NASA, NOAA Data Show Significant Antarctic Ozone Hole Remains

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Oct. 20, 2011

Steve Cole 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0918 
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx 

Patrick Lynch 
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 
301-286-3854/757-897-2047 
patrick.lynch@xxxxxxxx 
RELEASE: 11-357

NASA, NOAA DATA SHOW SIGNIFICANT ANTARCTIC OZONE HOLE REMAINS


WASHINGTON -- The Antarctic ozone hole, which yawns wide every 
Southern Hemisphere spring, reached its annual peak on Sept. 12. It 
stretched to 10.05 million square miles, the ninth largest ozone hole 
on record. Above the South Pole, the ozone hole reached its deepest 
point of the season on Oct. 9, tying this year for the 10th lowest in 
this 26-year record. 

NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) 
use balloon-borne instruments, ground-based instruments and 
satellites to monitor the annual Antarctic ozone hole, global levels 
of ozone in the stratosphere and the manmade chemicals that 
contribute to ozone depletion. 

"The colder than average temperatures in the stratosphere this year 
caused a larger than average ozone hole," said Paul Newman, chief 
scientist for atmospheres at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in 
Greenbelt, Md. "Even though it was relatively large, the area of this 
year's ozone hole was within the range we'd expect given the levels 
of manmade ozone-depleting chemicals that continue to persist in the 
atmosphere." 

The ozone layer helps protect the planet's surface from harmful 
ultraviolet radiation. Ozone depletion results in more incoming 
radiation that can hit the surface, elevating the risk of skin cancer 
and other harmful effects. 

"The manmade chemicals known to destroy ozone are slowly declining 
because of international action, but there are still large amounts of 
these chemicals doing damage," said James Butler, director of NOAA's 
Global Monitoring Division in Boulder, Colo. 

In the Antarctic spring (August and September) the sun begins rising 
again after several months of darkness and polar-circling winds keep 
cold air trapped above the continent. Sunlight-sparked reactions 
involving ice clouds and manmade chemicals begin eating away at the 
ozone. Most years, the conditions for ozone depletion ease before 
early December when the seasonal hole closes. 

Levels of most ozone-depleting chemicals in the atmosphere have been 
gradually declining as the result of the 1987 Montreal Protocol, an 
international treaty to protect the ozone layer. That international 
treaty caused the phase-out of ozone-depleting chemicals, which had 
been used widely in refrigeration, as solvents and in aerosol spray 
cans. 

However, most of those chemicals remain in the atmosphere for decades. 
Global atmospheric computer models predict that stratospheric ozone 
could recover by midcentury, but the ozone hole in the Antarctic will 
likely persist one to two decades longer, according to the latest 
analysis in the 2010 Quadrennial Ozone Assessment issued by the World 
Meteorological Organization and United Nations Environment Programme, 
with co-authors from NASA and NOAA. 

NASA currently measures ozone in the stratosphere with the 
Dutch-Finnish Ozone Monitoring Instrument, or OMI, on board the Aura 
satellite. OMI continues a NASA legacy of monitoring the ozone layer 
from space that dates back to 1972 with launch of the Nimbus-4 
satellite. The instrument measured the 2011 ozone hole at its deepest 
at 95 Dobson units on Oct. 8 this year. This differs slightly from 
NOAA's balloon-borne ozone observations from the South Pole (102 
Dobson units) because OMI measures ozone across the entire Antarctic 
region. 

That satellite-monitoring legacy will continue with the launch of 
NASA's National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite 
System Preparatory Project, known as NPP, on Oct. 28. The satellite 
will carry a new ozone-monitoring instrument, the Ozone Mapping and 
Profiler Suite. The instruments will provide more detailed daily, 
global ozone measurements than ever before to continue observing the 
ozone layer's gradual recovery. 

It will take a few years of averaging yearly lows in Antarctic ozone 
to discern evidence of recovery in ozone levels because seasonal 
cycles and other variable natural factors -- from the temperature of 
the atmosphere to the stability of atmospheric layers -- can make 
ozone levels dip and soar from day to day and year to year. 

NOAA has been tracking ozone depletion around the globe, including the 
South Pole, from several perspectives. NOAA researchers have used 
balloons to loft instruments 18 miles into the atmosphere for more 
than 24 years to collect detailed profiles of ozone levels from the 
surface up. NOAA also tracks ozone with ground-based instruments and 
from space. 

For the updates on the status of the Antarctic ozone layer, visit: 



http://ozonewatch.gsfc.nasa.gov 


For more information on the Antarctic ozone hole, visit: 










http://www.ozonelayer.noaa.gov 

	
-end-



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