Overlooked Long-Term Atmospheric Chemical Feedbacks Alter the Impact of Solar Geoengineering: Implications for Tropospheric Oxidative Capacity

AGU ADVANCES(2023)

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摘要
Studies of the impacts of solar geoengineering have mostly ignored tropospheric chemistry. By decreasing the sunlight reaching Earth's surface, geoengineering may help mitigate anthropogenic climate change, but changing sunlight also alters the rates of chemical reactions throughout the troposphere. Using the GEOS-Chem atmospheric chemistry model, we show that stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) with sulfate, a frequently studied solar geoengineering method, can perturb tropospheric composition over a span of 10 years, increasing tropospheric oxidative capacity by 9% and reducing methane lifetime. SAI decreases the overall flux of shortwave radiation into the troposphere, but increases flux at certain UV wavelengths due to stratospheric ozone depletion. These radiative changes, in turn, perturb tropospheric photochemistry, driving chemical feedbacks that can substantially influence the seasonal and spatial patterns of radiative forcing beyond what is caused by enhanced stratospheric aerosol concentrations alone. For example, chemical feedbacks decrease the radiative effectiveness of geoengineering in northern high latitude summer by 20%. Atmospheric chemical feedbacks also imply the potential for net global public health benefits associated with stratospheric ozone depletion, as the decreases in mortality resulting from SAI-induced improvements in air quality outweigh the increases in mortality due to increased UV radiation exposure. Such chemical feedbacks also lead to improved plant growth. Our results show the importance of including fuller representations of atmospheric chemistry in studies of solar geoengineering and underscore the risk of surprises from this technology that could carry unexpected consequences for Earth's climate, the biosphere, and human health. Solar geoengineering is a proposed set of technologies to help lessen the impacts of climate change by reducing the amount of sunlight received by the Earth. Stratospheric aerosol injection is a method of solar geoengineering that reduces sunlight by increasing the amount of aerosol particles in the stratosphere, a process which can also cause stratospheric ozone depletion. Nearly all studies of stratospheric aerosol injection have focused exclusively on the direct impacts of increased stratospheric aerosol on climate. However, changes in sunlight also alter the rates of chemical reactions throughout the atmosphere, changing the concentrations of greenhouse gases that affect climate like methane and tropospheric ozone. Our results show that these changes in greenhouse gases due to geoengineering chemical feedbacks can substantially alter the climate effect of geoengineering, especially on regional and seasonal scales. Our results also show that geoengineering-induced stratospheric ozone depletion can lead to net global health benefits, as the impacts on mortality from overall improvements in surface air quality due to chemical feedbacks outweigh those from increases in UV exposure. These same chemical feedbacks can also improve crop yields and overall plant growth. Our results underscore the risk of surprises that could arise from solar geoengineering. Chemical feedbacks from stratospheric aerosol injection, a form of solar geoengineering, increase tropospheric oxidative capacityAtmospheric composition changes due to geoengineering substantially influence the resulting seasonal and spatial patterns of radiative forcingThe level of stratospheric ozone depletion seen from geoengineering leads to a decline in global mortality, driven by air pollution changes
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solar geoengineering
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