https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2025/egusphere-2025-2312/

*Authors*
Pengfei Yu, Yifeng Peng, Karen H. Rosenlof, Ru-Shan Gao, Robert W.
Portmann, Martin Ross, Eric Ray, Jianchun Bian, Simone Tilmes, and Owen B.
Toon

*Received: 17 May 2025 – Discussion started: 06 Jun 2025*

*Abstract*
Stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) using sulfur cools the planet by
reflecting sunlight back to space. Traditional SAI, with sulfur dioxide
injection rate of 10 Tg/year at 25 km, accumulates aerosols in the tropical
lower stratosphere, causing a 6 K warming of the tropical lower
stratosphere that impact the entry value of stratospheric water vapor and
jet positions. This approach could also delay October Antarctic total
column ozone (TCO) recovery to 1980s values by 25–55 years. We propose a
novel SAI approach of injecting sulfur at 50 km (SAI50) that substantially
reduces these negative impacts. In SAI50, the mean meridional overturning
circulation near the stratopause rapidly transports aerosols to mid-high
latitudes, preventing their accumulation in the tropical lower
stratosphere. This approach reduces tropical stratospheric warming to 3 K
and shortens the Antarctic ozone recovery delay to 5 years. Furthermore,
SAI50 demonstrates greater cooling efficiency, enhancing global and polar
surface cooling by 22 % and 40 % respectively. Consequently, SAI50
preserves 20 % more Arctic September sea ice compared to lower-altitude
SAI. These findings suggest that SAI50 could offer a more effective and
less disruptive approach to climate intervention.

*Source: EGUSphere*

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