Africa's Climate Response to Marine Cloud Brightening Strategies Is Highly Sensitive to Deployment Region

Author:

Odoulami Romaric C.1ORCID,Hirasawa Haruki23ORCID,Kouadio Kouakou4ORCID,Patel Trisha D.1ORCID,Quagraine Kwesi A.56ORCID,Pinto Izidine67ORCID,Egbebiyi Temitope S.6ORCID,Abiodun Babatunde J.68ORCID,Lennard Christopher6ORCID,New Mark G.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. African Climate and Development Initiative University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

2. School of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of Victoria Victoria BC Canada

3. Department of Atmospheric Sciences University of Washington Seattle WA USA

4. Laboratory of Atmospheric Physics and Fluid Mechanics University Felix Houphouet‐Boigny Abidjan Côte D’Ivoire

5. National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) Boulder CO USA

6. Climate System Analysis Group (CSAG) Environmental and Geographical Science Department University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

7. Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI) De Bilt The Netherlands

8. Nansen‐Tutu Centre for Marine Environmental Research, Department of Oceanography University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

Abstract

AbstractSolar climate intervention refers to a group of methods for reducing climate risks associated with anthropogenic warming by reflecting sunlight. Marine cloud brightening (MCB), one such approach, proposes to inject sea‐salt aerosol into one or more regional marine boundary layer to increase marine cloud reflectivity. Here, we assess the potential influence of various MCB experiments on Africa's climate using simulations from the Community Earth System Model (CESM2) with the Community Atmosphere Model (CAM6) as its atmospheric component. We analyzed four idealized MCB experiments under a medium‐range background forcing scenario (SSP2‐4.5), which brighten clouds over three subtropical ocean regions: (a) Northeast Pacific (MCBNEP); (b) Southeast Pacific (MCBSEP); (c) Southeast Atlantic (MCBSEA); and (d) these three regions simultaneously (MCBALL). Our results suggest that the climate impacts of MCB in Africa are highly sensitive to the deployment region. MCBSEP would produce the strongest global cooling effect and thus could be the most effective in decreasing temperatures, increasing precipitation, and reducing the intensity and frequency of temperature and precipitation extremes across most parts of Africa, especially West Africa, in the future (2035–2054) compared to the historical climate (1995–2014). MCB in other regions produces less cooling and wetting despite similar radiative forcings. While the projected changes under MCBALL are similar to those of MCBSEP, MCBNEP and MCBSEA could see more residual warming and induce a warmer future than under SSP2‐4.5 in some regions across Africa. All MCB experiments are more effective in cooling maximum temperature and related extremes than minimum temperature and related extremes.

Funder

Carnegie Corporation of New York

National Research Foundation

Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics

National Science Foundation

Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency

National Center for Atmospheric Research

Amazon Web Services

Amazon

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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