
Image of the largest Antarctic ozone
hole ever recorded (September 2006).
Ozone depletion describes two distinct, but
related observations: a slow, steady decline of about 4% per decade
in the total volume of
ozone in
Earth's stratosphere
(ozone layer) since the late 1970s, and a much larger, but
seasonal, decrease in stratospheric ozone over Earth's polar
regions during the same period. The latter phenomenon is commonly
referred to as the
ozone hole. In addition to this
well-known
stratospheric ozone
depletion, there are also
tropospheric ozone depletion
events, which occur near the surface in polar regions during
spring.
The detailed mechanism by which the polar ozone holes form is
different from that for the mid-latitude thinning, but the most
important process in both trends is
catalytic destruction of ozone by atomic chlorine
and bromine. The main source of these
halogen atoms in the stratosphere is
photodissociation of
chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) compounds,
commonly called
freons, and of
bromofluorocarbon compounds known as
halons. These compounds are transported
into the stratosphere after being emitted at the surface. Both
ozone depletion mechanisms strengthened as emissions of CFCs and
halons increased.
CFCs and other contributory substances are commonly referred to as
ozone-depleting substances (
ODS).
Since the ozone layer prevents most harmful UVB wavelengths
(270–315 nm) of
ultraviolet light
(UV light) from passing through the
Earth's atmosphere, observed and
projected decreases in ozone have generated worldwide concern
leading to adoption of the
Montreal
Protocol that bans the production of CFCs and halons as well as
related ozone depleting chemicals such as
carbon tetrachloride and
trichloroethane. It is suspected that
a variety of biological consequences such as increases in
skin cancer,
cataracts,
damage to plants, and reduction of
plankton
populations in the ocean's
photic zone
may result from the increased UV exposure due to ozone
depletion.
Ozone cycle overview
Three forms (or
allotropes) of oxygen are
involved in the
ozone-oxygen
cycle:
oxygen atoms (O or atomic oxygen),
oxygen gas (O
2 or diatomic oxygen), and ozone gas
(O
3 or triatomic oxygen).
Ozone is
formed in the stratosphere when oxygen molecules
photodissociate after absorbing an
ultraviolet photon whose wavelength is
shorter than 240 nm. This produces two oxygen atoms. The
atomic oxygen then combines with O
2 to create
O
3. Ozone molecules absorb UV light between 310 and
200 nm, following which ozone splits into a molecule of
O
2 and an oxygen atom. The oxygen atom then joins up
with an oxygen molecule to regenerate ozone. This is a continuing
process which terminates when an oxygen atom "recombines" with an
ozone molecule to make two O
2 molecules:O +
O
3 → 2 O
2

Global monthly average total ozone
amount.
The overall amount of ozone in the stratosphere is determined by a
balance between photochemical production and recombination.
Ozone can be destroyed by a number of
free
radical catalysts, the most important of which are the
hydroxyl radical (OH·), the
nitric oxide radical (NO·) and atomic
chlorine (Cl·) and
bromine
(Br·). All of these have both natural and anthropogenic (manmade)
sources; at the present time, most of the OH· and NO· in the
stratosphere is of natural origin, but human activity has
dramatically increased the levels of chlorine and bromine. These
elements are found in certain stable organic compounds, especially
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), which
may find their way to the
stratosphere
without being destroyed in the troposphere due to their low
reactivity. Once in the stratosphere, the Cl and Br atoms are
liberated from the parent compounds by the action of ultraviolet
light, e.g. ('h' is
Planck's
constant, 'ν' is
frequency of
electromagnetic radiation)
CFCl
3 + hν → CFCl
2 + Cl
The Cl and Br atoms can then destroy ozone molecules through a
variety of
catalytic cycles. In the
simplest example of such a cycle, a chlorine atom reacts with an
ozone molecule, taking an oxygen atom with it (forming ClO) and
leaving a normal oxygen molecule. The chlorine monoxide (i.e., the
ClO) can react with a second molecule of ozone (i.e.,
O
3) to yield another chlorine atom and two molecules of
oxygen. The chemical shorthand for these gas-phase reactions
is:
Cl + O
3 → ClO + O
2
ClO + O
3 → Cl + 2 O
2
The overall effect is a decrease in the amount of ozone. More
complicated mechanisms have been discovered that lead to ozone
destruction in the lower stratosphere as well.
A single chlorine atom would keep on destroying ozone (thus a
catalyst) for up to two years (the time scale for transport back
down to the troposphere) were it not for reactions that remove them
from this cycle by forming reservoir species such as
hydrogen chloride (HCl) and
chlorine nitrate (ClONO
2). On a
per atom basis, bromine is even more efficient than chlorine at
destroying ozone, but there is much less bromine in the atmosphere
at present. As a result, both chlorine and bromine contribute
significantly to the overall ozone depletion. Laboratory studies
have shown that fluorine and iodine atoms participate in analogous
catalytic cycles. However, in the Earth's stratosphere, fluorine
atoms react rapidly with water and methane to form strongly-bound
HF, while organic molecules which
contain iodine react so rapidly in the lower atmosphere that they
do not reach the stratosphere in significant quantities.
Furthermore, a single chlorine atom is able to react with 100,000
ozone molecules. This fact plus the amount of chlorine released
into the atmosphere by chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) yearly
demonstrates how dangerous CFCs are to the environment.
Quantitative understanding of the chemical ozone loss
process
New research on the breakdown of a key molecule in these
ozone-depleting chemicals,
dichlorine peroxide
(Cl
2O
2), calls into question the completeness
of present atmospheric models of polar ozone depletion.
Specifically, chemists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Pasadena, California, found in 2007 that the temperatures, and the
spectrum and intensity of radiation present in the stratosphere
created conditions insufficient to allow the rate of
chemical-breakdown required to release chlorine radicals in the
volume necessary to explain observed rates of ozone depletion.
