Anthropogenic Aerosols Delay the Emergence of GHGs‐Forced Wetting of South Asian Rainy Seasons Under a Fossil‐Fuel Intensive Pathway

Author:

Singh Jitendra12ORCID,Cook Benjamin I.34ORCID,Marvel Kate35ORCID,McDermid Sonali6ORCID,Persad Geeta G.7,Rajaratnam Bala89,Singh Deepti2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Atmospheric and Climate ETH Zurich Zurich Switzerland

2. School of the Environment Washington State University Vancouver WA USA

3. NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies New York NY USA

4. Lamont‐Doherty Earth Observatory Columbia University Palisade NY USA

5. Center for Climate Systems Research Columbia University New York NY USA

6. Department of Environmental Studies New York University New York NY USA

7. Department of Geological Sciences University of Texas at Austin Austin TX USA

8. Department of Statistics University of California, Davis Davis CA USA

9. University of Sydney (Visiting) Camperdown NSW Australia

Abstract

AbstractWith continued fossil‐fuel dependence, anthropogenic aerosols over South Asia are projected to increase until the mid‐21st century along with greenhouse gases (GHGs). Using the Community Earth System Model (CESM1) Large Ensemble, we quantify the influence of aerosols and GHGs on South Asian seasonal precipitation patterns over the 21st century under a very high‐emissions (RCP 8.5) trajectory. We find that increasing local aerosol concentrations could continue to suppress precipitation over South Asia in the near‐term, delaying the emergence of precipitation increases in response to GHGs by several decades in the monsoon season and a decade in the post‐monsoon season. Emergence of this wetting signal is expected in both seasons by the mid‐21st century. Our results demonstrate that the trajectory of local aerosols together with GHGs will shape near‐future precipitation patterns over South Asia. Therefore, constraining precipitation response to different trajectories of both forcers is critical for informing near‐term adaptation efforts.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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