Abstract

This study assesses the impacts of sulfate aerosol intervention (SAI) and solar dimming on stratospheric ozone based on the G6 Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP) experiments, called G6sulfur and G6solar. For G6sulfur the stratospheric sulfate aerosol burden is increased to reflect some of the incoming solar radiation back into space in order to cool the surface climate, while for G6solar the global solar constant is reduced to achieve the same goal. The high emissions scenario SSP5-8.5 is used as the baseline experiment and surface temperature from the medium emission scenario SSP2-4.5 is the target. Based on three out of six Earth System Models (ESMs) that include interactive stratospheric chemistry, we find significant differences in the ozone distribution between G6solar and G6sulfur experiments compared to SSP5-8.5 and SSP2-4.5, which differ by both region and season. Both SAI and solar dimming methods reduce incoming solar insolation and result in tropospheric temperatures comparable to SSP2-4.5 conditions. G6sulfur increases the concentration of absorbing sulfate aerosols in the stratosphere, which increases lower tropical stratospheric temperatures by between 5 to 13 K for six different ESMs, leading to changes in stratospheric transport. The increase of the aerosol burden also increases aerosol surface area density, which is important for heterogeneous chemical reactions. The resulting changes in ozone include a significant reduction of total column ozone (TCO) in the Southern Hemisphere polar region in October of 10 DU at the onset and up to 20 DU by the end of the century. The relatively small reduction in TCO for the multi-model mean in the first two decades results from variations in the required sulfur injections in the models and differences in the complexity of the chemistry schemes, with no significant ozone loss for 2 out of 3 models. The decrease in the second half of the 21st century counters increasing TCO between SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5 due to the super-recovery resulting from increasing greenhouse gases. In contrast, in the Northern Hemisphere (NH) high latitudes, only a small initial decline in TCO is simulated, with little change in TCO by the end of the century compared to SSP5-8.5. All models consistently simulate an increase in TCO in the NH mid-latitudes up to 20 DU compared to SSP5-8.5, in addition to 20 DU increase resulting from increasing greenhouse gases between SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5. G6solar counters zonal wind and tropical upwelling changes between SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5 but does not change stratospheric temperatures. Solar dimming results in little change in TCO compared to SSP5-8.5 and does not counter the effects of the ozone super-recovery. Only in the tropics, G6solar results in an increase of TCO of up to 8 DU compared to SSP2-4.5, which may counter the projected reduction due to climate change in the high forcing future scenario. This work identifies differences in the response of SAI and solar dimming on ozone, which are at least partly due to differences and shortcomings in the complexity of aerosol microphysics, chemistry, and the description of ozone photolysis in the models. It also identifies that solar dimming, if viewed as an analog to SAI using a predominantly scattering aerosol, would, for the most part, not counter the potential harmful increase in TCO beyond historical values induced by increasing greenhouse gases.

Highlights

  • There has been an increasing interest in researching Climate Intervention (CI) strategies because even ambitious mitigation efforts may not be sufficient to keep global mean temperature targets below 1.5◦C above pre-industrial, as needed to prevent more serious climate impacts (Masson-Delmotte et al, 2021)

  • This study assesses the impacts of sulfate aerosol intervention (SAI) and solar dimming on stratospheric ozone based on the G6 Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP) experiments, called G6sulfur and G6solar

  • All models consistently simulate an increase in total column ozone (TCO) in the Northern Hemisphere (NH) mid-latitudes 20 up to 20 DU compared to SSP5-8.5, in addition to 20 DU increase resulting from increasing greenhouse gases between SSP2

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Summary

Introduction

There has been an increasing interest in researching Climate Intervention (CI) strategies because even ambitious mitigation efforts may not be sufficient to keep global mean temperature targets below 1.5◦C above pre-industrial, as needed to prevent more serious climate impacts (Masson-Delmotte et al, 2021). A baseline scenario with higher climate forcings that requires much larger sulfur injections to reach target surface temperatures by the end of the century, resulted in a much stronger impact on ozone (both increase and decrease depending on the region and season) than a scenario that would phase out injections towards the end of the 21st century It is unclear how representative these recent studies are since they only used one modeling framework, CESM(WACCM). Xia et al (2017) outlined differences in the effects of solar dimming and SAI on stratospheric and tropospheric ozone Both these earlier studies used CESM(WACCM), while G6sulfur and G6solar experiments have been performed by six ESMs. Another proposal suggests using aerosols for SAI that absorb less solar radiation when integrated across the solar spectrum (Keith and Irvine, 2016; Dykema et al, 2016), which may reduce some of the climate impacts, including the precipitation reduction over southern Europe in 90 winter (Jones et al, 2021) and weakening of the monsoonal precipitation over India (Simpson et al, 2019). We show TCO model results relative to 2020 conditions to remove model biases in TCO

Results
Effects of SAI and solar dimming on atmospheric temperature and winds
Effects of SAI on Surface Area Density
Effects of SAI and solar dimming on ozone concentration
Effects of SAI and solar dimming on total column ozone (TCO)
Effects of SAI on TCO
Effects of solar dimming on TCO
Summary
Conclusions
Full Text
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