Assessing the consequences of including aerosol absorption in potential stratospheric aerosol injection climate intervention strategies
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Published:2022-05-10
Issue:9
Volume:22
Page:6135-6150
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Haywood Jim M.ORCID, Jones AndyORCID, Johnson Ben T.ORCID, McFarlane Smith William
Abstract
Abstract. Theoretical stratospheric aerosol intervention (SAI) strategies model the deliberate injection of aerosols or their precursors
into the stratosphere, thereby reflecting incident sunlight back to space and counterbalancing a fraction of the warming due to increased concentrations
of greenhouse gases. This cooling mechanism is known to be relatively robust
through analogues from explosive volcanic eruptions which have been
documented to cool the climate of the Earth. However, a practical difficulty
of SAI strategies is how to deliver the injection high enough to ensure
dispersal of the aerosol within the stratosphere on a global scale.
Recently, it has been suggested that including a small amount of absorbing
material in a dedicated 10 d intensive deployment might enable aerosols or
precursor gases to be injected at significantly lower, more
technologically feasible altitudes. The material then absorbs sunlight, causing a localised heating and “lofting” of the particles and enabling them to
penetrate into the stratosphere. Such self-lofting has recently been
observed following the intensive wildfires in 2019–2020 in south-eastern Australia, where the resulting absorbing aerosol penetrated into the
stratosphere and was monitored by satellite instrumentation for many months
subsequent to emission. This study uses the fully coupled UKESM1 climate
model simulations performed for the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison
Project (GeoMIP) and new simulations where the aerosol optical properties
have been adjusted to include a moderate degree of absorption. The results
indicate that partially absorbing aerosols (i) reduce the cooling efficiency
per unit mass of aerosol injected, (ii) increase deficits in global
precipitation, (iii) delay the recovery of the stratospheric ozone hole, (iv) disrupt the Quasi-Biennial Oscillation when global-mean temperatures are reduced by as little as 0.1 K, and (v) enhance the positive phase of the wintertime North Atlantic Oscillation which is associated with floods in
northern Europe and droughts in southern Europe. While these results are dependent upon the exact details of the injection strategies and our
simulations use 10 times the ratio of black carbon to sulfate that is considered in the recent intensive deployment studies, they demonstrate some
of the potential pitfalls of injecting an absorbing aerosol into the
stratosphere to combat the global warming problem.
Funder
Natural Environment Research Council
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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