https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214581825005579

*Authors: *Haiyuan Tang, Mou Leong Tan, Zeqian Feng, Narimah Samat, Fei
Zhang

*22 August 2025*

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejrh.2025.102728

*Highlights*
•GeoMIP models show significant variability in simulating Hunan's
historical climate.

•G6solar and G6sulfur reduce extreme precipitation post-2070, especially
Rx1day.

•G6solar and G6sulfur scenarios produce differing spatial patterns of
extreme precipitation.

•Cold days and nights increase significantly under SSP5–8.5, but decrease
with G6sulfur.

•G6sulfur may reduce flood risk but increases dry days, limiting drought
mitigation.

*Abstract*
Study region
Hunan Province, located in subtropical China, is highly susceptible to
water-related disasters such as floods and droughts. Understanding
localized impacts of climate intervention strategies is critical for
hydro-climatic risk management and planning.
Study focus

This study explores the potential impacts of Solar Radiation Modification
(SRM) on extreme precipitation and temperature events in Hunan. Simulations
from the GeoMIP6 project under SSP2–4.5 and SSP5–8.5, alongside SRM
scenarios (G6solar and G6sulfur), are analyzed using bias-corrected outputs
from four global climate models: CNRM-ESM2–1, IPSL-CM6A-LR, MPI-ESM1–2-LR,
and UKESM1–0-LL. Quantile mapping was applied for bias correction using
observed data as reference. Climate extreme indices recommended by the WMO
were used to evaluate the extreme event changes.

New hydrological insights for the region
The results show notable inter-model differences in simulating Hunan’s
historical climate, particularly for precipitation and temperature
extremes. Both SRM scenarios reduce heavy rainfall indices (Rx1day, Rx5day,
R20mm), particularly after 2070, suggesting potential in flood risk
mitigation. However, spatial patterns differ between G6solar and G6sulfur
due to aerosol dispersion differences. Under SSP5–8.5, extreme temperatures
are projected to rise significantly, while G6sulfur notably reduces cold
nights. Conversely, consecutive dry days increase markedly under G6sulfur
by 2080–2099, indicating limited drought alleviation. These findings
highlight that although SRM may lower flood risks in subtropical areas like
Hunan, its effectiveness in addressing drought remains limited.

*Source: ScienceDirect*

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