How It Works

Ozone layer hole has grown for a third year in a row

- WORDS JOANNA WENDEL

The ozone hole that forms yearly over Antarctica has grown for the third year in a row. At nearly 10 million square miles, the ozone hole is the largest it’s been since 2015. But despite that growth, scientists say that the hole’s size is still on a downward trend overall. “All the data says that the ozone is on the mend,” Paul Newman, NASA Goddard Space Flight

Center’s chief Earth scientist, said.

Ozone is composed of three oxygen atoms and makes up very little of our atmosphere, but it has a huge impact on our planet. The blanketlik­e layer stretching over the globe absorbs the most harmful ultraviole­t (UV) radiation from the Sun, shielding Earth’s life. Ozone forms in the stratosphe­re, around 9 to 18 miles above Earth’s surface. It forms when UV radiation splits regular oxygen molecules, which are made of two oxygen atoms (O2). The two free-floating oxygen atoms then each bond with an oxygen molecule, forming a molecule made of three oxygen atoms.

Scientists discovered the thinning ozone layer over Antarctica in the early 1980s. Although

ozone is created and destroyed naturally in the stratosphe­re, human-driven pollution destroys ozone faster than it can form. In particular, industries that use chlorine or bromine, like refrigerat­ion and air conditioni­ng, destroy ozone at alarmingly high rates. In the stratosphe­re, chlorine molecules react with ozone to create one chlorine monoxide molecule – composed of a chlorine atom and an oxygen atom – and one O2 molecule. Then the chlorine monoxide molecule breaks down, freeing that chlorine atom to react with more ozone. One atom of chlorine can destroy 100,000 ozone molecules before that chlorine molecule is removed from the atmosphere. Substances like chlorofluo­rocarbons, used in refrigerat­ion and air conditioni­ng, stay in the atmosphere for a long time, some for longer than six months, meaning the chlorine and other chemicals from these substances can wreak havoc on the ozone layer.

The ozone hole was first observed in the early 1980s and reached its largest extent in 2006. This year’s ozone hole, which peaked on 5 October, was the biggest recorded since

2015. But scientists aren’t too concerned. “The overall trend is improvemen­t. It’s a little worse this year because it was a little colder this year,” said Newman.

A cold stratosphe­re is exactly what chemicals like chlorine need to break down ozone. During Antarctica’s winter, the stratosphe­re gets cold enough for clouds to form. The ice crystals that make up those clouds provide a surface on which chlorine, for instance, can react with ozone. As spring approaches in September, the Sun’s UV rays jumpstart these reactions. Once summer is in full swing, the stratosphe­re warms up enough to evaporate the clouds, removing the surface on which ozone-destroying chemical reactions take place. Global agreements like the 1987 Montreal Protocol, which regulates the production and consumptio­n of ozone-depleting substances, have helped to repair the ozone hole. And despite the ozone hole’s increasing size this year, scientists generally agree that the hole is shrinking.

 ?? ?? A false-colour view of the monthly averaged total ozone over the Antarctic pole for October 2022 – blue and purple show least ozone
A false-colour view of the monthly averaged total ozone over the Antarctic pole for October 2022 – blue and purple show least ozone

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom