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Assessment of solar geoengineering impact on precipitation and temperature extremes in the Muda River Basin, Malaysia using CMIP6 SSP and GeoMIP6 G6 simulations

Modelling
Malaysia | Tan
Hydrology, Monsoon, Precipitation, Temperature

Summary

This study examined whether solar radiation modification (SRM) could reduce climate‑change‑driven floods and droughts in Malaysia’s Muda River Basin. Results show SRM could lower rising temperatures and reduce extreme wet‑season rainfall, helping limit monsoon flooding. However, stratospheric aerosol injection could worsen dry‑season droughts in the medium to long term. Differences from a similar Malaysian basin highlight that SRM impacts are highly region‑specific and require local assessment.

Abstract

The concept of solar geoengineering remains a topic of debate, yet it may be an effective way for cooling the Earth’s temperature. Nevertheless, the impact of solar geoengineering on regional or local climate patterns is an active area of research. This study aims to evaluate the impact of solar geoengineering on precipitation and temperature extremes of the Muda River Basin (MRB), a very important agricultural basin situated in the northern Peninsular Malaysia. The analysis utilized the multi-model ensemble mean generated by four models that contributed to the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project (GeoMIP6). These models were configured to simulate the solar irradiance reduction (G6solar) and stratospheric sulfate aerosols (G6sulfur) strategies as well as the moderate (SSP245) and high emission (SSP585) experiments. Prior to the computation of extreme indices, a linear scaling approach was employed to bias correct the daily precipitation, maximum and minimum temperatures. The findings show that the G6solar and G6sulfur experiments, particularly the latter, could be effective in holding the increases in both annual and monthly mean precipitation totals and temperature extremes close to the increases projected under SSP245. For example, both G6solar and G6sulfur experiments project increases of temperature over the basin of 2 °C at the end of the 21st century as compared to 3.5 °C under SSP585. The G6solar and G6sulfur experiments also demonstrate some reliability in modulating the increases in precipitation extreme indices associated with flooding to match those under SSP245. However, the G6sulfur experiment may exacerbate dry conditions in the basin, as monthly precipitation is projected to decrease during the dry months from January to May and consecutives dry days are expected to increase, particularly during the 2045–2064 and 2065–2084 periods. Increases dry spells could indirectly affect agricultural and freshwater supplies, and pose considerable challenges to farmers.

Publication data

Journal: Science of the Total Environment
Date: 20 October 2024mou
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.174817

Authors

Mou Leong Tan

Universiti Sains Malaysia

Yi Lin Tew

Universiti Sains Malaysia

Juneng Liew

Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia

Govindasamy Bala

Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru

Mari Tye

National Center for Atmospheric Research

Chun Kiat Chang

Universiti Sains Malaysia

Nurfashareena Muhammad

Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia

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