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https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/23/13665/2023/

*Authors*
Ewa M. Bednarz <[email protected]>, Amy H. Butler, Daniele Visioni, Yan
Zhang, Ben Kravitz, and Douglas G. MacMartin
How to cite.

Bednarz, E. M., Butler, A. H., Visioni, D., Zhang, Y., Kravitz, B., and
MacMartin, D. G.: Injection strategy – a driver of atmospheric circulation
and ozone response to stratospheric aerosol geoengineering, Atmos. Chem.
Phys., 23, 13665–13684, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-23-13665-2023, 2023.

*Published: 03 Nov 2023*
*Abstract*

Despite offsetting global mean surface temperature, various studies
demonstrated that stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) could influence the
recovery of stratospheric ozone and have important impacts on stratospheric
and tropospheric circulation, thereby potentially playing an important role
in modulating regional and seasonal climate variability. However, so far,
most of the assessments of such an approach have come from climate model
simulations in which SO2 is injected only in a single location or a set of
locations.

Here we use CESM2-WACCM6 SAI simulations under a comprehensive set of SAI
strategies achieving the same global mean surface temperature with
different locations and/or timing of injections, namely an equatorial
injection, an annual injection of equal amounts of SO2 at 15∘ N and 15∘ S,
an annual injection of equal amounts of SO2 at 30∘ N and 30∘ S, and a polar
strategy injecting SO2 at 60∘ N and 60∘ S only in spring in each hemisphere.

We demonstrate that despite achieving the same global mean surface
temperature, the different strategies result in contrastingly different
magnitudes of the aerosol-induced lower stratospheric warming,
stratospheric moistening, strengthening of stratospheric polar jets in both
hemispheres, and changes in the speed of the residual circulation. These
impacts tend to maximise under the equatorial injection strategy and become
smaller as the aerosols are injected away from the Equator into the
subtropics and higher latitudes. In conjunction with the differences in
direct radiative impacts at the surface, these different stratospheric
changes drive different impacts on the extratropical modes of variability
(Northern and Southern Annular modes), including important consequences on
the northern winter surface climate, and on the intensity of tropical
tropospheric Walker and Hadley circulations, which drive tropical
precipitation patterns. Finally, we demonstrate that the choice of
injection strategy also plays a first-order role in the future evolution of
stratospheric ozone under SAI throughout the globe. Overall, our results
contribute to an increased understanding of the fine interplay of various
radiative, dynamical, and chemical processes driving the atmospheric
circulation and ozone response to SAI and lay the foundation for designing
an optimal SAI strategy that could form a basis of future multi-model
intercomparisons.

*Source: EGUSphere*

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