https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352485524002408

*Authors*
F.F.B.K. Ayissi, C.Y. Da-Allada, E. Baloïtcha, L.O. Worou, S. Tilmes

*29 May 2024*

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rsma.2024.103607

*Highlights*
•Ekman transport and geostrophic flow are the main processes underlying the
seasonal coastal upwelling intensity in the NGoG.

•In Climate change, the major upwelling weakens due to geostrophic flow and
minor upwelling intensifies by Ekman transport.

•Under SAI, major coastal upwelling intensity decreases, but less so than
under climate change, as geostrophic effect weakens.

*Abstract*
This study aims to assess the impact of Stratospheric Aerosol Injection
(SAI) on the coastal upwelling in the northern Gulf of Guinea based, on
upwelling index computation and using the Community Earth System Model from
the Geoengineering Large Ensemble (GLENS) project. GLENS project targets
not only maintaining the global temperature but also the interhemispheric
and equator-to-pole temperature gradient at their 2020 values by preventing
part of the solar radiation from reaching the Earth’s surface under a
RCP8.5 scenario. The results show that along the coast of the northern Gulf
of Guinea main upwelling cells are to the east of Cape Palmas and Cape
Three Points, and that upwelling is most intense in the Ghana region
compared to Côte d’Ivoire region. It is also found that Ekman transport
associated with geostrophic flow can explain a large part of the intensity
of the coastal upwelling in the northern Gulf of Guinea. Geostrophic flow
towards the coast reduces upwelling intensity, especially in the Ghana
region. In the context of global warming, boreal summer upwelling intensity
decreases all along the coast by 6% (with 2% in the Côte d’Ivoire region
and a more significant decrease of 10% in the Ghana region). This decrease
in upwelling intensity is linked to the intensification of geostrophic flow
towards the coast. Under SAI, coastal upwelling intensity is still
decreased by 5% along the coast (with 3% in the Côte d’Ivoire region and 6%
in the Ghana region), but this decrease is relatively weak compared to
global warming. This increase in upwelling intensity compared with climate
change, especially in Ghana, is associated with a 50% reduction in the
effect of geostrophic flow limitation with respect to global warming.
During the minor upwelling season, the upwelling intensity increases, due
to Ekman transport, both under the climate change and SAI.

*Source: ScienceDirect *

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