https://essopenarchive.org/users/990218/articles/1364633-climate-intervention-through-stratospheric-aerosol-injection-may-partially-mitigate-marine-heatwaves

*Authors*: Lala Kounta, Lifeng Luo, Gouri Anil, Daniel M. Hueholt, Cheryl
Shannon Harrison, Daniele Visioni, Mari Rachel Tye, Tyler Felgenhauer,
Amadou T Gaye, Phoebe L Zarnetske

*04 March 2026*

*Abstract*
Marine heatwaves (MHWs) cause significant harm to marine life and ecosystem
services, and can intensify hurricanes. Global warming has increased the
duration and intensity of MHWs over the last century, and permanent MHWs
have been predicted in many areas of the ocean by the end of the 21st
century. Climate interventions, such as stratospheric aerosol injection
(SAI), have been proposed to reduce the mean global temperature; however,
their potential impact on MHWs is unclear. In this study, we used the
output from the Community Earth System Model to quantify MHWs under
multiple timeframes and climate change scenarios. We evaluated MHW
properties, including duration and maximum intensity, over the historical
(1990-2009), present (2015-2034), and future (2050-2069) periods. We
analyzed output from two SAI scenarios aimed to maintain global mean
surface temperatures at ∼1.5 and ∼1.0°C above pre-industrial levels
(ARISE-SAI-1.0 and ARISE-SAI-1.5) and one non-SAI scenario (SSP2-4.5). Our
results show that despite the SAI reducing the global average maximum
intensity and duration of MHWs relative to SSP2-4.5, the magnitude of the
effects varies spatially. Compared with the present climate, SAI scenarios
would reduce MHW intensity in 25-76% of the ocean and MHW duration in
21-80% of the ocean. The largest future reductions in maximum intensity and
duration occurred in the coastal regions of the Tropical Atlantic, Indian,
Arctic, and South Atlantic oceans. Even with a more aggressive SAI scenario
(ARISE-SAI-1.0), nearly 25% of the ocean would remain unaffected, with
areas like the North Atlantic, Tropical Pacific, and parts of the Southern
Oceans still experiencing more intense and longer MHWs, posing risks to
marine life.

*Source: ESS Open Archive*

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