https://escholarship.org/uc/item/52k6b1kq#author

*Authors*: Wan, Jessica Shen Yi

2025

*Abstract*
As the impacts of climate change worsen, it is becoming increasingly
challenging to avoid irreversible climate damages through greenhouse gas
emissions reduction alone. In response, research on a set of proposals to
counteract the effects of global warming called solar geoengineering (SG)
has substantially grown in the past decade. Marine cloud brightening (MCB)
is one proposed SG strategy that would cool the planet by adding aerosols
to the lower atmosphere to form brighter marine clouds. While most MCB
studies have targeted global mean temperature, interventions for regional
climate risk reduction might present a more plausible pathway for future
deployment. However, it is uncertain the degree to which regional MCB could
achieve local climate benefits and avoid unintended side effects outside of
the target region. These uncertainties surrounding regional geoengineering
form the foundation for this dissertation. Chapter 1 explores the efficacy
of regional MCB in the North Pacific to alleviate extreme heat stress in
the Western U.S. By brightening both a remote mid-latitude region and a
proximate subtropical patch near the Western U.S., I demonstrate the impact
of MCB on teleconnections and regional climate. Chapter 2 dives deeper into
the idea of geoengineering teleconnections by modeling the response of El
Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) to MCB in the Southeast Subtropical
Pacific. By deliberately targeting climate variability, I reframe the
possible objectives for SG strategies and identify a plausible strategy for
MCB to weaken El Niño consistent with current forecasting capabilities.
Chapter 3 expands on the concept of targeted intervention for regional
impacts reduction by quantifying the societal impacts of MCB on ENSO. Using
the climate model experiments from Chapter 2 and interdisciplinary metrics
for economic losses, coral reef bleaching, and marine habitat viability, I
demonstrate the potential economic and marine ecosystem benefits of damping
El Niño with targeted MCB.

*Source: eScholarship*

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