Otago Daily Times

Mario Molina (77)

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MEXICAN scientist Mario Molina, who became his country’s first winner of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry for his work on the threat to the ozone layer from chlorofluo­rocarbons (CFCs), died on October 7.

One of Mexico’s most eminent scientists, Molina conducted some of his first experiment­s at a tender age in his childhood home before becoming a global authority on climate change.

Born in Mexico City, Molina was a graduate of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) and took postgradua­te degrees at universiti­es in Germany and California.

In 2008, he was appointed a scientific adviser to US President Barack Obama and also advised authoritie­s in the Mexican capital on their efforts to reduce smog and air pollution.

When Molina was a small boy, his parents bought him a microscope. He recalled transformi­ng one bathroom into a makeshift laboratory and was at the age of 10 already devouring biographie­s of Nobel laureates.

In 1995, Molina, Frank Sherwood Rowland and Paul Crutzen were awarded the Nobel Prize for their work showing how CFCs used in spray cans were destroying the ozone layer.

Molina worked at the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy at the University of California in San Diego (UCSD), a key centre of learning on phenomena linked to climate change.

His commitment to fighting global warming set Molina at odds with Mexico’s current government, which has pursued an energy agenda aimed at strengthen­ing state energy firms whose business models depend heavily on the use of polluting fossil fuels. — Reuters

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