Yahoo – AFP,
June 30, 2016
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A study has found that the September ozone hole over the Antarctic has shrunk by 1.5 million square miles, signaling good news for the environment (AFP Photo/Eitan Abramovich) |
Miami (AFP)
- The hole in the ozone layer over the Antarctic has begun to shrink, signaling
good news for the environment decades after an international accord to phase
out certain pollutants, researchers said Thursday.
The study
found that the ozone hole had shrunk by 1.5 million square miles (four million
square kilometers) -- an area about the size of India -- since 2000.
"It's
a big surprise," said lead author Susan Solomon, an atmospheric chemist at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in an interview with Science
magazine.
"I
didn't think it would be this early."
The study
attributed the ozone's recovery to the "continuing decline of atmospheric
chlorine originating from chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)," or chemicals that
were once emitted by dry cleaning, refrigerators, hairspray and other aerosols.
Most of the
world signed on to the Montreal Protocol in 1987, which banned the use of CFCs.
"We
can now be confident that the things we've done have put the planet on a path
to heal," said Solomon.
Co-author
Anja Schmidt, an academic research fellow in volcanic impacts at the University
of Leeds, agreed, describing the Montreal Protocol as "a true success
story that provided a solution to a global environmental issue."
Volcanic
activity
The ozone
hole was first discovered in the 1950s.
It reached
record size in October 2015, but Solomon and colleagues determined that this
was due to the eruption of the Chilean volcano Calbuco that same year.
The volcano
slightly delayed the recovery of the ozone, which is sensitive to chlorine,
temperature and sunlight.
"Volcanic
injections of particles cause greater than usual ozone depletion," said
Schmidt.
"Such
eruptions are a sporadic source of tiny airborne particles that provide the
necessary chemical conditions for the chlorine from CFCs introduced to the
atmosphere to react efficiently with ozone in the atmosphere above
Antarctica."
The ozone
goes through a regular cycle each year, with depletion of ozone starting in
late August at the end of Antarctica's dark winter.
The hole
typically peaks in size in October.
The overall
trend toward recovery became apparent when scientists studied measurements from
satellites, ground-based instruments and weather balloons in the month of
September, not October.
"I
think people, myself included, had been too focused on October, because that's
when the ozone hole is enormous," said Solomon.
"But
October is also subject to the slings and arrows of other things that vary,
like slight changes in meteorology."
Co-author
Ryan Neely, a lecturer in observational atmospheric science at Leeds, said the
scope of the study allowed the team to "quantify the separate impacts of
man-made pollutants, changes in temperature and winds, and volcanoes, on the
size and magnitude of the Antarctic ozone hole.
"Observations
and computer models agree," he added.
"Healing
of the Antarctic ozone has begun."
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