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Sensitivity of Methane Lifetime to Sulfate Geoengineering: Results from the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP) Giovanni Pitari V. Aquila,

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Presentation on theme: "Sensitivity of Methane Lifetime to Sulfate Geoengineering: Results from the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP) Giovanni Pitari V. Aquila,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Sensitivity of Methane Lifetime to Sulfate Geoengineering: Results from the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP) Giovanni Pitari V. Aquila, S. Tilmes, I. Cionni, N. De Luca, Di Genova, and D. Iachetti

2 Participating Models Source of geoengineering stratospheric aerosols: SO 2 injection/oxidation Effective radius of background aerosols at 75 hPa in the tropics: 0.2 µm 5 Tg/year SO 2 from 1 Jan 2020 to 31 Dec 2069 (G4). CCSM-CAM4: 8 Tg/year SO 2 Injection on the equator between 16 km and 25 km altitude Emission scenario: RCP4.5 ULAQ-CCM RCP4.5 SSTs: prescribed from CCSM-CAM4. G4 = RCP4.5 - 0.5K GEOSCCM RCP4.5 SSTs: prescribed from CESM4. G4 = RCP4.5 ResolutionOceanStratospheric Aerosol Aerosol effect on ozone Source Eff. radius at 75 hPa tropics [µm] Het. chemistry Photo- chemistry ULAQ-CCM Univ. L’Aquila 5˚x 6˚ L126 Prescribed SSTs From SO 2 0.6 microphysics ✓✓ GEOSCCM NASA GSFC 2˚x 2.5˚ L72 Prescribed SSTs From SO 2 0.6 prescribed ✓ CCSM-CAM4 NCAR 1.9˚x 2.5˚ L40 CoupledFrom SO 2 0.35 microphysics ✓✓

3 Effects of sulfate geoengineering on CH 4 Increase in planetary albedo Increase in radiation scattering and ozone depletion by the aerosols Increase in aerosol SAD and O 3 depletion and tropical stratospheric heating rates Surface cooling Less tropospheric water vapor Less OH -> Longer CH 4 lifetime Decrease in tropospheric UV in the tropics Less tropospheric O( 1 D) production Enhanced heterogeneous chemistry in the mid- upper troposphere Less NO x and tropospheric O 3 production More CH 4 poor stratospheric air is transported to the extra- tropical upper troposphere Less UT CH 4

4 Effect of the albedo increase on CH 4 Surface cooling  tropospheric water vapor decrease  less OH production  longer CH 4 lifetime

5 Effect of the UV-B changes on CH 4 Geoengineering aerosol Aerosol scattering Ozone depletion UV-B decrease in the tropics UV-B increase at high latitudes less OH formation and longer CH 4 lifetime

6 Effects of heterogeneous chemistry on CH 4 Tropospheric NOx depletion induces OH loss  longer CH 4 lifetime ULAQ-CCM GEOSCCM

7 Residual vertical velocity Temperature anomaly Aerosol warming The aerosol warming strengthens the tropical upwelling and the extratropical downwelling in the UTLS Effect of stratospheric warming on CH 4  impact on tropospheric OH and CH 4 lifetime depends on the net result of superimposed species perturbations in the UTLS: CH 4 (negative), NO y and O 3 (positive)  increased downward flux of CH 4 poor stratospheric air at the extratropical tropopause

8 CH 4 and N 2 O changes in the UTLS ULAQ-CCMGEOSCCM Results of ULAQ-CCM and GEOSCCM are similar for N 2 O  consistent with changes of lower stratospheric heating rates and BD circulation (due to aerosols and O 3 ). ULAQ shows about a factor of two larger changes for CH 4  better representation of chemical feedback processes in the upper troposphere. The sign inversion of the UTLS long-lived species perturbation after 2070 is due to their long stratospheric lifetime (about 130 years for N 2 O). Higher mixing ratio values persist for several years in the stratospheric tropical pipe after sulfate geoengineering has ceased, forcing an increase of stratospheric NOx and HOx production, with increased O 3 loss with respect to RCP4.5. This ends up in a sign change of 50-100 hPa tropical heating rates, since geoengineering sulfate aerosols have disappeared  slight weakening of the BD circulation  longer stratospheric lifetimes.

9 CH 4 and N 2 O lifetime changes The tropospheric CH 4 lifetime perturbation is driven by coupling of tropospheric OH changes and integrated CH 4 mass  longer lifetime in G4 with respect to RCP4.5. ULAQ-CCM The stratospheric N 2 O lifetime perturbation is driven by the intensifying strength of the Brewer-Dobson circulation  shorter lifetime in G4 with respect to RCP4.5  longlived species more abundant in the stratospheric tropical pipe. Termination effect discussed before

10 Summary of direct and indirect radiative forcings due to sulfate geo- engineering (2040-2049) Among gas species, in addition to contributions from O 3 (negative) and stratospheric H 2 O (positive), CH 4 produces the largest indirect RF. G4 – RCP4.5 Units CH4 197 ppbV (trop change) Trop O3 -0.72 DU Strat O3 -0.44 DU Strat H2O 0.22 ppmV (TTL change) Trop SO4 0.0055 Optical thickness Strat SO4 0.067 Optical thickness Cirrus ice -0.011 Optical thickness PSCs 0.0004 Optical thickness Direct aerosol RF (obviously) dominates; atmospheric stabilization lead to less upper tropospheric ice formation, with net negative RF.

11 Summary 5.Uncertainties: absence of various effects that could impact the RF, like changes in clouds due to increased aerosols; aerosol distribution; prescribed SSTs. 1.Sulfate geoengineering, made by sustained injection of SO 2 in the tropical lower stratosphere, may impact the abundance of tropospheric methane through several photochemical mechanisms affecting the tropospheric OH abundance and hence the methane lifetime. Stratosphere-troposphere exchange of CH 4 poorer air outside the tropics is also affected by an intensified Brewer-Dobson circulation, as a consequence of the aerosol heating rates. 2.Three models are used here to explore the above radiative, chemical and dynamical mechanisms affecting the methane lifetime (ULAQ-CCM, GEOSCCM, CCSM-CAM4). Our results show that the CH 4 lifetime may become significantly longer with a sustained injection of 2.5 Tg-S/yr started in year 2020 (exp. G4), which implies an increase of tropospheric CH 4 and a positive indirect RF of sulfate geoengineering due to CH 4 changes, of the order of 10% the aerosols direct forcing, but with opposite sign. The indirect RF from CH 4 is calculated as the largest RF among gas species (i.e. strat-trop O 3 and strat H 2 O). 3.Robust features: CH 4 and other long-lived species perturbations are found to be consistent both in ULAQ-CCM and GEOSCCM with changes of lower stratospheric heating rates and BD circulation (due to aerosols and O 3 ). 4.Future developments: ULAQ-CCM will repeat the G4 simulation using SSTs from the G4 atmosphere-ocean coupled run of CCSM-CAM4.

12 Thank you for your attention


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