Abstract

Abstract. The enhancement of the stratospheric sulfate aerosol layer has been proposed as a method of geoengineering to abate global warming. Previous modelling studies found that stratospheric aerosol geoengineering (SAG) could effectively compensate for the warming by greenhouse gases on the global scale, but also that the achievable cooling effect per sulfur mass unit, i.e. the forcing efficiency, decreases with increasing injection rate. In this study we use the atmospheric general circulation model LMDZ with the sectional aerosol module S3A to determine how the forcing efficiency depends on the injected amount of SO2, the injection height, and the spatio-temporal pattern of injection. We find that the forcing efficiency may decrease more drastically for larger SO2 injections than previously estimated. As a result, the net instantaneous radiative forcing does not exceed the limit of –2 W m−2 for continuous equatorial SO2 injections and it decreases (in absolute value) for injection rates larger than 20 Tg S yr−1. In contrast to other studies, the net radiative forcing in our experiments is fairly constant with injection height (in a range 17 to 23 km) for a given amount of SO2 injected. Also, spreading the SO2 injections between 30∘ S and 30∘ N or injecting only seasonally from varying latitudes does not result in a significantly larger (i.e. more negative) radiative forcing. Other key characteristics of our simulations include a consequent stratospheric heating, caused by the absorption of solar and infrared radiation by the aerosol, and changes in stratospheric dynamics, with a collapse of the quasi-biennial oscillation at larger injection rates, which has impacts on the resulting spatial aerosol distribution, size, and optical properties. But it has to be noted that the complexity and uncertainty of stratospheric processes cause considerable disagreement among different modelling studies of stratospheric aerosol geoengineering. This may be addressed through detailed model intercomparison activities, as observations to constrain the simulations of stratospheric aerosol geoengineering are not available and analogues (such as volcanic eruptions) are imperfect.

Highlights

  • Solar radiation management (SRM) has been proposed as a possible means to offset increasing Earth’s temperature in response to the anthropogenic greenhouse effect should mitigation efforts be insufficient and/or come too late

  • 85 % of the stratospheric sulfur exists in the form of H2SO4 aerosols, which have a mean lifetime in the stratosphere of about 10 months

  • The model results for various scenarios of stratospheric aerosol geoengineering (SAG) presented in this study imply that the net radiative forcing achievable through equawww.atmos-chem-phys.net/18/2769/2018/

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Summary

Introduction

Solar radiation management (SRM) has been proposed as a possible means to offset increasing Earth’s temperature in response to the anthropogenic greenhouse effect should mitigation efforts be insufficient and/or come too late. Irvine et al, 2016; MacMartin et al, 2016; Visioni et al, 2017) highlighted the need for accurate stratospheric aerosol models. This is important because the central idea of SAG is that stratospheric aerosols scatter sunlight back to space, cooling Earth, but they absorb and emit infrared radiation, causing a warming influence. In this study we make use of the new Sectional Stratospheric Sulfate Aerosol (S3A) module developed within the atmospheric general circulation model LMDZ, which is described in detail in Kleinschmitt et al (2017)

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