https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/2752-5295/ae228b

*Authors: *João Gabriel Martins Ribeiro, Michelle Simões Reboita, Natália
Machado Crespo and John C Moore

Accepted Manuscript online *21 November 2025 *

DOI 10.1088/2752-5295/ae228b

*Abstract*
This study seeks to describe the impact of Stratospheric Aerosol Injection
(SAI) under climate change scenarios on precipitation and 10-meter winds
caused by extratropical cyclones in the Southern Hemisphere, using data
from three international initiatives: the Earth System with Stratospheric
Aerosol Injection (ARISE), the Stratospheric Aerosol Geoengineering Large
Ensemble (GLENS), and the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project
(GeoMIP/G6Sulfur). Cyclone-related variables were examined across three
time periods—the reference period (2015–2024), the near future (2040–2059),
and the far future (2080–2099)—with a focus on four key subdomains: the
Southeast Pacific Ocean (SPO), Southwest Atlantic Ocean (SAO), Southern
Africa (AFR), and Australia (AUS). In the first part of the study, we
assessed precipitation and wind intensity associated with cyclones under
both SAI and no-SAI scenarios. Results show that the SAI scenario generally
leads to cyclones with reduced precipitation and weaker winds compared to
the no-SAI scenario, though exceptions were noted in the GeoMIP/G6Sulfur
simulations. In the second part, we analyzed the contribution of
extratropical cyclones to total precipitation and wind intensity within
each subdomain. The findings reveal that this contribution decreases under
the SAI scenario from the near to the far future. This trend is consistent
across both precipitation and wind intensity. In the final part of the
study, we examined the synoptic characteristics of extratropical cyclones
in each subdomain using composite analysis. During the reference period,
the three initiatives successfully reproduced the typical structure of
extratropical cyclones as observed in reanalysis data, albeit with
differences in the magnitude of precipitation. In contrast, there is no
spatial homogeneity in the composite differences between SAI and no-SAI
during the future periods. For example, one project may show reduced
precipitation in a specific quadrant of the cyclone in one domain, but
display a different pattern in others. This variability is also observed
across different projects and time periods analyzed. The main conclusion is
that SAI appears to mitigate some of the effects of global warming by
weakening extratropical cyclones, and contributing to decreasing regionally
precipitation and wind intensity associated with these systems.

*Source: IOP Science *

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