Berliner Boersenzeitung - Ozone layer healing but imperiled by schemes to curb Sun's heat

EUR -
AED 4.26981
AFN 79.430376
ALL 97.075055
AMD 446.133867
ANG 2.080488
AOA 1065.993588
ARS 1540.886156
AUD 1.786016
AWG 2.095369
AZN 1.972862
BAM 1.952834
BBD 2.348194
BDT 141.295382
BGN 1.952615
BHD 0.438255
BIF 3467.921964
BMD 1.162479
BND 1.494269
BOB 8.064958
BRL 6.329931
BSD 1.162949
BTN 101.928685
BWP 15.647636
BYN 3.829782
BYR 22784.593786
BZD 2.336112
CAD 1.602437
CDF 3359.565284
CHF 0.942889
CLF 0.028728
CLP 1127.000161
CNY 8.348348
CNH 8.361138
COP 4709.098919
CRC 588.114284
CUC 1.162479
CUP 30.805701
CVE 110.101079
CZK 24.478909
DJF 207.100773
DKK 7.462919
DOP 71.033938
DZD 151.087115
EGP 56.3685
ERN 17.437189
ETB 162.138108
FJD 2.623014
FKP 0.864403
GBP 0.865646
GEL 3.140866
GGP 0.864403
GHS 12.26968
GIP 0.864403
GMD 84.27863
GNF 10084.682069
GTQ 8.922677
GYD 243.256788
HKD 9.12541
HNL 30.503667
HRK 7.532752
HTG 152.290646
HUF 395.799775
IDR 18938.763601
ILS 3.972779
IMP 0.864403
INR 101.984654
IQD 1523.525189
IRR 48969.440014
ISK 143.019733
JEP 0.864403
JMD 186.197179
JOD 0.82424
JPY 171.956843
KES 150.193483
KGS 101.633584
KHR 4657.046454
KMF 490.740698
KPW 1046.231142
KRW 1617.926605
KWD 0.355373
KYD 0.969153
KZT 631.861987
LAK 25156.438329
LBP 104202.612624
LKR 349.763247
LRD 233.171846
LSL 20.616018
LTL 3.432499
LVL 0.703172
LYD 6.305423
MAD 10.510935
MDL 19.50288
MGA 5131.338278
MKD 61.446667
MMK 2440.367499
MNT 4177.563951
MOP 9.403559
MRU 46.366572
MUR 52.75303
MVR 17.904737
MWK 2016.588983
MXN 21.646085
MYR 4.921356
MZN 74.352946
NAD 20.615487
NGN 1782.999126
NIO 42.794997
NOK 11.907252
NPR 163.082394
NZD 1.960171
OMR 0.446962
PAB 1.162964
PEN 4.097077
PGK 4.905675
PHP 66.308399
PKR 330.135607
PLN 4.254151
PYG 8710.768948
QAR 4.240659
RON 5.064692
RSD 117.17097
RUB 92.561569
RWF 1682.787391
SAR 4.362653
SBD 9.552168
SCR 17.137387
SDG 698.068432
SEK 11.183126
SGD 1.495635
SHP 0.913526
SLE 26.857073
SLL 24376.613741
SOS 664.607659
SRD 43.336073
STD 24060.973952
STN 24.463158
SVC 10.175588
SYP 15114.290017
SZL 20.620389
THB 37.700943
TJS 10.833125
TMT 4.080302
TND 3.408722
TOP 2.722647
TRY 47.317313
TTD 7.893214
TWD 34.770932
TZS 2923.63532
UAH 48.224181
UGX 4143.705999
USD 1.162479
UYU 46.579249
UZS 14737.614588
VES 149.666591
VND 30495.318816
VUV 138.801361
WST 3.085123
XAF 654.979035
XAG 0.030766
XAU 0.000346
XCD 3.141658
XCG 2.095988
XDR 0.814248
XOF 654.981848
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.518465
ZAR 20.653862
ZMK 10463.711932
ZMW 27.039626
ZWL 374.317852
  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    22.99

