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MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2025
UN says ozone layer slowly healing, hole to mend by 2066

World+Biz

TBS Report
10 January, 2023, 10:55 am
Last modified: 10 January, 2023, 01:37 pm

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UN says ozone layer slowly healing, hole to mend by 2066

TBS Report
10 January, 2023, 10:55 am
Last modified: 10 January, 2023, 01:37 pm
This image made available by Nasa shows a map of a hole in the ozone layer over Antarctica on 20 October 2019. Photograph: AP
This image made available by Nasa shows a map of a hole in the ozone layer over Antarctica on 20 October 2019. Photograph: AP

Human action to save earth's protective ozone layer has worked as hoped, is set to be completely healed over most of the world within two decades following decisive action by governments to phase out ozone-depleting substances, the UN says.

An international agreement in 1987 to stop using the harmful chemicals that were damaging the layer has been successful, the major assessment says, reports BBC.

The ozone layer is a thin part of the Earth's atmosphere that absorbs most of the ultraviolet radiation from the Sun.

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When it is depleted, this radiation can reach the surface - causing potential harm to humans and other living things.

Ultraviolet rays can damage DNA and cause sunburn, increasing the long-term risk of problems such as skin cancer.

The ozone layer began depleting in the 1970s.

Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), which were commonly found in spray cans, fridges, foam insulation and air conditioners, were blamed for eating away at the ozone layer.

A gaping hole in the layer was discovered by scientists in 1985. Just two years later, the Montreal Protocol was signed - with 46 countries promising to phase out the harmful chemicals.

The deal later became the first UN treaty to achieve universal ratification, and almost 99% of banned ozone-depleting substances have now been phased out.

The Antarctic ozone hole continued expanding until 2000, after which its area and depth began improving slowly.

Now, a report co-produced by UN, US and EU agencies says the Montreal Protocol is working as hoped.

The progress is slow, according to the report presented Monday at the American Meteorological Society convention in Denver.

The global average amount of ozone 18 miles (30 kilometers) high in the atmosphere won't be back to 1980 pre-thinning levels until about 2040, the report said. And it won't be back to normal in the Arctic until 2045.

Antarctica, where it's so thin there's an annual giant gaping hole in the layer, won't be fully fixed until 2066, the report said.

While the depletion of ozone is harmful due to solar radiation, it is not a major cause of climate change.

But saving the ozone layer has had a positive knock-on effect on global warming, the report suggests, because some of the harmful chemicals that were phased out are powerful greenhouse gases, BBC reported.

That phase-out will have prevented up to 1C of warming by the middle of the century - if compared to increasing their use by 3% per year, the scientists found.

While the report has been hailed as good news - and evidence that rapid, international action to avert environmental crises can work - it warns that continued progress on the ozone layer is not guaranteed.

For example, proposals to limit global warming by sending millions of tonnes of sulphur dioxide into the upper atmosphere - known as stratospheric aerosol injection - could drastically reverse the ozone layer's recovery.

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ozone / Ozone Layer

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