Abstract

<strong class="journal-contentHeaderColor">Abstract.</strong> Surficial enhanced rock weathering (ERW) is a land-based carbon dioxide removal (CDR) strategy that involves applying crushed silicate rock (e.g., basalt) to agricultural soils. However, unintended biogeochemical interactions with the nitrogen cycle may arise through ERW increasing soil pH as basalt grains undergo dissolution that may reinforce, counteract, or even offset the climate benefits from carbon sequestration. Increases in soil pH could drive changes in the soil emissions of key non-CO<sub>2</sub> greenhouse gases, e.g., nitrous oxide (N<sub>2</sub>O), and trace gases, e.g., nitric oxide (NO) and ammonia (NH<sub>3</sub>) that affect air quality, and crop and human health. We present the development and implementation of a new improved nitrogen cycling scheme for the land surface model Community Land Model v5 (CLM5), the land component of the Community Earth System Model, allowing evaluation of ERW effects on soil gas emissions. We base the new parameterizations on datasets derived from soil pH responses of N<sub>2</sub>O, NO and NH<sub>3</sub> of ERW field trial and mesocosm experiments with crushed basalt. We successfully validated simulated &lsquo;control&rsquo; (i.e., no ERW) seasonal cycles of soil N<sub>2</sub>O, NO and NH<sub>3</sub> emissions against a wide range of global emission inventories. We benchmark simulated mitigation of soil N<sub>2</sub>O fluxes in response to ERW against a sub-set of data from ERW field trials in the U.S. Corn Belt. Using the new scheme, we provide a specific example of the effect of large-scale ERW deployment with croplands on soil nitrogen fluxes across five key regions with high potential for CDR with ERW (North America, Brazil, Europe, India, and China). Across these regions, ERW implementation led to marked reductions in N<sub>2</sub>O and NO (both 18 %) with moderate increases in NH<sub>3</sub> (2 %). Our improved N-cycle scheme within CLM5 has utility for investigating the potential of ERW point-source and regional effects of soil N<sub>2</sub>O, NO and NH<sub>3</sub> fluxes in response to current and future climates. This framework also provides the basis for assessing the implications of ERW for air quality given the role of NO in tropospheric ozone formation, and both NO and NH<sub>3</sub> in inorganic aerosol formation.

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