    -0.26%

  • SCS

    -0.0550

    15.825

    -0.35%

  • BCC

    -1.7100

    80.38

    -2.13%

  • NGG

    0.2200

    71.23

    +0.31%

  • GSK

    -0.0650

    37.735

    -0.17%

  • AZN

    0.2250

    73.76

    +0.31%

  • BCE

    0.0650

    24.415

    +0.27%

  • RIO

    -0.0600

    61.8

    -0.1%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • BTI

    0.9950

    58.235

    +1.71%

  • RBGPF

    4.1600

    76

    +5.47%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    14.34

    -0.07%

  • BP

    -0.1850

    33.955

    -0.54%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.51

    -0.3%

  • VOD

    0.1350

    11.495

    +1.17%

  • RELX

    -0.1050

    47.895

    -0.22%

  • JRI

    -0.0250

    13.41

    -0.19%

Advertisement Image
Ozone layer healing but imperiled by schemes to curb Sun's heat
Ozone layer healing but imperiled by schemes to curb Sun's heat / Photo: Handout - NASA/AFP

Ozone layer healing but imperiled by schemes to curb Sun's heat

The ozone layer that shields life on Earth from deadly solar radiation is on track to recover within decades, but controversial geoengineering schemes to blunt global warming could reverse that progress, a major scientific assessment warned Monday.

Advertisement Image

Text size:

Since the mid-1970s, certain industrial aerosols have led to the depletion of ozone in the stratosphere, 11 to 40 kilometres (7 to 25 miles) above Earth's surface.

In 1987, nearly 200 nations agreed on the Montreal Protocol to reverse damage to the ozone layer by banning chemicals that destroy this naturally occurring stratum of molecules in the atmosphere.

That agreement is working as hoped, and is in line with previous projections, more than 200 scientists found.

"Ozone is recovering, this is a good story," John Pyle, a professor at the University of Cambridge and co-chair of Scientific Assessment of Ozone Depletion, told AFP.

The ozone layer should be restored -- both in area and depth -- by around 2066 over the Antarctic region, where ozone depletion has been most pronounced, according to the report, jointly released by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), the UN Environment Programme, and government agencies in the US and the European Union.

Over the Arctic, full recovery will happen around 2045, and for the rest of the world in about 20 years.

An intact ozone layer filters out most of the Sun's short-wave ultraviolet radiation, which damages DNA in living organisms and can cause cancer.

At ground level, however, ozone is a major component of air pollution and exacerbates respiratory disease.

Efforts to repair the ozone layer intersect with the fight against global warming.

- Like a volcano -

The phase-out of ozone-depleting substances -- some of them powerful greenhouse gases -- will have avoided up to one degree Celsius of warming by mid-century compared to a scenario in which their use expanded some three percent per year, according to the assessment.

A class of industrial aerosols developed to replace those banned by the Montreal Protocol also turned out to be powerful greenhouse gases, and will be phased out over the next three decades under a recent amendment to the 1987 treaty.

But while the world pulled together to tackle the damage to the ozone layer, it has failed to curb carbon emissions quickly enough to forestall dangerous warming.

A world barely 1.2C above pre-industrial levels has already been buffeted by record heatwaves, droughts and temperatures, and is headed for a disastrous 2.7C above that benchmark.

With emissions continuing to rise and time running out to avoid some of the worst impacts, controversial geoengineering schemes are moving to the centre of climate change policy debates.

These include proposals to blunt global warming by depositing sulphur particles into the upper atmosphere.

But the report cautioned this could sharply reverse the recovery of the ozone layer.

So-called stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) is increasingly seen as a potential stop-gap measure for capping temperatures long enough to tackle the problem at the source.

Nature demonstrates that it works: the violent 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines -- which spewed millions of tonnes of dust and debris -- lowered global temperatures for about a year.

- Unintended consequences -

Scientists calculate that injecting 8 to 16 million tonnes of sulphur dioxide into the stratosphere each year, roughly equivalent to Pinatubo's output, would cool Earth's temperature by about 1C.

Simulations over Antarctica in October -- when the ozone hole is biggest -- show that so-called stratospheric aerosol injection over 20 years would lower global temperatures by 0.5C.

But there's a trade-off: the ozone layer would be reduced to its 1990 levels, only a third of what it was before the impact of human activity.

The world would see "a continuing severe depletion of ozone while such solar radiation management continues," Pyle said.

The UN's climate science advisory panel, the IPCC, has warned of other unintended consequences, ranging from the disruption of African and Asian monsoons, upon which hundreds of millions depend for food, to a drying of the Amazon, which is already transitioning toward a savannah state.

The new report, the 10th to date, also highlights an unexpected decline of ozone in the lower stratosphere over the planet's populated tropical and mid-latitude regions.

Up to now, chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, and other molecules have mainly eroded ozone in the upper stratosphere, and over the poles.

Scientists are investigating two possible culprits: industrial chemicals not covered by the Montreal Protocol called "very short-lived substances" (VSLSs), and climate change.

(F.Schuster--BBZ)

Advertisement Image