Healing continues in the atmosphere over the Antarctic: a hole that opens annually in the ozone layer over Earth’s southern pole was relatively small in 2024 compared to other years. Scientists with NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) project the ozone layer could fully recover by 2066.
This map shows the size and shape of the ozone hole
over the South Pole on Sept. 28, 2024, the day of its annual maximum extent, as
calculated by the NASA Ozone Watch team. Scientists describe the ozone “hole”
as the area in which ozone concentrations drop below the historical threshold
of 220 Dobson units.
During the peak of ozone depletion season from Sept. 7 through Oct. 13, the
2024 area of the ozone hole ranked the seventh smallest since recovery
began in 1992, when the Montreal Protocol, a landmark international agreement to phase out ozone-depleting
chemicals, began to take effect.
At almost 8 million square miles
(20 million square kilometers), the monthly average ozone-depleted region in
the Antarctic this year was nearly three times the size of the contiguous U.S.
The hole reached its greatest one-day extent for the year on Sept. 28 at 8.5
million square miles (22.4 million square kilometers).
The improvement is due to a combination of continuing declines in harmful chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) chemicals, along with an unexpected infusion of ozone carried by air currents from north of the Antarctic, scientists said.
The ozone hole over Antarctica averaged nearly 8
million square miles (20 million square kilometers) between Sept. 7 and Oct.
13, 2024, the 20th smallest extent in 45 years.
Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/ Kathleen Gaeta
In previous years, NASA and NOAA
have reported the ozone hole ranking using a time frame dating back to 1979,
when scientists began tracking Antarctic ozone levels with satellite data.
Using that longer record, this year’s hole ranked 20th smallest in area across
the 45 years of observations.
“The 2024 Antarctic hole is smaller
than ozone holes seen in the early 2000s,” said Paul Newman, leader of NASA’s
ozone research team and chief scientist for Earth sciences at NASA’s Goddard
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “The gradual improvement we’ve seen
in the past two decades shows that international efforts that curbed
ozone-destroying chemicals are working.”
The ozone-rich layer high in the
atmosphere acts as a planetary sunscreen that helps shield us from harmful
ultraviolet (UV) radiation from the Sun. Areas with depleted ozone allow more
UV radiation, resulting in increased cases of skin cancer and cataracts.
Excessive exposure to UV light can also reduce agricultural yields as well as
damage aquatic plants and animals in vital ecosystems.
Scientists were alarmed in the
1970s at the prospect that CFCs could eat away at atmospheric ozone. By the
mid-1980s, the ozone layer had been depleted so much that a broad swath of the
Antarctic stratosphere was essentially devoid of ozone by early October each
year. Sources of damaging CFCs included coolants in refrigerators and air
conditioners, as well as aerosols in hairspray, antiperspirant, and spray
paint. Harmful chemicals were also released in the manufacture of insulating
foams and as components of industrial fire suppression systems.
The Montreal Protocol was signed in
1987 to phase out CFC-based products and processes. Countries worldwide agreed
to replace the chemicals with more environmentally friendly alternatives by
2010. The release of CFC compounds has dramatically decreased following the
Montreal Protocol. But CFCs already in the air will take many decades to break
down. As existing CFC levels gradually decline, ozone in the upper atmosphere will rebound globally,
and ozone holes will shrink.
Ozone 101 is the first in a series of explainer
videos outlining the fundamentals of popular Earth science topics. Let’s back
up to the basics and understand what caused the Ozone Hole, its effects on the
planet, and what scientists predict will happen in future decades.
Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/ Kathleen Gaeta
“For 2024, we can see that the
ozone hole’s severity is below average compared to other years in the
past three decades, but the ozone layer is still far from being fully
healed,” said Stephen Montzka, senior scientist of the NOAA Global Monitoring
Laboratory.
Researchers rely on a combination
of systems to monitor the ozone layer. They include instruments on NASA’s
Aura satellite, the NOAA-20 and NOAA-21 satellites, and the Suomi National Polar-orbiting
Partnership satellite, jointly operated by NASA and NOAA.
NOAA scientists also release
instrumented weather balloons from the South Pole Baseline Atmospheric Observatory to observe ozone concentrations directly
overhead in a measurement called Dobson Units. The 2024 concentration reached
its lowest value of 109 Dobson Units on October 5. The lowest value ever
recorded over the South Pole was 92 Dobson Units in October 2006.
NASA and NOAA satellite
observations of ozone concentrations cover the entire ozone hole, which can
produce a slightly smaller value for the lowest Dobson Unit measurement.
“That is well below the 225 Dobson
Units that was typical of the ozone cover above the Antarctic in 1979,” said
NOAA research chemist Bryan Johnson. “So, there’s still a long way to go before
atmospheric ozone is back to the levels before the advent of widespread CFC
pollution.”
View the latest status of the ozone
layer over the Antarctic with NASA’s
ozone watch.
By James Riordon
NASA’s Earth Science News Team
Source: NASA, NOAA Rank 2024 Ozone Hole as 7th-Smallest Since Recovery Began - NASA
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