Instead, laboratory tests, designed to be the most accurate
reflection of stratospheric conditions to date, showed the decay of
the crucial molecule almost a magnitude lower than previously
thought.
That result motivated further measurements by different methods,
resulting in cross-sections that agree with the older, higher ones.
If the new results hold up the purported discrepancy will be
resolved.
Observations on ozone layer depletion
The most pronounced decrease in ozone has been in the lower
stratosphere. However, the ozone hole
is most usually measured not in terms of ozone concentrations at
these levels (which are typically of a few parts per million) but
by reduction in the total
column ozone, above a point on
the Earth's surface, which is normally expressed in
Dobson units, abbreviated as "DU". Marked
decreases in column ozone in the
Antarctic
spring and early summer compared to the early 1970s and before have
been observed using instruments such as the
Total Ozone Mapping
Spectrometer (TOMS).
Reductions of up to 70% in the ozone column observed in the austral
(southern hemispheric) spring over Antarctica and first reported in
1985 (Farman et al. 1985) are continuing. Through the 1990s, total
column ozone in September and October have continued to be 40–50%
lower than pre-ozone-hole values. In the
Arctic the amount lost is more variable year-to-year
than in the Antarctic. The greatest declines, up to 30%, are in the
winter and spring, when the stratosphere is colder.
Reactions that take place on polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) play
an important role in enhancing ozone depletion. PSCs form more
readily in the extreme cold of Antarctic stratosphere. This is why
ozone holes first formed, and are deeper, over Antarctica. Early
models failed to take PSCs into account and predicted a gradual
global depletion, which is why the sudden Antarctic ozone hole was
such a surprise to many scientists.
In middle latitudes it is preferable to speak of ozone depletion
rather than holes. Declines are about 3% below pre-1980 values for
35–60°N and about 6% for 35–60°S. In the tropics, there are no
significant trends.
Ozone depletion also explains much of the observed reduction in
stratospheric and upper
tropospheric
temperatures. The source of the warmth of the stratosphere is the
absorption of UV radiation by ozone, hence reduced ozone leads to
cooling. Some stratospheric cooling is also predicted from
increases in
greenhouse gases such as
CO2; however the
ozone-induced cooling appears to be dominant.
Predictions of ozone levels remain difficult. The
World Meteorological Organization Global Ozone
Research and Monitoring Project - Report No. 44 comes out strongly in favor for the Montreal
Protocol, but notes that a
UNEP 1994 Assessment
overestimated ozone loss for the 1994–1997 period.
Chemicals in the atmosphere
CFCs in the atmosphere
Chlorofluorocarbons (
CFCs) were invented by
Thomas Midgley in the 1920s. They
were used in
air
conditioning/cooling units, as
aerosol spray
propellant prior to the 1980s, and in the cleaning processes of
delicate electronic equipment. They also occur as by-products of
some chemical processes. No significant natural sources have ever
been identified for these compounds — their presence in the
atmosphere is due almost entirely to human manufacture. As
mentioned in the
ozone cycle overview above, when such
ozone-depleting chemicals reach the stratosphere, they are
dissociated by ultraviolet light to release chlorine atoms. The
chlorine atoms act as a
catalyst, and each
can break down tens of thousands of ozone molecules before being
removed from the stratosphere. Given the longevity of CFC
molecules, recovery times are measured in decades. It is calculated
that a CFC molecule takes an average of 15 years to go from the
ground level up to the upper atmosphere, and it can stay there for
about a century, destroying up to one hundred thousand ozone
molecules during that time.
Verification of observations
Scientists have been increasingly able to attribute the observed
ozone depletion to the increase of anthropogenic
halogen compounds from CFCs by the use of complex
chemistry transport models and their validation against
observational data (e.g.
SLIMCAT,
CLaMS). These models work by combining satellite
measurements of chemical concentrations and meteorological fields
with chemical reaction rate constants obtained in lab experiments.
They are able to identify not only the key chemical reactions but
also the transport processes which bring CFC
photolysis products into contact with
ozone.
The ozone hole and its causes

Ozone hole in North America during
1984 (abnormally warm reducing ozone depletion) and 1997
(abnormally cold resulting in increased seasonal depletion).
The Antarctic ozone hole is an area of the Antarctic stratosphere
in which the recent ozone levels have dropped to as low as 33% of
their pre-1975 values. The ozone hole occurs during the Antarctic
spring, from September to early December, as strong westerly winds
start to circulate around the continent and create an atmospheric
container. Within this
polar vortex,
over 50% of the lower stratospheric ozone is destroyed during the
Antarctic spring.
As explained above, the primary cause of ozone depletion was the
presence of chlorine-containing source gases (primarily CFCs and
related halocarbons). In the presence of UV light, these gases
dissociate, releasing chlorine atoms, which then go on to catalyze
ozone destruction. The Cl-catalyzed ozone depletion can take place
in the gas phase, but it is dramatically enhanced in the presence
of
polar stratospheric
clouds (PSCs).
These polar stratospheric clouds form during winter, in the extreme
cold. Polar winters are dark, consisting of 3 months without solar
radiation (sunlight). The lack of sunlight contributes to a
decrease in temperature and the
polar
vortex traps and chills air. Temperatures hover around or below
-80 °C. These low temperatures form cloud particles and are
composed of either nitric acid (Type I PSC) or ice (Type II PSC).
Both types provide surfaces for chemical reactions that lead to
ozone destruction.
The
photochemical processes involved
are complex but well understood. The key observation is that,
ordinarily, most of the chlorine in the stratosphere resides in
stable "reservoir" compounds, primarily hydrochloric acid (HCl) and
chlorine nitrate (ClONO
2). During the Antarctic winter
and spring, however, reactions on the surface of the polar
stratospheric cloud particles convert these "reservoir" compounds
into reactive free radicals (Cl and ClO). The clouds can also
remove NO
2 from the atmosphere by converting it to
nitric acid, which prevents the newly formed ClO from being
converted back into ClONO
2.
