https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2023/egusphere-2023-980/

*Authors*
Matthew Henry <[email protected]>, Jim Haywood, Andy Jones, Mohit
Dalvi, Alice
Wells, Daniele Visioni, Ewa Bednarz, Douglas MacMartin, Walker Lee, and Mari
Tye
Received: 15 May 2023 – *Discussion started: 05 Jun 2023*

Abstract. Solar climate intervention using stratospheric aerosol injection
(SAI) has been proposed as a method which could offset some of the adverse
effects of global warming. The Assessing Responses and Impacts of Solar
climate intervention on the Earth system with Stratospheric Aerosol
Injection (ARISE-SAI) set of simulations is based on a moderate greenhouse
gas emission scenario and employs injection of sulphur dioxide at four
off-equatorial locations using a control algorithm which maintains the
global-mean surface temperature at 1.5 K above preindustrial conditions
(ARISE-SAI-1.5), as well as the latitudinal gradient and inter-hemispheric
difference in surface temperature. This is the first comparison between two
models (CESM2 and UKESM1) applying the same multi-target SAI strategy.
CESM2 is successful in reaching its temperature targets, but UKESM1 has
considerable residual Arctic warming. This occurs because the pattern of
temperature change in a geoengineered climate is determined both by the
structure of the climate forcing (mainly greenhouse gases and stratospheric
aerosols) and the climate models’ feedbacks, the latter of which favour a
strong Arctic amplification of warming in UKESM1. Therefore, research
constraining the level of future Arctic warming would also inform any
hypothetical SAI deployment strategy which aims to maintain the
interhemispheric and equator-to-pole near-surface temperature differences.
Furthermore, despite broad agreement in the precipitation response in the
extratropics, precipitation changes over tropical land show important
inter-model differences, even under greenhouse gas forcing only. In
general, this ensemble comparison is the first step in comparing
policy-relevant scenarios of SAI, and will help in the design of an
experimental protocol which both reduces some known negative side effects
of SAI and is simple enough to encourage more climate models to participate.
How to cite. Henry, M., Haywood, J., Jones, A., Dalvi, M., Wells, A.,
Visioni, D., Bednarz, E., MacMartin, D., Lee, W., and Tye, M.: Comparison
of UKESM1 and CESM2 Simulations Using the Same Multi-Target Stratospheric
Aerosol Injection Strategy, EGUsphere [preprint],
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2023-980, 2023.
*Source: EGUSphere*

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