Ozone
hole remains size of North America, Nasa data shows
Antarctic
hole in protective layer of gas stands around same level as 2010,
2012 and 2013, but scientists say recovery is on track
31
October, 2014
The
Antarctic ozone hole, which was expected to reduce in size swiftly
when manmade chlorine emissions were outlawed 27 years ago, is
stubbornly remaining the size of North America, new data from Nasa
suggests.
The
hole in the thin layer of gas, which helps shield life on Earth from
potentially harmful ultraviolet solar radiation that can cause skin
cancers, grows and contracts throughout the year but reached its
maximum extent on 9 September when monitors at the south pole showed
it to cover 24.1m square km (9.3m sq miles). This is about 9% below
the record maximum in 2000 but almost the same as in 2010, 2012 and
2013.
But
scientists remain unsure why the hole has not reduced more since the
Montreal Protocol agreement was signed by countries in 1987.
This
global treaty is considered one of the world’s most successful,
having been pushed through in record time. It bans the use of
ozone-depleting chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), substances that were
widely-used in household and industrial products such as
refrigerators, spray cans, insulation foam and fire suppressants.
“The
ozone hole area is smaller than what we saw in the late-1990s and
early 2000s, and we know that chlorine levels are decreasing.
However, we are still uncertain about whether a long-term Antarctic
stratospheric temperature warming might be reducing this ozone
depletion,” said Paul A Newman, chief scientist for atmospheres at
Nasa’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
“It’s
broadly on track [to reduce in size],” said Dr Jonathan Shanklin,
emeritus professor at the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, one
of the three scientists who discovered the hole in the 1980s. “We
knew it was always going to take a long time to recover because the
CFCs were long-lived.”
He
said the reason why it was not healing more quickly was because the
interaction between climate change and the ozone hole was complex.
“The ozone hole itself is affecting the climate of Antarctica and
Australia, and is being affected by it. It is changing the wind
systems.
“As
the ozone hole [gradually] fills in, so we can expect, over the next
50 or so years, the effects of climate change to increase. We will
see different patterns of climate change”.
Last
month the UN Environment Programme (Unep) and the World
Meteorological Organisation (WMO) said there were “positive
indications” that the ozone layer was on track to recovery, but
warned it might take a further 35 years or more to recover to 1980
levels. They said that without the Montreal Protocol atmospheric
levels of ozone depleting substances could have increased tenfold by
2050.
According
to Unep, by 2030 the treaty will have prevented two million cases of
skin cancer annually, averted damage to human eyes and immune
systems, and protected wildlife and agriculture.
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