https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2025/egusphere-2025-4889/

*Authors: *Isobel M. Parry, Paul D. L. Ritchie, Olivier Boucher, Peter M.
Cox, James M. Haywood, Ulrike Niemeier, Roland Séférian, Simone Tilmes, and
Daniele Visioni

*02 October 2025 – Discussion started: 15 Oct 2025*

*Abstract*
Solar radiation modification (SRM) aims to artificially cool the Earth,
counteracting warming from anthropogenic greenhouse gases by increasing the
reflection of incoming sunlight. One SRM strategy is stratospheric aerosol
injection (SAI), which mimics explosive volcanoes by injecting aerosols
into the stratosphere. There are concerns that SAI could suppress
vegetation productivity by reducing the amount of sunlight reaching the
Earth's surface and by shifting rainfall patterns. Here we examine results
from five Earth System Models that use SAI to reduce the global mean
temperature from that of a high emissions world (SSP585), to that of a more
moderate global warming scenario (SSP245). Compared to SSP245, the SAI
simulations project higher global net primary productivity (NPP) values
(+15.6 %) and higher land carbon storage (+5.9 %), primarily because of
increased CO2 fertilisation. The effects of SAI are especially clear in
Amazonia where land carbon storage increases under G6suplhur compared to
both SSP245 (+8.6 %) and SSP585 (+10.8 %), even though the latter scenario
has the same atmospheric CO2 scenario as G6sulfur. Our results therefore
suggest that SAI could provide some protection against the risk of climate
change induced carbon losses from the Amazon rainforest.

*Source: EGU sphere*

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