Ozone Hole Healing Stalls
The hole in stratospheric ozone over Antarctica has remained stubbornly large in recent years despite a worldwide ban since 1987 on the chlorine emissions that created it, according to NASA.
While this year’s maximum expanse of the ozone hole, reached on Sept. 9, was about 9 percent less than the record set in 2000, its coverage was about the same as in 2010, 2012 and 2013.
Earth’s ozone layer helps shield life on the surface from potentially harmful ultraviolet radiation that can cause skin cancer, cataracts and plant damage.
The reason the hole isn’t closing up despite no new chlorofluorocarbons being released into the atmosphere is clouded by a complex interaction between it and climate change, scientists say.
“The ozone hole itself is affecting the climate of Antarctica and Australia, and is being affected by it. It is changing the wind systems,” said Jonathan Shanklin of…
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