Arctic ozone hits record low.

AuthorMastny, Lisa
PositionENVIRONMENTAL INTELLIGENCE

Ozone depletion over the North Pole reached record proportions this spring, heightening risks of UV-B radiation and sunburn as far south as Italy, according to scientists conducting a five-year assessment of Earth's ozone layer. In April, researchers with Europe's SCOUT-O3 project reported the loss of more than half of all ozone at 18 kilometers above the pole, and destruction of 30 percent of the Arctic's total protective ozone cover.

The team attributes the depletion to cooler winter temperatures--the lowest in 50 years--in the polar stratosphere. Consistently low temperatures can contribute to the formation of large cloud areas in the ozone layer, altering its chemical balance, explained Markus Rex of Germany's Alfred Wegener Institute of Polar and Marine Research. These conditions boost the ozone-destroying properties of chlorine and bromine, chemicals that are released when chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), halons, and other halogen-containing compounds break down in the presence of sunlight.

Scientists had hoped that the phaseout of these compounds under the 1987 Montreal Protocol would lead to a gradual "healing" of Earth's ozone layer by 2050. However, studies now suggest that a second variable--climate change--may also play a...

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