https://www.nature.com/articles/s43247-025-03088-1

*Authors: *Robert G. Ryan, Daniel P. Harrison, Lasse Johansson & Robyn
Schofield

*22 January 2026*

*Abstract*
Global shipping fuel sulphur content regulations introduced in 2020 reduced
the radiative cooling effects of sulfate aerosol over the ocean. Here we
use the WRF-Chem model to estimate the effect these regulations have had on
aerosols, clouds and solar radiation at the Great Barrier Reef, where
climate change is increasing the frequency of mass coral bleaching events.
During February 2022, the build-up to a La Niña mass coral bleaching event,
we find 11 Wm−2 extra daytime downwards shortwave radiation reaches the
reef post-sulfate regulation, compared to the control pre-regulation
scenario. The enhancement is dominated by clear-sky-only forcing changes
and less severe in cloudier and windier periods. Persistent incoming
shortwave radiation enhancements on the order of 5-11 Wm−2 likely lead to
sea-surface temperature increases of 0.05-0.15 °C, implying that during
bleaching-conducive conditions, 5-10% additional thermal stress is felt by
GBR corals now than before the regulation of ship sulfate emissions.

*Source: Communications Earth & Environment *

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