https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/25/2473/2025/

*Authors*
Zhe Song, Shaocai Yu, Pengfei Li, Ningning Yao, Lang Chen, Yuhai Sun,
Boqiong Jiang, and Daniel Rosenfeld

*Ciations*: Song, Z., Yu, S., Li, P., Yao, N., Chen, L., Sun, Y., Jiang,
B., and Rosenfeld, D.: The effectiveness of solar radiation management
using fine sea spray across multiple climatic regions, Atmos. Chem. Phys.,
25, 2473–2494, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-25-2473-2025, 2025.

*26 February 2025*

*Abstract*
Marine cloud brightening (MCB) geoengineering aims to inject aerosols over
oceans to brighten clouds and reflect more sunlight in order to offset the
impacts of global warming or to achieve localized climate cooling. The
relative contributions of direct and indirect effects in MCB
implementations remain uncertain. Here, we quantify both effects by
designing model simulations to simulate MCB for five open-ocean regions
around the globe. Our results show that a uniform injection strategy that
does not depend on wind speed captured the sensitive areas of the regions
that produced the largest radiative perturbations during the implementation
of MCB. When the injection amounts are low, the sea salt aerosol effect on
shortwave radiation is dominated by the indirect effect via brightening
clouds, showing obvious spatial heterogeneity. As the indirect effect of
aerosols saturates with increasing injection rates, the direct effect
increases linearly and exceeds the indirect effects, producing a consistent
increase in the spatial distributions of top-of-atmosphere upward shortwave
radiation. This study provides quantifiable radiation and cloud variability
data for multiple regional MCB implementations and suggests that injection
strategies can be optimized by adjusting injection amounts and selecting
areas sensitive to injections.

*Source: EGU*

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