Abstract
The Indonesia Throughflow (ITF) is the only low-latitude channel between the Pacific and Indian oceans, and its variability has important effects on global climate and biogeochemical cycles. Climate models consistently predict a decline in ITF transport under global warming, but it has not yet been examined under solar geoengineering scenarios. We use standard parameterized methods for estimating ITF: the Amended Island Rule and Buoyancy Forcing, to investigate ITF under the SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5 greenhouse gas scenarios, and the geoengineering experiments G6solar and G6sulfur that reduce net global mean radiative forcing from SSP5-8.5 levels to SSP2-4.5 levels using solar diming and sulfate aerosol injection strategies. Six model ensemble mean projections for 2080–2100 relative to historical ITF are reductions of 19 % under the G6solar scenario and 28 % under the G6sulfur scenario which compare with reductions of 23 % and 27 % under SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5. Thus, significant weakening of the ITF occurs under all scenarios, but G6solar closer approximates SSP2-4.5 than does G6sulfur. In contrast with the other three scenarios which show only reductions in forcing due to ocean upwelling, the G6sulfur experiment shows a large reduction in ocean surface wind stress forcing accounting for 47 % (38 %~65 % across model range) of the decline of total ITF transport. There are also reductions in deep-sea upwelling in extratropical western boundary currents.