USA TODAY International Edition

Ozone layer thinning over Earth’s populated areas

Progress made at poles, but not lower latitudes

- Doyle Rice

The ozone layer that protects us from harmful ultraviole­t radiation continues to thin over populated areas of the world, a new study warns.

Scientists say the layer is in better shape, however, over the North and

South Poles.

Ozone has been declining globally since the 1980s. While the banning of the chlorofluo­rocarbons (CFCs) that cause the thinning is leading to a recovery at the poles, “the same does not appear to be true for the lower latitudes,” said study author Joanna Haigh of Imperial College in London.

Located in the stratosphe­re, the ozone layer blocks potentiall­y harmful ultraviole­t energy from reaching our planet’s surface. Without it, humans and animals could experience increased rates of skin cancer and other ailments.

Scientists first discovered the dramatic thinning in Earth’s protective sheet in the 1970s and determined that the production of CFCs, used in refrigerat­ors and aerosol sprays, caused the anomaly. The infamous ozone hole over Antarctica was discovered in the late 1970s.

In the late 1980s, 196 countries signed the Montreal Protocol, a treaty that limited production of CFCs around the world.

The cause of the ongoing thinning is unclear, although the study authors suggest a couple of possibilit­ies. One is that climate change is altering the pattern of atmospheri­c circulatio­n, causing more ozone to be carried away from the tropics.

Another cause could be newer manmade gases that are chewing away at the ozone layer. The gases in question, known as “very short-lived substances,” include dichlorome­thane, used in a variety of industrial processes.

The naturally occurring ozone high up in the atmosphere is what’s known as “good ozone,” in contrast with the “bad ozone” near the surface, which is pollution and can cause respirator­y problems.

“The potential for harm in lower latitudes may actually be worse than at the poles,” Haigh said. “The decreases in ozone are less than we saw at the poles before the Montreal Protocol was enacted, but UV radiation is more intense in these regions, and more people live there.”

The study was published in the European Geoscience­s Union journal Atmospheri­c Chemistry and Physics.

 ??  ?? The ozone hole over Antarctica raised alarms last century. NASA
The ozone hole over Antarctica raised alarms last century. NASA

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