The role of sunlight in ozone depletion is the reason why the
Antarctic ozone depletion is greatest during spring. During winter,
even though PSCs are at their most abundant, there is no light over
the pole to drive the chemical reactions. During the spring,
however, the sun comes out, providing energy to drive photochemical
reactions, and melt the polar stratospheric clouds, releasing the
trapped compounds.
Most of the ozone that is destroyed is in the lower stratosphere,
in contrast to the much smaller ozone depletion through homogeneous
gas phase reactions, which occurs primarily in the upper
stratosphere.
Warming temperatures near the end of spring break up the vortex
around mid-December. As warm, ozone-rich air flows in from lower
latitudes, the PSCs are destroyed, the ozone depletion process
shuts down, and the ozone hole closes.
Interest in ozone layer depletion
While the effect of the Antarctic ozone hole in decreasing the
global ozone is relatively small, estimated at about 4% per decade,
the hole has generated a great deal of interest because:
- The decrease in the ozone layer was predicted in the early
1980s to be roughly 7% over a 60 year period.
- The sudden recognition in 1985 that there was a substantial
"hole" was widely reported in the press. The especially rapid ozone
depletion in Antarctica had previously been dismissed as a
measurement error.
- Many were worried that ozone holes might start to appear over
other areas of the globe but to date the only other large-scale
depletion is a smaller ozone "dimple" observed during the Arctic
spring over the North Pole. Ozone at middle latitudes has declined,
but by a much smaller extent (about 4–5% decrease).
- If the conditions became more severe (cooler stratospheric
temperatures, more stratospheric clouds, more active chlorine),
then global ozone may decrease at a much greater pace. Standard
global warming theory predicts that
the stratosphere will cool.
- When the Antarctic ozone hole breaks up, the ozone-depleted air
drifts out into nearby areas. Decreases in the ozone level of up to
10% have been reported in New Zealand in the month following the
break-up of the Antarctic ozone hole.
Consequences of ozone layer depletion
Since the ozone layer absorbs
UVB ultraviolet
light from the Sun, ozone layer depletion is expected to increase
surface UVB levels, which could lead to damage, including increases
in
skin cancer. This was the reason for
the Montreal Protocol. Although decreases in stratospheric ozone
are well-tied to CFCs and there are good theoretical reasons to
believe that decreases in ozone will lead to increases in surface
UVB, there is no direct observational evidence linking ozone
depletion to higher incidence of skin cancer in human beings. This
is partly due to the fact that
UVA,
which has also been implicated in some forms of skin cancer, is not
absorbed by ozone, and it is nearly impossible to control
statistics for lifestyle changes in the populace.
Increased UV
Ozone, while a minority constituent in the Earth's atmosphere, is
responsible for most of the absorption of UVB radiation. The amount
of UVB radiation that penetrates through the ozone layer
decreases exponentially with the
slant-path thickness/density of the layer. Correspondingly, a
decrease in atmospheric ozone is expected to give rise to
significantly increased levels of UVB near the surface.
Increases
in surface UVB due to the ozone hole can be
partially inferred by radiative
transfer model calculations, but cannot be calculated from
direct measurements because of the lack of reliable historical
(pre-ozone-hole) surface UV data, although more recent surface UV
observation measurement programmes exist (e.g. at Lauder, New Zealand
).
Because it is this same UV radiation that creates ozone in the
ozone layer from O
2 (regular oxygen) in the first place,
a reduction in stratospheric ozone would actually tend to increase
photochemical production of ozone at lower levels (in the
troposphere), although the overall observed
trends in total column ozone still show a decrease, largely because
ozone produced lower down has a naturally shorter photochemical
lifetime, so it is destroyed before the concentrations could reach
a level which would compensate for the ozone reduction higher
up.
Biological effects of increased UV and microwave radiation from
a depleted ozone layer
The main public concern regarding the ozone hole has been the
effects of surface UV on human health. So far, ozone depletion in
most locations has been typically a few percent and, as noted
above, no direct evidence of health damage is available in most
latitudes. Were the high levels of depletion seen in the ozone hole
ever to be common across the globe, the effects could be
substantially more dramatic.
As the ozone hole over Antarctica has in some
instances grown so large as to reach southern parts of Australia and New Zealand
, environmentalists have been concerned that the
increase in surface UV could be significant.
Effects of ozone layer depletion on humans
UVB (the higher energy UV radiation absorbed by
ozone) is generally accepted to be a contributory factor to
skin cancer. In addition, increased
surface UV leads to increased tropospheric ozone, which is a health
risk to humans. The increased surface UV also represents an
increase in the
vitamin D synthetic
capacity of the sunlight.
The cancer preventive effects of vitamin D represent a possible
beneficial effect of ozone depletion.
[7269][7270] In terms of health costs, the possible
benefits of increased UV irradiance may outweigh the burden.
[7271]
1.
Basal and Squamous Cell Carcinomas -- The most
common forms of skin cancer in humans,
basal and
squamous cell carcinomas, have been
strongly linked to UVB exposure. The mechanism by which UVB induces
these cancers is well understood — absorption of UVB radiation
causes the pyrimidine bases in the DNA molecule to form
dimers, resulting in transcription errors when the DNA
replicates. These cancers are relatively mild and rarely fatal,
although the treatment of squamous cell carcinoma sometimes
requires extensive reconstructive surgery. By combining
epidemiological data with results of animal studies, scientists
have estimated that a one percent decrease instratospheric ozone
would increase the incidence of these cancers by 2%.
2.
Malignant Melanoma -- Another form of skin
cancer, malignant melanoma, is much less common but far more
dangerous, being lethal in about 15% - 20% of the cases diagnosed.
