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TWENTY
YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF THE DISCOVERY OF THE CAUSE OF THE ANTARCTIC OZONE
HOLE — A SCIENTIFIC SUCCESS STORY
September
15, 2006 — Twenty years ago this August, NOAA senior scientist Susan
Solomon, along with other government and university scientists, identified
the cause
of the Antarctic ozone hole — a discovery that is still being
celebrated as the most significant scientific/global environmental success
story of the 20th century. Within five years of the hole’s discovery
by the British Antarctic Survey, Solomon’s proposed chemistry for
the linkage of increases in long-lived man-made chlorofluorocarbons (or
CFCs) primarily responsible for the seasonal Antarctic ozone hole was
confirmed and the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone
Layer (the first treaty to address the Earth's environment) was enacted
to phase out these compounds. As a result, the global production of these
ozone-depleting compounds is now greatly reduced and there are signs that
the ozone hole is slowly stepping into a recovery phase — both CFC
and ozone levels are showing signs of leveling off and some CFCs have
even started to decrease.
"This
is an example of the quality science conducted by NOAA scientists and
their colleagues, often in extreme conditions, and how it informs those
who make decisions that affect our daily lives," said retired Navy
Vice Adm. Conrad C. Lautenbacher,
Ph.D., undersecretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator.
"Through this work, the nation has gained a better understanding
of our atmosphere, which is a key element of NOAA's mission."
David Hofmann,
director of the NOAA Global Atmospheric Monitoring Program described the
status of the ozone layer today as, "the patient hasn't recovered,
but it's not getting any sicker. We really have not seen any recovery
in Antarctica." NOAA predicts that it could take until 2060 for the
ozone layer to heal completely, provided humans stop all release of man-made
substances containing chlorine (or bromine).
The
Ozone Layer
The
ozone layer is a thin, invisible
layer of the Earth's atmosphere about 15 miles thick. In nature, ozone
production and destruction are balanced, but the introduction of man-made
compounds has upset this balance. Much like sunscreen for the Earth, the
ozone layer shields the Earth from the sun’s damaging UV-B radiation,
which can adversely affect human health and ecosystems. (Click
NOAA image to the right for a larger view of different regions of the
atmosphere. Please credit “NOAA.”)
The
Ozone Depletion Story
Solomon once described the story of ozone depletion in terms
of phases: phases of matter (gas, solid and liquid), phases of scientific
discovery and phases of public awareness and global policy decisions.
The following article highlights this concept and NOAA’s role in
the story of Antarctic and global ozone depletion.
The History and the Science behind the Antarctic Ozone Hole
Although
some ozone depletion
by CFCs had been suspected (due to “gas phase” ozone depletion
in the upper reaches of the stratospheric ozone layer in the presence
of sunlight near 40 kilometers) and there was enough concern regarding
this issue that some relevant environmental policy had been enacted (i.e.,
several countries agreed to ban the use of CFCs in spray cans), there
was little direct evidence of ozone depletion by these chemicals in the
1970s.
In fact,
by 1983, a United States National Research Council report projected that
continued use of CFCs at then-current rates would probably lead to depletion
of the total global ozone layer by only about three percent in about a
century. Many argued that this was a small effect, far in the future,
and subject to large uncertainties.
Unexpected
Discovery of the Antarctic Ozone Hole
The
situation changed dramatically with the publication of the discovery of
the Antarctic ozone hole by British Antarctic survey scientist, Joseph
Farman, and his colleagues in 1985. Although the British researchers first
doubted the validity of their own measurements — taken in the springtime
ozone layer above Halley Bay, Antarctica — their work was quickly
confirmed by measurements from satellites and from other Antarctic research
stations. Having monitored ozone levels at that site for decades, Farman
noticed that the ozone layer thinned every spring (starting in August/September
and reaching a minimum in early October) over Antarctica and that the
thinning started to increase in the late 1970’s. (Click
NOAA image to the right for a larger view of South Pole ozone hole minimum
profiles from NOAA's 20 year record. Please credit “NOAA.”)
Ozone appeared
to be depleted not by a few percent, but by about a third and not in the
far future, but just a few years after the National Research Council said
little would occur for a century. This and the fact that observed ozone
losses occurred concurrently with increases of CFC-11 and CFC-12 concentrations
in the troposphere raised fears that ozone depletion may have been drastically
underestimated. Furthermore, the ozone depletion was not occurring at
the very top of the ozone layer (near 40 kilometers), as expected from
gas-phase chlorine chemistry, but at an entirely different height range
from about 10-20 kilometers (the very heart of the ozone layer). It was
clear that this ozone depletion was not only larger than had been expected,
but totally different in character. It could not be explained by the then-current
ozone depletion theories involving “gas phase” chemistry,
so a massive shift in scientific understanding was needed to explain this
change in ozone depletion from global to polar, and from 40 kilometers
down to 10-20 kilometers.
