We were extremely lucky in that
we were able to connect the dots and phasing out CFC’s was in fact a practical
option as an alternative was immediately available. Had it meant the end of refrigeration we
would still be waiting.
The format still needs to be applied
to a host of problem industrial protocols and international agreements have the
advantage of fostering greater efforts.
Yet we have also had the idiotic Kyoto accord which was
naturally impractical and then dodged by everyone in one way or the other.
Let us go back to selected targets
were regulated replacement is the proper response. Perhaps we can start with replacing sugar
with stevia in beverages.
Study links ozone hole to climate change all the way to the equator
by Staff Writers
Thanks to the 1989 Montreal
Protocol, now signed by 196 countries, global CFC production has been phased
out. As a result, scientists have observed over the past decade that ozone
depletion has largely halted and they now expect it to fully reverse, and the
ozone hole to close by midcentury.
In a study to be published in the April 21st issue of Science magazine, researchers at Columbia University's School of Engineering and Applied Sciencereport their findings that the ozone hole, which is located over the South Pole, has affected the entire circulation of the Southern Hemisphere all the way to the equator.
While previous work has shown that the ozone hole is changing the
atmospheric flow in the high latitudes, the Columbia Engineering paper, "Impact of
Polar Ozone Depletion on Subtropical Precipitation," demonstrates that the
ozone hole is able to influence the tropical circulation and increase rainfall
at low latitudes in the Southern Hemisphere.
This is the first time that ozone depletion, an upper atmospheric
phenomenon confined to the polar regions,
has been linked to climate change from the Pole to the equator.
"The ozone hole is not even mentioned in the summary for
policymakers issued with the last IPCC report," noted Lorenzo M. Polvani,
Professor of Applied Mathematics and of Earth and Environmental Sciences,
Senior Research Scientist at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, and
co-author of the paper. "We show in this study that it has large and
far-reaching impacts. The ozone hole is a big player in the climate
system!"
"It's really amazing that the ozone hole, located so high up in
the atmosphere over Antarctica, can have an impact all the way to the tropics
and affect rainfall there - it's just like a domino effect," said Sarah
Kang, Postdoctoral Research Scientist in Columbia Engineering's Department of
Applied Physics and Applied Mathematics and lead author of the paper.
The ozone hole is now widely believed to have been the dominant agent
of atmospheric circulation changes in the Southern Hemisphere in the last half
century.
This means, according to Polvani and Kang, that international
agreements about mitigating climate change cannot be confined to dealing with
carbon alone- ozone needs to be considered, too. "This could be a real
game-changer," Polvani added.
Located in the Earth's stratosphere, just above the troposphere (which
begins on Earth's surface),
the ozone layer absorbs most of the Sun's harmful ultraviolet rays. Over the
last half-century, widespread use of manmade compounds, especially household
and commercial aerosols containing chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), has
significantly and rapidly broken down the ozone layer, to a point where a hole
in the Antarctic ozone layer was discovered in the mid 1980s.
Thanks to the 1989 Montreal
Protocol, now signed by 196 countries, global CFC production has been phased
out. As a result, scientists have observed over the past decade that ozone
depletion has largely halted and they now expect it to fully reverse, and the
ozone hole to close by midcentury.
But, as Polvani has said, "While the ozone hole has been
considered as a solved problem, we're now finding it has caused a great deal of
the climate change that's been observed." So, even though CFCs are no
longer being added to the atmosphere, and the ozone layer will recover in the
coming decades, the closing of the ozone hole will have a considerable impact
on climate.
This shows that through international treaties such as the Montreal Protocol, which
has been called the single most successful international agreement to date,
human beings are able to make changes to the climate system.
Together with colleagues at the Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling
and Analysis in Victoria , BC , Kang and Polvani used two different
state-of-the-art climate models to
show the ozone hole effect. They first calculated the atmospheric changes in
the models produced by creating an ozone hole.
They then compared these changes with the ones that have been observed
in the last few decades: the close agreement between the models and the
observations shows that ozone has likely been responsible for the observed
changes in Southern Hemisphere.
This important new finding was made possible by the international
collaboration of the Columbia
University scientists
with Canadian colleagues.
Model results pertaining to rainfall are notoriously difficult to
calculate with climate models, and a single model is usually not sufficient to
establish credible results. By joining hands and comparing results from two
independent models, the scientists obtained solid results.
Kang and Polvani plan next to study extreme precipitation events, which
are associated with major floods, mudslides, etc. "We really want to
know," said Kang, "if and how the closing of the ozone hole will
affect these."
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