The relationship between malignant melanoma and ultraviolet
exposure is not yet well understood, but it appears that both UVB
and UVA are involved. Experiments on fish suggest that 90 to 95% of
malignant melanomas may be due to UVA and visible radiationwhereas
experiments on opossums suggest a larger role for UVB. Because of
this uncertainty, it is difficult to estimate the impact of ozone
depletion on melanoma incidence. One study showed that a 10%
increase in UVB radiation was associated with a 19% increase in
melanomas for men and 16% for women.
A study of people in
Punta
Arenas
, at the southern tip of Chile
, showed a
56% increase in melanoma and a 46% increase in nonmelanoma skin
cancer over a period of seven years, along with decreased ozone and
increased UVB levels.
3.
Cortical Cataracts -- Studies are suggestive of
an association between ocular cortical
cataracts and UV-B exposure, using crude
approximations of exposure and various cataract assessment
techniques. A detailed assessment of ocular exposure to UV-B was
carried out in a study on Chesapeake Bay Watermen, where increases
in average annual ocular exposure were associated with increasing
risk of cortical opacity . In this highly exposed group of
predominantly white males, the evidence linking cortical opacities
to sunlight exposure was the strongest to date. However, subsequent
data from a population-based study in Beaver Dam, WI suggested the
risk may be confined to men. In the Beaver Dam study, the exposures
among women were lower than exposures among men, and no association
was seen. Moreover, there were no data linking sunlight exposure to
risk of cataract in African Americans, although other eye diseases
have different prevalences among the different racial groups, and
cortical opacity appears to be higher in African Americans compared
with whites.
4.
Increased Tropospheric Ozone -- Increased
surface UV leads to increased
tropospheric ozone. Ground-level ozone is
generally recognized to be a health risk, as ozone is toxic due to
its strong
oxidant properties. At this time,
ozone at ground level is produced mainly by the action of UV
radiation on
combustion gases from
vehicle exhausts.
Effects on crops
An increase of UV radiation would be expected to affect crops. A
number of economically important species of plants, such as
rice, depend on
cyanobacteria residing on their roots for the
retention of
nitrogen. Cyanobacteria are
sensitive to UV light and they would be affected by its
increase.
Public policy in response to the ozone hole

NASA projections of stratospheric
ozone concentrations if chlorofluorocarbons had not been
banned.
The full extent of the damage that CFCs have caused to the ozone
layer is not known and will not be known for decades; however,
marked decreases in column ozone have already been observed (as
explained above).
After a
1976 report by the U.S.
National Academy of Sciences
concluded that credible scientific evidence
supported the ozone depletion hypothesis, a few countries,
including the United States, Canada, Sweden, and Norway, moved to
eliminate the use of CFCs in aerosol spray cans. At the time
this was widely regarded as a first step towards a more
comprehensive regulation policy, but progress in this direction
slowed in subsequent years, due to a combination of political
factors (continued resistance from the halocarbon industry and a
general change in attitude towards environmental regulation during
the first two years of the Reagan administration) and scientific
developments (subsequent National Academy assessments which
indicated that the first estimates of the magnitude of ozone
depletion had been overly large).The United States banned the use
of CFCs in aerosol cans in 1978. The European Community rejected
proposals to ban CFCs in aerosol sprays, and in the U.S., CFCs
continued to be used as refrigerants and for cleaning circuit
boards. Worldwide CFC production fell sharply after the U.S.
aerosol ban, but by 1986 had returned nearly to its 1976 level. In
1980,
DuPont closed down its research program
into halocarbon alternatives.
The U.S. Government's attitude began to change again in 1983, when
William Ruckelshaus replaced
Anne M. Burford as Administrator of the
United States
Environmental Protection Agency. Under Ruckelshaus and his
successor, Lee Thomas, the EPA pushed for an international approach
to halocarbon regulations. In 1985 20 nations, including most of
the major CFC producers, signed the
Vienna
Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer which
established a framework for negotiating international regulations
on ozone-depleting substances. That same year, the discovery of the
Antarctic ozone hole was announced, causing a revival in public
attention to the issue. In 1987, representatives from 43 nations
signed the
Montreal
Protocol.Meanwhile, the halocarbon industry shifted its
position and started supporting a protocol to limit CFC production.
The reasons for this were in part explained by "Dr. Mostafa Tolba,
former head of the UN Environment Programme, who was quoted in the
30 June 1990 edition of The
New
Scientist, '...the chemical industry supported the Montreal
Protocol in 1987 because it set up a worldwide schedule for phasing
out CFCs, which [were] no longer protected by patents. This
provided companies with an equal opportunity to market new, more
profitable compounds.'"
At Montreal, the participants agreed to freeze production of CFCs
at 1986 levels and to reduce production by 50% by 1999. After a
series of scientific expeditions to the Antarctic produced
convincing evidence that the ozone hole was indeed caused by
chlorine and bromine from manmade organohalogens, the Montreal
Protocol was strengthened at a 1990 meeting in London. The
participants agreed to phase out CFCs and halons entirely (aside
from a very small amount marked for certain "essential" uses, such
as
asthma inhalers) by 2000. At a
1992 meeting in Copenhagen, the phase out date was moved up to
1996.
To some extent, CFCs have been replaced by the less damaging
hydro-chloro-fluoro-carbons (
HCFCs), although
concerns remain regarding HCFCs also. In some applications,
hydro-fluoro-carbons (
HFCs) have been used to
replace CFCs. HFCs, which contain no chlorine or bromine, do not
contribute at all to ozone depletion although they are potent
greenhouse gases. The best known of these compounds is probably
HFC-134a (
R-134a), which in the United States
has largely replaced CFC-12 (
R-12) in automobile air
conditioners. In laboratory analytics (a former "essential" use)
the ozone depleting substances can be replaced with various other
solvents.