Antarctic Ozone Hole Ozone Theories
The
discovery of the ozone depletion blindsided the scientific community,
leaving them without a suitable explanation. But within a few months,
scientists came up with three competing ideas that could explain why an
ozone hole — larger than the size of the entire continental United
States — had developed over Antarctica. Two theories stressed natural
processes, but a third theory — proposed by Solomon — suggested
that human-made chemicals were to blame.
Solomon’s
Theory
According
to Solomon’s theory, the cold conditions above Antarctica greatly
amplified the ozone-destroying power of CFCs, accelerating the loss in
this region. Specifically, chemical reactions involving hydrochloric acid
on the surface of the Antarctic’s icy polar stratospheric clouds
increased the amount of chlorine present in active, ozone-destroying forms,
beginning over the dark winter months. Once the sun returned in the Antarctic
springtime, a second (photochemical) reaction involving these reactive
chlorine compounds would cause a massive, though localized and seasonal,
ozone depletion.
Subsequent
laboratory and field measurements (from the ground, balloon borne and
from high-altitude airplanes) confirmed Solomon’s theory that the
ozone hole was caused by the interaction of CFCs, sunlight and the icy
clouds that form in that special region of the Earth. Scientists had gravely
underestimated the chemicals' destructive power, and the ozone layer faced
even more danger than previously thought.
Observational
Evidence: Verifying the Role of CFCs and Surface Chemistry
In
Aug. 1986, the National Ozone Expedition (or NOZE) was dispatched to the
McMurdo station in Antarctic to make some of the first measurements of
key chlorine and nitrogen containing gases to test the new “surface”
ozone depletion chemistry.
Solomon was
an atmospheric chemist at the then-NOAA Aeronomy Laboratory (now the NOAA
Chemical Sciences Division) in Boulder, Colo., when she led the NOAA
team. David Hofmann, then with the University of Wyoming, headed the UW
team. He later joined NOAA and is now the Director of ESRL’s Global
Monitoring Division. Both were funded by NSF, which operates the McMurdo
Station at the South Pole. Researchers from NASA and the State University
of New York (SUNY) at Stoneybrook, rounded out the scientific party. Other
sponsors included NOAA, the Chemical Manufacturers Association, the U.S.
Navy and ITT Antarctic Services.
NOAA
Measurements at McMurdo Station
Solomon
and the rest of the NOAA team used ground-based visible absorption techniques
to measure ozone, nitrogen dioxide and chlorine dioxide. Solomon recounts
that the NOAA team arrived at McMurdo station in late August, before the
sun was above the horizon, and hence before substantial ozone loss began
at that location. “One of the stunning experiences of my life in
science was to witness the ozone levels drop at McMurdo during September
1986,” said Solomon. “Ozone fell from about 300 Dobson Units
when we arrived in Antarctica in late August 1986 to less than 200 Dobson
Units by late September, and the disappearance of a third of the total
ozone supported the observations of others regarding the veracity of the
ozone hole and its seasonality.”
The falling
ozone was accompanied by a spectacular enhancement in chlorine dioxide.
Chlorine dioxide was a particularly important early measurement because
that molecule is proportional to other reactive forms of chlorine (i.e.,
Cl and ClO). Solomon’s measurements of greatly enhanced chlorine
dioxide therefore showed that the polar stratospheric clouds were indeed
liberating chlorine. The nitrogen dioxide was in contrast extremely low,
further confirming expectations based upon polar stratospheric cloud chemistry.
The proposed surface chemistry converts nitrogen-containing gases to nitric
acid (HNO3), which impedes the reformation of “unreactive”
chlorine nitrate (ClONO2) and thereby further enhances the ozone loss
by allowing chlorine to stay in its active ozone-destroying forms longer.
As temperatures rose in early October, the chlorine dioxide disappeared
and the nitrogen dioxide increased, again as expected. Thus the seasonal
behavior of both molecules supported Solomon’s theory. Furthermore,
as verified by the University of Wyoming balloon measurements, the ozone
losses were confined primarily to the lower stratosphere, between about
12 and 20 kilometers, as would be expected for the new surface ozone depletion
chemistry.
In the end,
all four of the major NOZE
teams successfully measured the key chlorine and nitrogen containing compounds
indicative of the new surface ozone depletion chemistry. This data, along
with additional findings from the NOZE
II mission in 1987 and the Airborne Antarctic Ozone Experiment (also
known as AAOE) the same year, showed conclusively that human-produced
trace gases that contain chlorine (and bromine) had caused the ozone hole.
