https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2024EF004474

*Authors*
Mengying Zhao, Long Cao, Daniele Visioni, Douglas G. MacMartin

https://doi.org/10.1029/2024EF004474

*31 May 2024*

*Abstract*
We analyze the global carbon cycle response to a set of stratospheric
aerosol injection (SAI) simulations performed by the CESM2(WACCM6-MA)
model. The simulations are performed under the specified SSP2-4.5 CO2
concentration pathway. It is found that both the temperature stabilization
target and the SO2 injection strategy have important effects on the global
carbon sink. Relative to the SSP2-4.5 scenario, averaged over the last 20
years of our simulations (year 2050–2069), simultaneous multi-location SO2
injection causes an increase in cumulative land carbon uptake of 45 and 23
PgC, and an increase in cumulative ocean carbon uptake of 6 and 2 PgC for
temperature stabilization targets of 0.5°C and 1.5°C respectively. For a
temperature stabilization target of 1.0°C, SO2 injections increase land and
ocean carbon sinks by 22–42 PgC and 4–7 PgC, respectively, depending on the
strategies of SO2 injections (low latitude, mid-to-high latitude, and
multi-objective injection). Relative to SSP2-4.5, by year 2069, SAI
increases diagnosed cumulative CO2 emissions by 25–53 PgC (3%–6%), implying
a decrease in atmospheric CO2 if SO2 injections were performed under a
prescribed CO2 emission pathway. Stratospheric SO2 injections slow
permafrost thaw, but do not restore permafrost to the previous extent at
the same warming level for all injection strategies. An abrupt termination
of SO2 injection weakens both the ocean and land carbon sink, and causes a
rapid decline of permafrost extent. A gradual phaseout of SO2 injection
slows sharp decline of permafrost and delays the rebound of carbon sink.

*Key Points*
Both temperature stabilization goals and strategy for stratospheric aerosol
injection are important in affecting land and ocean CO2 uptake

Aerosol injections reduce CO2 concentrations, diagnosed here as a 3%–6%
increase in CO₂ emissions leading to specific CO2 concentrations

A gradual phaseout compared to an abrupt termination is shown to result in
a slower rebound of the carbon sink

*Plain Language Summary*
Stratospheric SO2 injections are proposed as a possible additional tool to
help counteract global warming. This method would affect aspects of the
climate system such as temperature, precipitation, and ocean circulation,
which would in turn alter the global carbon cycle. We use an Earth system
model to examine how SO2 injections would affect the ability of land and
ocean to absorb CO2. Under a moderate CO2 concentration increase scenario
(SSP2-4.5), SO2 is injected into the stratosphere to maintain global
temperature at the level of 0.5, 1.0 and 1.5°C above pre-industrial,
respectively. Compared to the background scenario, SO2 injections increase
the land and ocean CO2 sinks and reduce atmospheric CO2 (diagnosed here as
3%–6% increase in cumulative CO2 emissions that would lead to specific CO2
concentration). For the same 1°C target, the location of SO2 injections
(low-latitudes, high-latitudes, multi-latitudes) could produce a range of
response in land and ocean CO2 sinks that is as large as that caused by
different cooling targets. Both land and ocean CO2 sinks are weakened in
response to an abrupt or gradual termination of SO2 injection. SO2
injections slow permafrost thaw but do not entirely restore permafrost to
past extents at the same warming level.

*Source: AGU*

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