Ozone Diplomacy, by Richard Benedick (Harvard University
Press, 1991) gives a detailed account of the negotiation process
that led to the Montreal Protocol.
Pielke and Betsill provide an extensive review
of early U.S. government responses to the emerging science of ozone
depletion by CFCs.
Past and current events and future prospects of ozone
depletion

Ozone-depleting gas trends.
Since the adoption and strengthening of the Montreal Protocol has
led to reductions in the emissions of CFCs, atmospheric
concentrations of the most significant compounds have been
declining. These substances are being gradually removed from the
atmosphere - since peaking in 1994, the Effective Equivalent
Chlorine (EECl) level in the atmosphere had dropped about 10% by
2008. It is estimated that by 2015, the Antarctic ozone hole will
have reduced by 1 million km² out of 25 (Newman
et al.,
2004); complete recovery of the Antarctic ozone layer is not
expected to occur until the year 2050 or later. Work has suggested
that a detectable (and statistically significant) recovery will not
occur until around 2024, with ozone levels recovering to 1980
levels by around 2068.The decrease in ozone-depleting chemicals has
also been significantly affected by a decrease in
bromine-containing chemicals. The data suggest that
substantial natural sources exist for atmospheric
methyl bromide (CH
3Br).. The
phase-out of CFCs means that
nitrous
oxide (N
2O), which is not covered by the Montreal
Protocol, has become the most highly emitted ozone depleting
substance and is expected to remain so throughout the 21st
century.
The 2004 ozone hole ended in November 2004, daily minimum
stratospheric temperatures in the Antarctic lower stratosphere
increased to levels that are too warm for the formation of polar
stratospheric clouds (PSCs) about 2 to 3 weeks earlier than in most
recent years.
The Arctic winter of 2005 was extremely cold in the stratosphere;
PSCs were abundant over many high-latitude areas until dissipated
by a big warming event, which started in the upper stratosphere
during February and spread throughout the Arctic stratosphere in
March. The size of the Arctic area of anomalously low total ozone
in 2004-2005 was larger than in any year since 1997. The
predominance of anomalously low total ozone values in the Arctic
region in the winter of 2004-2005 is attributed to the very low
stratospheric temperatures and meteorological conditions favorable
for ozone destruction along with the continued presence of ozone
destroying chemicals in the stratosphere.
A 2005
IPCC summary of
ozone issues observed that observations and model calculations
suggest that the global average amount of ozone depletion has now
approximately stabilized. Although considerable variability in
ozone is expected from year to year, including in polar regions
where depletion is largest, the ozone layer is expected to begin to
recover in coming decades due to declining ozone-depleting
substance concentrations, assuming full compliance with the
Montreal Protocol.
Temperatures during the Arctic winter of 2006 stayed fairly close
to the long-term average until late January, with minimum readings
frequently cold enough to produce PSCs. During the last week of
January, however, a major warming event sent temperatures well
above normal — much too warm to support PSCs. By the time
temperatures dropped back to near normal in March, the seasonal
norm was well above the PSC threshold. Preliminary satellite
instrument-generated ozone maps show seasonal ozone buildup
slightly below the long-term means for the Northern Hemisphere as a
whole, although some high ozone events have occurred. During March
2006, the Arctic stratosphere poleward of 60 degrees North Latitude
was free of anomalously low ozone areas except during the three-day
period from 17 March to 19 when the total ozone cover fell below
300 DU over part of the North Atlantic region from Greenland to
Scandinavia.
The area where total column ozone is less than 220 DU (the accepted
definition of the boundary of the ozone hole) was relatively small
until around 20 August 2006. Since then the ozone hole area
increased rapidly, peaking at 29 million km² 24 September.
In October
2006, NASA
reported
that the year's ozone hole set a new area record with a daily
average of 26 million km² between 7 September and 13 October 2006;
total ozone thicknesses fell as low as 85 DU on 8 October.
The two factors combined, 2006 sees the worst level of depletion in
recorded ozone history. The depletion is attributed to the
temperatures above the Antarctic reaching the lowest recording
since comprehensive records began in 1979.
On October 2008 the
Ecuadorian
Space Agency published a report called HIPERION, a study of the
last 28 years data from 10 satellites and dozens of ground
instruments around the world among them their own, and found that
the UV radiation reaching equatorial latitudes was far greater than
expected, climbing in some very populated cities up to 24 UVI, the
WHO UV Index standard
considers 11 as an extreme index and a great risk to health. The
report concluded that the ozone depletion around mid latitudes on
the planet is already endangering large populations in this areas.
Later, the CONIDA, the Peruvian Space Agency, made its own study,
which found almost the same facts as the Ecuadorian study.
The Antarctic ozone hole is expected to continue for decades. Ozone
concentrations in the lower stratosphere over Antarctica will
increase by 5%–10% by 2020 and return to pre-1980 levels by about
2060–2075, 10–25 years later than predicted in earlier assessments.
This is because of revised estimates of atmospheric concentrations
of Ozone Depleting Substances — and a larger predicted future usage
in developing countries. Another factor which may aggravate ozone
depletion is the draw-down of nitrogen oxides from above the
stratosphere due to changing wind patterns.
History of the research
The basic physical and chemical processes that lead to the
formation of an ozone layer in the Earth's stratosphere were
discovered by
Sydney
Chapman in 1930. These are discussed in the article
Ozone-oxygen cycle — briefly,
short-wavelength UV radiation splits an oxygen (O
2)
molecule into two oxygen (O) atoms, which then combine with other
oxygen molecules to form ozone. Ozone is removed when an oxygen
atom and an ozone molecule "recombine" to form two oxygen
molecules, i.e. O + O
3 → 2O
2. In the 1950s,
David Bates and Marcel Nicolet presented evidence that various free
radicals, in particular hydroxyl (OH) and nitric oxide (NO), could
catalyze this recombination reaction, reducing the overall amount
of ozone. These free radicals were known to be present in the
stratosphere, and so were regarded as part of the natural balance –
it was estimated that in their absence, the ozone layer would be
about twice as thick as it currently is.
