injects different quantities of SO2 at 30° N, 15° N, 15° S,
and 30° S in order to maintain not only the global mean surface temperature
but also its large scale horizontal gradients. We find that the choice of
SAI strategy notably affects the spatial distribution of aerosol optical
depths, injection efficiency, and various surface climate responses. Among
other findings, we show that injecting in subtropics produces more global
cooling per unit injection, with the EQ and the 60N+60S cases requiring,
respectively, 59 % and 50 % more injection than the 30N+30S case to meet
the same global mean temperature target. Injecting at higher latitudes
results in larger equator-to-pole temperature gradients. While all five
strategies restore September Arctic sea ice, the high-latitude injection
one is more effective due to the SAI-induced cooling occurring
preferentially at higher latitudes.
*Source: EGUsphere *

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