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https://essopenarchive.org/users/709111/articles/693454-identifying-climate-impacts-from-different-stratospheric-aerosol-injection-strategies-in-ukesm1?commit=cd900f90d40ac4332926f9a1e758780211cc1946

*Authors*
Alice Florence Wells,Matthew Henry,Ewa M. Bednarz,Douglas G MacMartin,Andy
Jones,Mohit Dalvi,Jim M. Haywood

*Cite as*: Alice Florence Wells, Matthew Henry, Ewa M. Bednarz, et al.
Identifying climate impacts from different Stratospheric Aerosol Injection
strategies in UKESM1. ESS Open Archive . December 27, 2023.
DOI: 10.22541/essoar.170365333.31848426/v1

*27 December 2023*

*Abstract*
Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI) is a proposed method of climate
intervention aiming to reduce the impacts of human-induced global warming
by reflecting a portion of incoming solar radiation. Many studies have
demonstrated that SAI would successfully reduce global-mean surface air
temperatures, however the vast array of potential scenarios and strategies
for deployment result in a diverse range of climate impacts. Here we
compare two SAI strategies - a quasi- equatorial injection and a
multi-latitude off-equatorial injection - simulated with the UK Earth
System Model (UKESM1), both aiming to reduce the global-mean surface
temperature from that of a high-end emissions scenario to that of a
moderate emissions scenario. Both strategies effectively reduce global mean
surface air temperatures by around 3°C by the end of the century; however,
there are significant differences in the resulting regional temperature and
precipitation patterns. We compare changes in the surface and stratospheric
climate under each strategy to determine how the climate response depends
on the injection location. In agreement with previous studies, an
equatorial injection results in a tropospheric overcooling in the tropics
and a residual warming in the polar regions, with substantial changes to
stratospheric temperatures, water vapour and circulation. However, we
demonstrate that by utilising a feedback controller in an off-equatorial
injection strategy, regional surface temperature and precipitation changes
relative to the target can be minimised. We conclude that moving the
injection away from the equator minimises unfavourable changes to the
climate, calling for a new series of inter-model SAI comparisons using an
off-equatorial strategy.


*Source: ESS OPEN ARCHIVE *

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