In 1970 Prof.
Paul Crutzen pointed out
that emissions of
nitrous oxide (N
2O), a
stable, long-lived gas produced by soil bacteria, from the Earth's
surface could affect the amount of
nitric oxide (NO) in
the stratosphere. Crutzen showed that nitrous oxide lives long
enough to reach the stratosphere, where it is converted into NO.
Crutzen then noted that increasing use of
fertilizers might have led to an increase in
nitrous oxide emissions over the natural background, which would in
turn result in an increase in the amount of NO in the stratosphere.
Thus human activity could have an impact on the stratospheric ozone
layer. In the following year, Crutzen and (independently) Harold
Johnston suggested that NO emissions from
supersonic aircraft,
which fly in the lower stratosphere, could also deplete the ozone
layer.
The Rowland-Molina hypothesis
In 1974
Frank Sherwood
Rowland, Chemistry Professor at the University of California at
Irvine, and his postdoctoral associate
Mario J. Molina suggested that long-lived organic
halogen compounds, such as
CFCs, might behave in
a similar fashion as Crutzen had proposed for nitrous oxide.
James Lovelock (most popularly known
as the creator of the
Gaia
hypothesis) had recently discovered, during a cruise in the
South Atlantic in 1971, that almost all of the CFC compounds
manufactured since their invention in 1930 were still present in
the atmosphere. Molina and Rowland concluded that, like
N
2O, the CFCs would reach the stratosphere where they
would be dissociated by UV light, releasing Cl atoms. (A year
earlier, Richard Stolarski and
Ralph
Cicerone at the University of Michigan had shown that Cl is
even more efficient than NO at catalyzing the destruction of ozone.
Similar conclusions were reached by Michael McElroy and Steven
Wofsy at Harvard University. Neither group, however, had realized
that CFC's were a potentially large source of stratospheric
chlorine — instead, they had been investigating the possible
effects of HCl emissions from the Space Shuttle, which are very
much smaller.)
The Rowland-Molina hypothesis was strongly disputed by
representatives of the aerosol and
halocarbon industries. The Chair of the Board of
DuPont was quoted as saying that ozone
depletion theory is "a science fiction tale...a load of
rubbish...utter nonsense".
Robert
Abplanalp, the President of Precision Valve Corporation (and
inventor of the first practical aerosol spray can valve), wrote to
the Chancellor of UC
Irvine
to complain about Rowland's public statements
(Roan, p 56.) Nevertheless, within three years most of the basic
assumptions made by Rowland and Molina were confirmed by laboratory
measurements and by direct observation in the stratosphere.
The concentrations of the source gases (CFCs and related compounds)
and the chlorine reservoir species (HCl and ClONO
2) were
measured throughout the stratosphere, and demonstrated that CFCs
were indeed the major source of stratospheric chlorine, and that
nearly all of the CFCs emitted would eventually reach the
stratosphere. Even more convincing was the measurement, by James G.
Anderson and collaborators, of chlorine monoxide (ClO) in the
stratosphere. ClO is produced by the reaction of Cl with ozone —
its observation thus demonstrated that Cl radicals not only were
present in the stratosphere but also were actually involved in
destroying ozone. McElroy and Wofsy extended the work of Rowland
and Molina by showing that bromine atoms were even more effective
catalysts for ozone loss than chlorine atoms and argued that the
brominated organic compounds known as
halons,
widely used in fire extinguishers, were a potentially large source
of stratospheric bromine. In 1976 the U.S. National Academy of
Sciences released a report which concluded that the ozone depletion
hypothesis was strongly supported by the scientific evidence.
Scientists calculated that if CFC production continued to increase
at the going rate of 10% per year until 1990 and then remain
steady, CFCs would cause a global ozone loss of 5 to 7% by 1995,
and a 30 to 50% loss by 2050. In response the United States, Canada
and Norway banned the use of CFCs in aerosol spray cans in 1978.
However, subsequent research, summarized by the National Academy in
reports issued between 1979 and 1984, appeared to show that the
earlier estimates of global ozone loss had been too large.
Crutzen, Molina, and Rowland were awarded the 1995
Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their
work on stratospheric ozone.
The ozone hole
The discovery of the Antarctic "ozone hole" by
British Antarctic Survey scientists
Farman, Gardiner and Shanklin (announced in a paper in
Nature in May 1985) came as a shock to
the scientific community, because the observed decline in polar
ozone was far larger than anyone had anticipated.
Satellite measurements
showing massive depletion of ozone around the south pole
were becoming available at the same time.
However, these were initially rejected as unreasonable by data
quality control algorithms (they were filtered out as errors since
the values were unexpectedly low); the ozone hole was detected only
in satellite data when the raw data was reprocessed following
evidence of ozone depletion in
in situ observations. When
the software was rerun without the flags, the ozone hole was seen
as far back as 1976.
Susan Solomon, an atmospheric chemist
at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
proposed that chemical reactions on
polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs)
in the cold Antarctic stratosphere caused a massive, though
localized and seasonal, increase in the amount of chlorine present
in active, ozone-destroying forms. The polar stratospheric clouds
in Antarctica are only formed when there are very low temperatures,
as low as -80 degrees
C, and early spring
conditions. In such conditions the ice crystals of the cloud
provide a suitable surface for conversion of unreactive chlorine
compounds into reactive chlorine compounds which can deplete ozone
easily.
Moreover the polar vortex formed over Antarctica is very tight and
the reaction which occurs on the surface of the cloud crystals is
far different from when it occurs in atmosphere. These conditions
have led to ozone hole formation in Antarctica. This hypothesis was
decisively confirmed, first by laboratory measurements and
subsequently by direct measurements, from the ground and from
high-altitude airplanes, of very high concentrations of chlorine
monoxide (ClO) in the Antarctic stratosphere.
