Solar Geoengineering Effects on Malaria Transmission Risk in South Asia Under G6sulfur Scenario

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Apr 2, 2026, 7:06:54 AM (4 days ago) Apr 2
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https://rmets.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/joc.70365

Authors: Athar Hussain, Muhammad Ali Khan, Muhammad Shoaib

First published: 27 March 2026


Abstract
Malaria is a disease that affects people throughout the global South and has a major impact on public health. The distribution of disease is influenced by global warming. Proposed solar geoengineering (SG), through aerosol injection, is a hypothetical climate intervention intended to temporarily counteract global warming by reflecting and absorbing a portion of incoming solar radiation. Using Entomological Inoculation Rate (EIR) as a quantitative measure of malaria transmission under the G6sulfur scenario of SG, this study investigates the projected spatio-temporal characteristics of malaria distribution in seven of South Asia's most climate vulnerable countries (Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Iran, Nepal and Pakistan). Furthermore, for comparative analysis, future projections of EIR are examined under a Shared Socioeconomic Pathway scenario (SSP585) without SG. According to the outcomes of a dynamical malaria model, the spatial distribution patterns of EIR under the SG G6sulfur scenario show a general decline in the distribution of malaria over South Asia between 2020 and 2090 as compared to the SSP585 scenario. Malaria's regional spatial distribution is expected to significantly reduce over Bangladesh, India and Pakistan. While the decline in EIR is less severe, it is still noticeable in Afghanistan, Iran and Nepal.

Source: RMeTS
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