The Day

2019 ozone hole smallest on record since discovery

- By ANDREW FREEDMAN

The Antarctic ozone hole hit its smallest annual peak on record since tracking began in 1982, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion and NASA announced Monday. Although we’re making progress in cutting down on the use of ozone-depleting chemicals, the milestone doesn’t mean we’ve solved the problem, the agencies cautioned.

Instead, scientists attribute the relatively tiny ozone hole to unusually mild temperatur­es in that layer of the atmosphere.

According to NASA and the NOAA, the annual ozone hole — which consists of an area of heavily depleted ozone high in the stratosphe­re above Antarctica, between seven and 25 miles above the surface — reached its peak extent of 6.3 million square miles on Sept. 8 and then shrank to less than 3.9 million square miles during the rest of September and October.

“During years with normal weather conditions, the ozone hole typically grows to a maximum of about 8 million square miles,” the agencies said in a news release.

This is the third time in 40 years that weather systems have caused warm stratosphe­ric temperatur­es that put the brakes on ozone loss, the federal science agencies said. Similar weather patterns led to unusually small ozone holes in 1988 and 2002, they reported. “It’s a rare event that we’re still trying to understand,” Susan Strahan, an atmospheri­c scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, said in a news release. “If the warming hadn’t happened, we’d likely be looking at a much more typical ozone hole.”

The stratosphe­ric ozone layer helps deflect incoming ultraviole­t radiation from the sun, shielding life on Earth from its harmful effects, such as skin cancer, cataracts and damage to plants. However, chemicals used for refrigerat­ion purposes, such as chlorofluo­rocarbons (CFCs) and hydrofluor­ocarbons (HFCs), break down stratosphe­ric ozone molecules, thereby exposing the planet’s surface to greater amounts of UV radiation.

The Montreal Protocol, a landmark internatio­nal environmen­tal treaty that took effect in 1988, has reduced CFC emissions worldwide.

These chemicals have an atmospheri­c lifetime of several decades and can destroy extraordin­ary amounts of ozone over that time. The ozone layer has been slowly but steadily recovering since the Montreal Protocol took effect, but it still has a long way to go.

Each year, an ozone hole forms during the Southern Hemisphere’s late winter as the sun’s rays initiate chemical reactions between the ozone molecules and manmade chemically active forms of chlorine and bromine. These chemical reactions are maximized on the surface of high-flying clouds, but milder-than-average conditions in the stratosphe­re above Antarctica this year inhibited cloud formation and persistenc­e, according to a NASA statement. This helped prevent the loss of a considerab­le amount of ozone.

For example, unlike what typically happens, there was no area above Antarctica this year that was completely lacking in ozone, according to measuremen­ts from NOAA using weather balloons.

The weather systems that minimized ozone depletion in September, known as “sudden

stratosphe­ric warming” events, were unusually strong this year. About 12 miles above Earth’s surface, temperatur­es during September were 29 degrees higher than average, NASA reported, “which was the warmest in the 40-year historical record for September by a wide margin.”

As can occur with stratosphe­ric warming events in the Northern Hemisphere, this weather event helped to weaken the Antarctic polar vortex, a ribbon of high-speed air encircling the South Pole that typically concentrat­es the coldest air near or over the pole itself.

Instead, the Antarctic polar vortex was knocked off balance and slowed significan­tly, from an average wind speed of 161 mph to just 67 mph.

The slowing vortex allowed air to sink in the lower stratosphe­re, where it warmed and inhibited cloud formation. In addition, the reconfigur­ed weather map helped to import ozone-rich air from other parts of the Southern Hemisphere, rather than sealing off the polar region entirely. This also helped boost ozone levels there.

Interestin­gly, climate change isn’t expected to cause more frequent sudden stratosphe­ric warming events over the South Pole, and instead it could strengthen, not weaken, the polar vortex overall.

In contrast with global warming, the discovery of the ozone hole by scientists at the British Antarctic Survey in 1985 galvanized internatio­nal action. This swiftly resulted in a binding internatio­nal treaty that many experts consider the most successful environmen­tal agreement to date. In fact, policymake­rs are even using it to address HFCs, ozone-depleting chemicals that are also global-warming pollutants.

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