Alternative hypotheses, which had attributed the ozone hole to
variations in solar UV radiation or to changes in atmospheric
circulation patterns, were also tested and shown to be
untenable.
Meanwhile, analysis of ozone measurements from the worldwide
network of ground-based Dobson spectrophotometers led an
international panel to conclude that the ozone layer was in fact
being depleted, at all latitudes outside of the tropics. These
trends were confirmed by satellite measurements. As a consequence,
the major halocarbon producing nations agreed to phase out
production of CFCs, halons, and related compounds, a process that
was completed in 1996.
Since 1981 the
United Nations Environment
Programme has sponsored a series of reports on
scientific assessment
of ozone depletion. The most recent is from 2007 where
satellite measurements have shown the hole in the ozone layer is
recovering and is now the smallest it has been for about a
decade
[7272].
Ozone depletion and global warming
Although they are often interlinked in the
mass media, the connection between global warming
and ozone depletion is not strong. There are five areas of
linkage:
- The same CO2 radiative forcing that produces
near-surface global warming is expected to cool the stratosphere. This cooling, in turn, is
expected to produce a relative increase in polar ozone (O3) depletion and the frequency of
ozone holes.
- Conversely, ozone depletion represents a radiative forcing of
the climate system. There are two opposing effects: Reduced ozone
causes the stratosphere to absorb less solar radiation, thus
cooling the stratosphere while warming the troposphere; the resulting colder stratosphere
emits less long-wave radiation downward, thus cooling the
troposphere. Overall, the cooling dominates; the IPCC concludes
that "observed stratospheric O3
losses over the past two decades have caused a negative forcing of
the surface-troposphere system" of about −0.15 ± 0.10
watts per square meter (W/m²).
- One of the strongest predictions of the greenhouse effect is
that the stratosphere will cool. Although this cooling has been
observed, it is not trivial to separate the effects of changes in
the concentration of greenhouse gases
and ozone depletion since both will lead to cooling. However, this
can be done by numerical stratospheric modeling. Results from the
National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Geophysical Fluid Dynamics
Laboratory show that above 20 km (12.4 miles), the
greenhouse gases dominate the cooling.
- Ozone depleting chemicals are also greenhouse gases. The
increases in concentrations of these chemicals have produced
0.34 ± 0.03 W/m² of radiative forcing, corresponding to
about 14% of the total radiative forcing from increases in the
concentrations of well-mixed greenhouse gases.
- The long term modeling of the process, its measurement, study,
design of theories and testing take decades to both document, gain
wide acceptance, and ultimately become the dominant paradigm.
Several theories about the destruction of ozone, were hypothesized
in the 1980s, published in the late 1990s, and are currently being
proven. Dr Drew Schindell, and Dr Paul Newman, NASA Goddard,
proposed a theory in the late 1990s, using a SGI Origin 2000 supercomputer, that modeled
ozone destruction, accounted for 78% of the ozone destroyed.
Further refinement of that model, accounted for 89% of the ozone
destroyed, but pushed back the estimated recovery of the ozone hole
from 75 years to 150 years. (An important part of that model is the
lack of stratospheric flight due to depletion of fossil
fuels.)
Misconceptions about ozone depletion
A few of the more common misunderstandings about ozone depletion
are addressed briefly here; more detailed discussions can be found
in the
ozone-depletion FAQ.
CFCs are "too heavy" to reach the stratosphere
It is sometimes stated that since CFC molecules are much heavier
than nitrogen or oxygen, they cannot reach the stratosphere in
significant quantities. But atmospheric gases are not sorted by
weight; the forces of wind (turbulence) are strong enough to fully
intermix gases in the atmosphere. CFCs are heavier than air, but
just like
argon,
krypton and other heavy gases with a long lifetime,
they are uniformly distributed throughout the
turbosphere and reach the upper
atmosphere.
Man-made chlorine is insignificant compared to natural
sources
Another objection occasionally voiced is that
It is generally
agreed that natural sources of tropospheric chlorine (volcanoes,
ocean spray, etc.) are four to five orders of magnitude larger than
man-made sources. While strictly true,
tropospheric
chlorine is irrelevant; it is
stratospheric chlorine that
affects ozone depletion. Chlorine from
ocean
spray is soluble and thus is washed out by rainfall before it
reaches the stratosphere. CFCs, in contrast, are insoluble and
long-lived, which allows them to reach the stratosphere. Even in
the lower atmosphere there is more chlorine present in the form of
CFCs and related
haloalkanes than there
is in HCl from salt spray, and in the stratosphere halocarbons
dominate overwhelmingly. Only one of these halocarbons, methyl
chloride, has a predominantly natural source, and it is responsible
for about 20 percent of the chlorine in the stratosphere; the
remaining 80% comes from manmade compounds.
Very large volcanic eruptions can inject HCl directly into the
stratosphere, but direct measurements have shown that their
contribution is small compared to that of chlorine from
CFCs.
A
similar erroneous assertion is that soluble halogen compounds from
the volcanic plume of Mount Erebus
on Ross Island, Antarctica are a major contributor
to the Antarctic ozone hole.
An ozone hole was first observed in 1956
G.M.B. Dobson
(Exploring the Atmosphere, 2nd Edition, Oxford, 1968) mentioned
that when springtime ozone levels over Halley
Bay
were first measured, he was surprised to find that
they were ~320 DU, about 150 DU below spring levels, ~450 DU, in
the Arctic. These, however, were the pre-ozone hole normal
climatological values. What Dobson describes is essentially the
baseline from which the ozone hole is measured: actual
ozone hole values are in the 150–100 DU range.
