Ozone Hole Matches
Record Size
October 03, 2006 — By Associated Press
GENEVA — The "ozone hole" over
Antarctica this year has matched the record size of 11.4 million square
miles, the U.N. weather agency has said.
The area of the so-called hole -- a thinning in the ozone layer during the
South Pole winter -- is the same as in the record year of 2000, according
to measurements by NASA, said Geir Braathen, ozone specialist at the
Geneva-based World Meteorological Organization.
But Braathen said of greater concern is that the amount of ozone gas
particles remaining in the hole is even lower than in 2000, a measurement
called "the mass deficit." According to the European Space Agency, the
loss has been 39.8 megatons, he said.
"In a way this mass deficit is a better measure of how much ozone is
depleted ... because it counts how many tons of ozone are lacking,"
Braathen told The Associated Press.
The thinner layer this year "will lead to more ultraviolet radiation on
the ground," Braathen said.
Too much ultraviolet radiation can cause skin cancer and destroy tiny
plants at the beginning of the food chain.
Thinning in the ozone layer -- largely due to the chemical compounds
chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, leaked from refrigerators, air conditioners
and other devices -- exposes Earth to harmful solar rays. Under a 1997
international treaty, most countries have agreed to reduce use of the
ozone depleting chemicals, and scientists are predicting the ozone layer
will eventually recover.
The hole has been forming in the extremely low temperatures that mark the
end of Antarctic winter every year since the mid-1980s. Generally, the
hole is biggest around late September.
This year's Antarctic winter has been very cold, the weather agency said
earlier this month, which has led to greater ozone depletion. Although
there has been a decrease in ozone-depleting substances over the last few
years, the atmosphere is still saturated with them, it said.
According to the agency, it will take until 2065 for the ozone layer to
recover and the hole over the Antarctic to close. That estimate is 15
years longer than previous predictions by the agency.
Source: Associated Press