Montreal
Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone
On Sept. 16,
1987, diplomats from around the world met in Montreal and forged a treaty
unprecedented in the history of international negotiations. Environmental
ministers from 24 nations, representing most of the industrialized world,
agreed to set sharp limits on the use of CFCs (and Halons).
More
Ozone Depletion in the North
Having seen that chlorine dioxide was greatly enhanced in Antarctica,
Solomon and her colleagues went north to Thule, Greenland in Jan. 1988,
to search for enhanced chlorine chemistry in the Arctic. Indeed there
were clear signs that chlorine dioxide was also significantly enhanced
in the north compared to gas-phase chemistry, but at levels much lower
than those observed in the Antarctic (as would be expected since Arctic
temperatures usually warm up in spring much earlier than in the Antarctic,
limiting the overlap between sunlight and cold temperatures and thus ozone
depletion). Therefore, both the Antarctica and Arctic polar ozone loss
appeared to depend upon the overlap between chemical perturbations due
to cold temperatures, associated polar stratospheric clouds and sunlight.
1990 London Amendments
The fast-paced research of the late 1980s led diplomats to conclude
that the original Montreal Protocol would not go far enough toward protecting
the fragile ozone layer. Therefore, in June 1990, diplomats met in London
and voted to significantly strengthen the Montreal Protocol.
New
Phases in Understanding Surface Chemistry
At the time of discovery of the ozone hole, it was thought that
polar stratospheric clouds were composed entirely of solid particles,
mainly water ice. But in addition to the solid phase, NOAA scientists
also made leading discoveries showing that the liquid phase was also important
to stratospheric chemistry, and that the solid and liquid particles of
the stratosphere contain additional chemical species besides water. Because
all of these surfaces were found to drive much of the same surface chemistry,
this discovery relaxed the threshold for enhanced ozone loss related to
surface chemistry from extremely cold temperatures to a far more widespread
phenomenon affecting latitudes outside the polar regions.
Furthermore,
NOAA scientists Hofmann and Solomon realized that the abundances of ozone
depleting substances were greatly enhanced after explosive volcanic eruptions.
Solomon and her colleagues have made several contributions to the understanding
of liquid phase chemistry in the stratosphere, particularly regarding
the role of volcanic effects.
While the
discovery and explanation of the Antarctic ozone hole was important to
policy deliberations, the identification and explanation of ozone loss
at mid-latitudes helped inspire further action by policymakers to reduce
emissions of CFCs (e.g., Copenhagen and Beijing Amendments).
Closing
thoughts
Cold temperatures, solid polar stratospheric clouds, and liquid
volcanic particles are all factors that modulate the ozone depletion,
but the fundamental cause of the loss is human use ofCFCs
(and, to a lesser extent, bromocarbons).
Solomon and
her NOAA colleagues have been involved in multiple phases of understanding
of ozone loss chemistry both through modeling and observations. The picture
has evolved from the gas-phase alone to solids and liquids. Further, the
understanding of liquid phase chemistry has led to an evolution of thinking
from extreme cold to less extreme, expanding both the processes that must
be considered and where they can occur in altitude and latitude.
Ozone
Depletion in the Antarctic Springtime
1) HCl
+ ClONO2 → HNO3
+ Cl2
2)
Cl2 + sunlight → Cl
+ Cl
3) 2Cl
+ O3 → 2ClO
+ 2O2
4) 2ClO
+ 2O → 2Cl + 2O2
______________________
NET
= 203 to 302
(Click NOAA image to the right for a larger view of ozone depletion
in the Antarctic springtime. Please credit “NOAA.”)
Relevant
Web Sites
NOAA South Pole
Ozone Program
NOAA
Earth System Research Laboratory
NOAA
Satellite Image of Ozone Hole
NOAA
Ozone Page
NOAA
Aeronomy Lab: Stratospheric Ozone Layer (Antarctic, Arctic, and Global)
Reports
to the Nation on Our Changing Planet: Our Ozone Shield
NOAA
Research: The Ozone Hole
SCIENTISTS
BRAVE BRUTAL ELEMENTS ON TOP OF THE WORLD TO STUDY OZONE LAYER
NOAA
SCIENTIST RECEIVES PRESTIGIOUS AWARD FOR WORK ON OZONE HOLE
NOAA
SCIENTIST RECEIVES NATION'S HIGHEST SCIENTIFIC HONOR
NOAA
MONITORS STRATOSPHERIC OZONE, AS WELL AS THE CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS AND ATMOSPHERIC
CONDITIONS THAT AFFECT ITS CONCENTRATION
NOAA,
NSF OBSERVE 20TH ANNIVERSARY OF OZONE HOLE 'SUCCESS STORY'
Media
Contact:
Jana
Goldman, NOAA Research, (301)
713-2483
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