The discrepancy between the Arctic and Antarctic noted by Dobson
was primarily a matter of timing: during the Arctic spring ozone
levels rose smoothly, peaking in April, whereas in the Antarctic
they stayed approximately constant during early spring, rising
abruptly in November when the polar vortex broke down.
The behavior seen in the Antarctic ozone hole is distinctly
different. Instead of staying constant, early springtime ozone
levels suddenly drop from their already low winter values, by as
much as 50%, and normal values are not reached again until
December.
If the theory were correct, the ozone hole should be above the
sources of CFCs
CFCs are well mixed in the
troposphere
and the
stratosphere. The reason the
ozone hole occurs above Antarctica is not because there are more
CFCs there but because the low temperatures allow polar
stratospheric clouds to form. There have been anomalous discoveries
of significant, serious, localized "holes" above other parts of the
globe.
The "ozone hole" is a hole in the ozone layer
When the "ozone hole" forms, essentially all of the ozone in the
lower stratosphere is destroyed. The upper stratosphere is much
less affected, however, so that the overall amount of ozone over
the continent declines by 50 percent or more. The ozone hole does
not go all the way through the layer; on the other hand, it is not
a uniform 'thinning' of the layer either. It is a "hole" in the
sense of "a hole in the ground", that is, a depression; not in the
sense of "a hole in the windshield."
World Ozone Day
In 1994, the
United
Nations General Assembly voted to designate the 16th of
September as "World Ozone Day", to commemorate the signing of the
Montreal Protocol on that date in
1987.
See also
References
- Stratospheric ozone: an electronic textbook, Chapter
5, Section 4.2.8, [1]
- Stratospheric Ozone Depletion by
Chlorofluorocarbons (Nobel Lecture) - Encyclopedia of
Earth
- Nature
- Ultraviolet Absorption Spectrum of Chlorine
Peroxide, ClOOCl
- Bulletin - The journal of the World Meteorological
Organization
- [2]
- The Ozone Hole Tour: Part II. Recent Ozone
Depletion
- World Meteorological Organization (WMO)
- U.S. EPA: Ozone Depletion
- Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis
- [3]
- chlorofluorocarbons – FREE chlorofluorocarbons
Information | Encyclopedia.com: Facts, Pictures,
Information!
- http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=1771
- Antarctic Ozone Hole
- Antarctic ozone-depletion FAQ, section 7
- [4]
- [5]
- Ozone and solar UV-B radiation: monitoring of the
vitamin D synthetic capacity of sunlight in Kiev and Antarctica -
International Journal of Remote Sensing
- http://www.gcrio.org/CONSEQUENCES/summer95/impacts.html
Consequences (vol. 1, No. 2) - Impacts of a Projected Depletion of
the Ozone Layer
- Wavelengths effective in induction of malignant
me...[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1993] - PubMed Result
- Fears et al, Cancer Res. 2002, 62(14):3992–6
- Abarca, Jaime F. & Casiccia, Claudio C. (2002) Skin cancer
and ultraviolet-B radiation under the Antarctic ozone hole:
southern Chile, 1987-2000. Photodermatology, Photoimmunology &
Photomedicine 18 (6), 294–302 [6]
- JAMA - Sunlight Exposure and Risk of Lens Opacities
in a Population-Based Study: The Salisbury Eye Evaluation Project,
26 August 1998, West et al. 280 (8): 714
- Ultraviolet light exposure and lens opacities: the
Beaver Dam Eye Study. - Cruickshanks et al. 82 (12): 1658 -
American Journal of Public Health
- Racial differences in lens opacities: the Salisbury
Eye Evaluation (SEE) project
- Prevalence of lens opacities in the Barbados Eye
S...[Arch Ophthalmol. 1997] - PubMed Result
-
http://archive.greenpeace.org/ozone/greenfreeze/moral97/6dupont.html
- Use of Ozone Depleting Substances in Laboratories.
TemaNord 516/2003
- World Meteorological Organization (WMO)
- NOAA Study Shows Nitrous Oxide Now Top
Ozone-Depleting Emission, NOAA, August 27, 2009
- World Meteorological Organization (WMO)
- CPC - Stratosphere: Winter Bulletins
- [7]
- Available Annual NCEP data
- Select ozone maps, individual sources
- Index of
/products/stratosphere/sbuv2to/archive/nh
- Ozone
Hole Watch
- http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/10/03/ozone_depletion
- CNW Group | CANADIAN SPACE AGENCY | Canada's SCISAT
satellite explains 2006 ozone-layer depletion
- Ozone Depletion, History and politics accessed
18 November 2007.
- Phoenix - News - FREON EASY
- FAQ, part I, section 1.3.
- ozone-depletion FAQ, Part II, section 4.3
-
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v403/n6767/full/403295a0.html
- ozone-depletion FAQ, Part II, section 4.4
- ozone-depletion FAQ, Part III, section 6
- ozone-depletion FAQ, Antarctic
- ozone hole: Definition and Much More from
Answers.com
Nontechnical books
- Dotto, Lydia and Schiff, Harold (1978). The Ozone War.
Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-12927-0
- Roan, Sharon (1990). Ozone Crisis, the 15 Year Evolution of a
Sudden Global Emergency. Wiley. ISBN 0-471-52823-4
- Cagin, Seth and Dray, Phillip (1993). Between Earth and Sky:
How CFCs Changed Our World and Endangered the Ozone Layer.
Pantheon. ISBN 0-679-42052-5
Books on public policy issues
- Benedick, Richard E. (1991). Ozone Diplomacy. Harvard
University Press. ISBN 0-674-65001-8 (Ambassador Benedick was the
Chief U.S. Negotiator at the meetings that resulted in the Montreal
Protocol.)
- Litfin, Karen T. (1994). Ozone Discourses. Columbia University
Press. ISBN 0-231-08137-5
Research articles
External links