https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2025EF006212

*Authors: *Jiu Jiang, Long Cao, Han Zhang

First published: *16 October 2025*

https://doi.org/10.1029/2025EF006212

*Abstract*
Arctic Ocean albedo modification (AOAM) has been proposed as a potential
means to mitigate some adverse climate impacts of amplified warming over
the Arctic. Here we use an Earth system model to examine the response of
physical climate and carbon cycle to a hypothetical AOAM implementation in
which open seawater albedo in Arctic is set to the albedo of sea ice.
Simulation results show that by the end of this century, relative to
SSP5-8.5, AOAM would reduce Arctic mean warming by 1.6°C and delay the
occurrence of 4°C Arctic warming by more than 20 years. Meanwhile, AOAM
would prevent about 16% Arctic sea ice from melting. Although AOAM directly
targets the Arctic Ocean, it has much larger impacts on the land carbon
sink than that of the ocean. By 2100, AOAM would reduce 6% Arctic
permafrost from thawing and prevent the release of permafrost carbon by 22
PgC compared to that of SSP5-8.5. On the other hand, AOAM would only
decrease ocean carbon storage by 1 PgC. Regarding ocean acidification, AOAM
would significantly postpone the onset of sea surface aragonite
undersaturation over some Arctic Ocean areas by more than 10 years.
Simulations show that a sudden termination of AOAM would cause rapid
changes of climate and carbon cycle with a rate much larger than that under
SSPs scenarios. Our study demonstrates the potential of AOAM to mitigate
some impacts of Arctic warming, and illustrates modest effects of AOAM on
the Arctic carbon cycle.

*Plain Language Summary*
Arctic warming is accelerating partly because melting sea ice exposes
darker ocean surface, and absorbs more solar radiation. Increasing the
Arctic Ocean surface albedo to reflect more incoming sunlight has been
proposed as a potential means to counteract the accelerated Arctic warming.
Here we analyze how the increase in Arctic Ocean surface albedo could
affect Arctic climate and carbon cycle under high atmospheric CO2 emission
scenarios. Our analysis shows that the ocean surface albedo enhancement
over the Arctic can help slow down Arctic temperature increase and reduce
sea ice loss induced by global warming. It would also help preserve Arctic
permafrost, suppressing carbon release from thawing soil. In addition,
ocean albedo enhancement would delay ocean acidification in parts of the
Arctic Ocean, potentially allowing marine ecosystems more time to adapt.
However, a sudden termination of such albedo modification could cause rapid
climate change that are much faster than those caused by high CO2 emissions.

*Key Points*
We examine climate and carbon cycle response to Arctic Ocean albedo
modification (AOAM)

AOAM would help to delay Arctic warming and prevent part of sea ice loss

AOAM would prevent a fraction of permafrost from thawing and suppress loss
of permafrost carbon

*Source: AGU*

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