Houston Chronicle

Ozone layer healing

Damage from aerosol, coolants is dissipatin­g due to 1987 protocol

- By Seth Borenstein

Earth’s protective ozone layer, which has been thinning since the 1970s, is finally healing from damage caused by aerosol sprays and coolants, a new U.N. report says.

WASHINGTON — Earth’s protective ozone layer is finally healing from damage caused by aerosol sprays and coolants, a new United Nations report said.

The ozone layer had been thinning since the late 1970s. Scientists raised the alarm, and ozonedeple­ting chemicals were phased out worldwide.

As a result, the upper ozone layer above the Northern Hemisphere should be completely repaired in the 2030s and the gaping Antarctic ozone hole should disappear in the 2060s, according to a scientific assessment released Monday at a conference in Quito, Ecuador. The Southern Hemisphere lags a bit and its ozone layer should be healed by midcentury.

“It’s really good news,” said report co-chairman Paul Newman, chief Earth scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. “If ozone-depleting substances had continued to increase, we would have seen huge effects. We stopped that.”

High in the atmosphere, ozone shields Earth from ultraviole­t rays that cause skin cancer, crop damage and other problems. Use of man-made chemicals called chlorofluo­rocarbons, or CFCs, which release chlorine and bromine, began eating away at the ozone. In 1987, countries around the world agreed in the Montreal Protocol to phase out CFCs, and businesses came up with replacemen­ts for spray cans and other uses.

Not over yet?

At its worst in the late 1990s, about 10 percent of the upper ozone layer was depleted, Newman said. Since 2000, it has increased by about 1 to 3 percent per decade, the report said.

This year, the ozone hole over the South Pole peaked at nearly 9.6 million square miles. That’s about 16 percent smaller than the biggest hole recorded — 11.4 million square miles in 2006.

The hole reaches its peak in September and October and disappears by late December until the next Southern Hemisphere spring, Newman said.

The ozone layer starts about 6 miles above Earth and stretches

for nearly 25 miles; ozone is a colorless combinatio­n of three oxygen atoms.

If nothing had been done to stop the thinning, the world would have destroyed two-thirds of its ozone layer by 2065, Newman said.

But it’s not a complete success yet, said University of Colorado’s

Brian Toon, who wasn’t part of the report.

“We are only at a point where recovery may have started,” Toon said, pointing to some ozone measuremen­ts that haven’t increased yet.

Another problem is that new technology has found an increase in emissions of a banned CFC out

of East Asia, the report noted.

On its own, the ozone hole has slightly shielded Antarctica from the much larger effects of global warming — it has heated up but not as much as it likely would without ozone depletion, said Ross Salawitch, a University of Maryland atmospheri­c scientist who co-authored the report.

So a healed ozone layer will worsen man-made climate change there a bit, Newman said.

More work to do

Scientists don’t know how much a healed ozone hole will further warm Antarctica, but they do know the immediate effects of ozone depletion on the world and human health, so “it would be incredibly irresponsi­ble not to do this,” Salawitch said.

And the replacemen­ts now being used to cool cars and refrigerat­ors need to be replaced themselves with chemicals that don’t worsen global warming, Newman said. An amendment to the Montreal Protocol that goes into effect next year would cut use of some of those gases.

“I don’t think we can do a victory lap until 2060,” Newman said. “That will be for our grandchild­ren to do.”

 ?? NASA via Associated Press ?? This combinatio­n of images made from NASA shows areas of low ozone above Antarctica in September 2000, left, and September 2018. The purple and blue colors are where there is the least ozone, and the yellows and reds are where there is more ozone. A U.N. report released on Monday says Earth’s protective ozone layer is finally, though slowly, healing.
NASA via Associated Press This combinatio­n of images made from NASA shows areas of low ozone above Antarctica in September 2000, left, and September 2018. The purple and blue colors are where there is the least ozone, and the yellows and reds are where there is more ozone. A U.N. report released on Monday says Earth’s protective ozone layer is finally, though slowly, healing.

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