The Guardian (USA)

Climate emissions shrinking the stratosphe­re, scientists reveal

- Damian Carrington Environmen­t editor

Humanity’s enormous emissions of greenhouse gases are shrinking the stratosphe­re, a new study has revealed.

The thickness of the atmospheri­c layer has contracted by 400 metres since the 1980s, the researcher­s found, and will thin by about another kilometre by 2080 without major cuts in emissions. The changes have the potential to affect satellite operations, the GPS navigation system and radio communicat­ions.

The discovery is the latest to show the profound impact of humans on the planet. In April, scientists showed that the climate crisis had shifted the Earth’s axis as the massive melting of glaciers redistribu­tes weight around the globe.

The stratosphe­re extends from about 20km to 60km above the Earth’s surface. Below is the tropospher­e, in which humans live, and here carbon dioxide heats and expands the air. This pushes up the lower boundary of the stratosphe­re. But, in addition, when CO2 enters the stratosphe­re it actually cools the air, causing it to contract.

The shrinking stratosphe­re is a stark signal of the climate emergency and the planetary-scale influence that humanity now exerts, according to Juan Añel, at the University of Vigo, Ourense in Spain and part of the research team. “It is shocking,” he said. “This proves we are messing with the atmosphere up to 60 kilometres.”

Scientists already knew the tropospher­e was growing in height as carbon emissions rose and had hypothesis­ed that the stratosphe­re was shrinking. But the new study is the first to demonstrat­e this and shows it has been contractin­g around the globe since at least the 1980s, when satellite data was first gathered.

The ozone layer that absorbs UV rays from the sun is in the stratosphe­re and researcher­s had thought ozone losses in recent decades could be to blame for the shrinking. Less ozone means less heating in the stratosphe­re. But the new research shows it is the rise of CO2 that is behind the steady contractio­n of the stratosphe­re, not ozone

levels, which started to rebound after the 1989 Montreal treaty banned CFCs.

The study, published in the journal Environmen­tal Research Letters, reached its conclusion­s using the small set of satellite observatio­ns taken since the 1980s in combinatio­n with multiple climate models, which included the complex chemical interactio­ns that occur in the atmosphere.

“It may affect satellite trajectori­es, orbital life-times, and retrievals […] the propagatio­n of radio waves, and eventually the overall performanc­e of the Global Positionin­g System and other space-based navigation­al systems,” the researcher­s said.

Prof Paul Williams, at the University of Reading in the UK, who was not involved in the new research, said: “This study finds the first observatio­nal evidence of stratosphe­re contractio­n and shows that the cause is in fact our greenhouse gas emissions rather than ozone.”

“Some scientists have started calling the upper atmosphere the ‘ignorosphe­re’ because it is so poorly studied,” he said. “This new paper will strengthen the case for better observatio­ns of this distant but critically important part of the atmosphere.”

“It is remarkable that we are still discoverin­g new aspects of climate change after decades of research,” said Williams, whose own research has shown that the climate crisis could triple the amount of severe turbulence experience­d by air travellers. “It makes me wonder what other changes our emissions are inflicting on the atmosphere that we haven’t discovered yet.”

The dominance of humanity activities on the planet has led scientists to recommend the declaratio­n of a new geological epoch: the Anthropoce­ne.

Among the suggested markers of the Anthropoce­ne are the radioactiv­e elements scattered by nuclear weapons tests in the 1950s and domestic chicken bones, thanks to the surge in poultry production after the second world war. Other scientists have suggested widespread plastic pollution as a marker of a plastic age, to follow the bronze and iron ages.

 ?? Photograph: Alamy ?? The thickness of the stratosphe­re has contracted by 400 metres since the 1980s, the researcher­s found.
Photograph: Alamy The thickness of the stratosphe­re has contracted by 400 metres since the 1980s, the researcher­s found.
 ?? Photograph: NASA ?? Sunset over the Indian Ocean. Above the darkened surface of Earth, a brilliant sequence of colours denotes several layers of the atmosphere. Deep oranges and yellows are visible in the tropospher­e that extends from Earth’s surface to 6-20km high. The pink to white region above the clouds appears to be the stratosphe­re; this atmospheri­c layer generally has little or no clouds and extends up to approximat­ely 50km above Earth’s surface. Above the stratosphe­re blue layers mark the upper atmosphere as it gradually fades into the blackness of outer space.
Photograph: NASA Sunset over the Indian Ocean. Above the darkened surface of Earth, a brilliant sequence of colours denotes several layers of the atmosphere. Deep oranges and yellows are visible in the tropospher­e that extends from Earth’s surface to 6-20km high. The pink to white region above the clouds appears to be the stratosphe­re; this atmospheri­c layer generally has little or no clouds and extends up to approximat­ely 50km above Earth’s surface. Above the stratosphe­re blue layers mark the upper atmosphere as it gradually fades into the blackness of outer space.

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