While continental in scale, the ozone hole over the Antarctic was small in 2025 compared to previous years and remains on track to recover later this century, NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reported. The hole this year was the fifth smallest since 1992, the year a landmark international agreement to phase out ozone-depleting chemicals began to take effect.
At the height of this year’s depletion
season from Sept. 7 through Oct. 13, the average extent of the ozone hole was
about 7.23 million square miles (18.71 million square kilometers) — that’s
twice the area of the contiguous United States. The 2025 ozone hole is already
breaking up, nearly three weeks earlier than usual during the past decade.
This map shows the size and shape of the ozone hole
over the South Pole on the day of its 2025 maximum extent. Moderate ozone
losses (orange) are visible amid areas of more potent ozone losses (red).
Scientists describe the ozone “hole” as the area in which ozone concentrations
drop below the historical threshold of 220 Dobson units.
NASA Earth Observatory image by Lauren Dauphin, using
data courtesy of NASA Ozone Watch and GEOS-5 data from the Global Modeling and
Assimilation Office at NASA GSFC
The hole reached its greatest one-day extent for the year on Sept. 9 at
8.83 million square miles (22.86 million square kilometers). It was about 30%
smaller than the largest hole ever observed, which occurred in 2006, and had an
average area of 10.27 million square miles (26.60 million square kilometers).
“As predicted, we’re seeing ozone
holes trending smaller in area than they were in the early 2000s,” said Paul
Newman, a senior scientist with the University of Maryland, Baltimore County,
and leader of the ozone research team at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Maryland. “They’re forming later in the season and breaking up
earlier. But we still have a long way to go before it recovers to 1980s
levels.”
NASA and NOAA scientists say this
year’s monitoring showed that controls on ozone-depleting chemical compounds
established by the Montreal Protocol and subsequent amendments are driving the gradual recovery of the
ozone layer in the stratosphere, which remains on track to recover fully later
this century.
The ozone-rich layer acts as a
planetary sunscreen that helps shield life from harmful ultraviolet (UV)
radiation from the Sun. It is located in the stratosphere, which is found
between 7 and 31 miles above the Earth’s surface. Reduced ozone allows more UV
rays to reach the surface, resulting in crop damage as well as increased cases
of skin cancer and cataracts, among other adverse health impacts.
The ozone depletion process starts
when human-made compounds containing chlorine and bromine rise high into the
stratosphere miles above Earth’s surface. Freed from their molecular bonds by
the more intense UV radiation, the chlorine and bromine-containing molecules
then participate in reactions that destroy ozone molecules. Chlorofluorocarbons
and other ozone-depleting compounds were once widely used in aerosol sprays,
foams, air conditioners, and refrigerators. The chlorine and bromine from these
compounds can linger in the atmosphere for decades to centuries.
“Since peaking around the year 2000, levels of ozone-depleting substances in the Antarctic stratosphere have declined by about a third, relative to pre-ozone-hole levels,” said Stephen Montzka, a senior scientist with NOAA’s Global Monitoring Laboratory.
As part of the 1987 Montreal Protocol,
countries agreed to replace ozone-depleting substances with less harmful
alternatives.
“This year’s hole would have been more
than one million square miles larger if there was still as much chlorine in the
stratosphere as there was 25 years ago,” Newman said.
Still, the now-banned chemicals persist
in old products like building insulation and in landfills. As emissions from
those legacy uses taper off over time, projections show the ozone hole over the
Antarctic recovering around the late 2060s.
NASA and NOAA previously ranked ozone
hole severity using a time frame dating back to 1979, when scientists began
tracking Antarctic ozone levels with satellites. Using that longer record, this
year’s hole area ranked 14th smallest over 46 years of observations.
Factors like temperature, weather, and
the strength of the wind encircling Antarctica known as the polar vortex also influence ozone levels from
year to year. A weaker-than-normal polar vortex this August helped keep
temperatures above average and likely contributed to a smaller ozone hole, said
Laura Ciasto, a meteorologist with NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center.
Researchers monitor the ozone layer
around the world using 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 use instruments carried on weather balloons and upward-looking surface-based instruments to measure stratospheric ozone directly above the South Pole Atmospheric Baseline Observatory. Balloon data showed that the ozone concentration reached its lowest value of 147 Dobson Units this year on Oct. 6. The lowest value ever recorded over the South Pole was 92 Dobson Units in October 2006.
NOAA scientists launch a weather balloon carrying an
ozonesonde near the South Pole in September 2025.
Simeon Bash/IceCube - courtesy of NOAA
The Dobson
Unit is a
measurement that indicates the total number of ozone molecules present
throughout the atmosphere above a certain location. A measurement of 100 Dobson
Units corresponds to a layer of pure ozone 1 millimeter thick — about as thick
as a dime — at standard temperature and pressure conditions.
View the latest status of the ozone
layer over the Antarctic with NASA’s ozone watch.
By Sally Younger
NASA’s Earth Science News Team
Source: NASA, NOAA Rank 2025 Ozone Hole as 5th Smallest Since 1992 - NASA Science


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