We are already reaping the rewards of the Montreal Protocol, with the
ozone layer in much better shape than it would have been without the UN
treaty, according to a new study in Nature Communications.
Study lead author Professor Martyn Chipperfield, from the School of Earth & Environment
at the University of Leeds, said: “Our research confirms the importance
of the Montreal Protocol and shows that we have already had real
benefits. We knew that it would save us from large ozone loss 'in the
future', but in fact we are already past the point when things would
have become noticeably worse.”
Although the Montreal Protocol came
into force in 1987 and restricted the use of ozone-depleting
substances, atmospheric concentrations of these harmful substances
continued to rise as they can survive in the atmosphere for many years.
Concentrations peaked in 1993 and have subsequently declined.
In the new study,
the researchers used a state-of-the-art 3D computer model of
atmospheric chemistry to investigate what would have happened to the
ozone layer if the Montreal Protocol had not been implemented.
Professor
Chipperfield said: “Ozone depletion in the polar regions depends on
meteorology, especially the occurrence of cold temperatures at about
20km altitude – colder temperatures cause more loss. Other studies which
have assessed the importance of the Montreal Protocol have used models
to predict atmospheric winds and temperatures and have looked a few
decades into the future. The predictions of winds and temperatures in
these models are uncertain, and probably underestimate the extent of
cold winters.
“We have used actual observed meteorological
conditions for the past few decades. This gives a more accurate
simulation of the conditions for polar ozone loss.”
The
researchers suggest that the hole in the ozone layer over the Antarctic
would have grown in size by an additional 40% by 2013. Their model also
suggests that had ozone-depleting substances continued to increase, the
ozone layer would have become significantly thinner over other parts of
the globe.
Professor Chipperfield said he undertook this study because of the exceptionally cold Arctic winter of 2010/11.
“We
could see that previous models used to predict the impact of the
Montreal Protocol in the future would not have predicted such extreme
events and we wondered how much worse things could have been if the
Montreal Protocol had not been in place,” he said.
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