Earth’s Ozone Shield Shows Signs of
Recovery
Study shows atmospheric ozone recovering
in mid-latitudes of Northern and Southern hemispheres
Atlanta (August 30, 2006)
— Concentrations of atmospheric ozone—which protects Earth from the sun’s
ultraviolet radiation—are showing signs of recovery in the most important
regions of the stratosphere above the mid-latitudes in both the Northern and
Southern hemispheres, a new study shows.
Researchers attribute the improvement to both a reduction in ozone-depleting
chemicals phased out by the global Montreal Protocol treaty and its amendments
and to changes in atmospheric transport dynamics. The study, funded by NASA, is
the first to document a difference among stratospheric regions in ozone-level
improvement and to establish a cause-and-effect relationship based on direct
measurements by multiple satellite and ground-based, ozone-monitoring systems.
“We do think we’re on the road to recovery of stratospheric ozone, but what we
don’t know is exactly how that recovery will happen,” said Derek Cunnold, a
professor of earth and atmospheric sciences at the Georgia Institute of
Technology. “Many in the scientific community think it will be at least 50 years
before ozone levels return to the pre-1980 levels when ozone began to decline.”
Authors of the paper, Eun-Su Yang and Derek Cunnold, pose outside their research
building
on the Georgia Institute of Technology campus in Atlanta.
(Georgia Tech Photo: Gary Meek)
The research results will be published Sept. 9, 2006 in the American Geophysical
Union’s Journal of Geophysical Research—Atmospheres. Georgia Tech
research scientist Eun-Su Yang led the study in close collaboration with
Cunnold, Ross Salawitch of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California
Institute of Technology, M. Patrick McCormick and James Russell III of Hampton
University, Joseph Zawodny of NASA Langley Research Center, Samuel Oltmans of
the NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory and Professor Mike Newchurch at the
University of Alabama in Huntsville.
The study’s data indicate that atmospheric ozone has stopped decreasing in one
region and is actually increasing in the other of the two most important lower
regions of the stratosphere.
Scientists attribute the stabilization of ozone levels in the past decade in
the 11- to 15-mile (18- to 25-kilometer) altitude region to the Montreal
Protocol, enacted in 1987, and its amendments. The treaty phased out the use of
ozone-depleting chemicals, including chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) emitted from
such sources as spray-can propellants, refrigerator coolants and foam
insulation.
In the 7- to 11-mile (11- to 18-kilometer) region, the researchers link a slight
increase in ozone to changes in atmospheric transport – perhaps caused by
natural variability or human-induced climate warming – rather than atmospheric
chemistry. The changes in this altitude range – below the region where
ozone-depleting gases derived from human activity are thought to cause ozone
depletion – contribute about half of the overall-measured improvement,
researchers said.
“There is now widespread agreement in the scientific community that ozone is
leveling off in the 18- to 25-kilometer region of the stratosphere because of
the Montreal Protocol,” Cunnold said. “And we believe there is some tendency
toward an increase in ozone in this region, though further study is needed to be
certain.
“In the 11- to 18-kilometer region, ozone is definitely increasing because of
changes in atmospheric dynamics and transport not related to the Montreal
Protocol,” he added. “But we don’t know the long-term effect this change will
have in this region.”
Other recent studies complement these new findings. Among them are a study
published in 2003 in the Journal of Geophysical Research, which
reported a slowdown in the ozone depletion rate in the upper stratosphere at
about 22 to 28 miles altitude (35 to 45 kilometers). Newchurch at the University
of Alabama in Huntsville led this study in collaboration with: Cunnold, his
former Ph.D. advisor; Yang, his former Ph.D. student; and other prominent
scientists. Newchurch is also an author on the current paper.
More recently, a study published in the journal Nature on May 3, 2006
indicated a stabilization and slight increase in the total-column stratospheric
ozone in the past decade. This work, led by Betsy Weatherhead at the University
of Colorado at Boulder, relied on satellite and ground-based ozone data used
in 14 modeling studies done by researchers around the world. She and her
colleagues also attributed the changes to the Montreal Protocol, but could not
separate treaty-related changes from transport-related changes because of
limited information available on ozone variations by height.
In the current study, Yang, Cunnold and their co-authors reached their
conclusions based on satellite and ground-based atmospheric ozone measurements.
They analyzed a tremendous amount of data from three extremely accurate NASA
satellite’s instruments (SAGE I and II and HALOE) that began collecting data
in 1979 and continued until 2005, with the exception of a three-year period in
the early 1980s. Ground-based ozone measurements taken by NASA and NOAA
from 1979 to 2005 and balloons provided essential complementary data for the
study, Yang said. The satellites and the balloons measured ozone levels by
atmospheric region. The ground-based data recorded measurements for the total
ozone column.
“The ground-based measurements were especially important for the lower
atmosphere because satellites can have difficulty in sensing the lowest
regions,” Yang said.
Salawitch, a senior research scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
noted: “Our study provides a quantitative measure of a key fingerprint that is
lacking in earlier studies—the response of the ozone layer as function of
height. We reconcile the height-dependent response with observations from other
instruments that record variations in total-column ozone”.
To accurately attribute the ozone level changes to the Montreal Protocol,
researchers had to account for long- and short-term natural fluctuations in
ozone concentration, Cunnold noted. One such fluctuation is an 11-year solar
cycle, and another is a two-year oscillation that occurs in the tropics, but
affects ozone in other latitudes because of atmospheric transport. Despite the
natural fluctuations, Yang, Cunnold and their co-authors are very confident in
the conclusions they reached from the data they analyzed.
“We know from the study we’ve just published that the Montreal Protocol—the
first major global agreement related to atmospheric change—is working,” Cunnold
said.
A new NASA satellite called Aura is continuing to measure ozone in various
regions of the stratosphere, and these same researchers are involved in the
ongoing study of the ozone layer using the satellite’s data.
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