2012 Antarctic Ozone Hole Second Smallest in 20 Years

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Oct. 24, 2012

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

Katy Human 
NOAA Office of Communications and External Affairs, Boulder, Colo. 
303-497-4747 
katy.g.human@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 12-371

2012 ANTARCTIC OZONE HOLE SECOND SMALLEST IN 20 YEARS

WASHINGTON -- The average area covered by the Antarctic ozone hole 
this year was the second smallest in the last 20 years, according to 
data from NASA and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 
(NOAA) satellites. Scientists attribute the change to warmer 
temperatures in the Antarctic lower stratosphere. 

The ozone hole reached its maximum size Sept. 22, covering 8.2 million 
square miles (21.2 million square kilometers), or the area of the 
United States, Canada and Mexico combined. The average size of the 
2012 ozone hole was 6.9 million square miles (17.9 million square 
kilometers). The Sept. 6, 2000 ozone hole was the largest on record 
at 11.5 million square miles (29.9 million square kilometers). 

"The ozone hole mainly is caused by chlorine from human-produced 
chemicals, and these chlorine levels are still sizable in the 
Antarctic stratosphere," said NASA atmospheric scientist Paul Newman 
of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "Natural 
fluctuations in weather patterns resulted in warmer stratospheric 
temperatures this year. These temperatures led to a smaller ozone 
hole." 

The ozone layer acts as Earth's natural shield against ultraviolet 
radiation, which can cause skin cancer. The ozone hole phenomenon 
began making a yearly appearance in the early 1980s. The Antarctic 
ozone layer likely will not return to its early 1980s state until 
about 2065, Newman said. The lengthy recovery is because of the long 
lifetimes of ozone-depleting substances in the atmosphere. Overall 
atmospheric ozone no longer is declining as concentrations of 
ozone-depleting substances decrease. The decrease is the result of an 
international agreement regulating the production of certain 
chemicals. 

This year also showed a change in the concentration of ozone over the 
Antarctic. The minimum value of total ozone in the ozone hole was the 
second highest level in two decades. Total ozone, measured in Dobson 
units (DU), reached 124 DU on Oct. 1. NOAA ground-based measurements 
at the South Pole recorded 136 DU on Oct. 5. When the ozone hole is 
not present, total ozone typically ranges from 240-500 DU. 

This is the first year growth of the ozone hole has been observed by 
an ozone-monitoring instrument on the Suomi National Polar-orbiting 
Partnership (NPP) satellite. The instrument, called the Ozone Mapping 
Profiler Suite (OMPS), is based on previous instruments, such as the 
Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) and the Solar Backscatter 
Ultraviolet instrument (SBUV/2), which have flown on multiple 
satellites. OMPS continues a satellite record dating back to the 
early 1970s. 

In addition to observing the annual formation and extent of the ozone 
hole, scientists hope OMPS will help them better understand ozone 
destruction in the middle and upper stratosphere with its Nadir 
Profiler. Ozone variations in the lower stratosphere will be measured 
with its Limb Profiler. 

"OMPS Limb looks sideways, and it can measure ozone as a function of 
height," said Pawan K. Bhartia, a NASA atmospheric physicist and OMPS 
Limb instrument lead. "This OMPS instrument allows us to more closely 
see the vertical development of Antarctic ozone depletion in the 
lower stratosphere where the ozone hole occurs." 

NASA and NOAA have been monitoring the ozone layer on the ground and 
with a variety of instruments on satellites and balloons since the 
1970s. Long-term ozone monitoring instruments have included TOMS, 
SBUV/2, Stratospheric Aerosol and Gas Experiment series of 
instruments, the Microwave Limb Sounder, the Ozone Monitoring 
Instrument, and the OMPS instrument on Suomi NPP. Suomi NPP is a 
bridging mission leading to the next-generation polar-orbiting 
environmental satellites called the Joint Polar Satellite System, 
will extend ozone monitoring into the 2030s. 

NASA and NOAA have a mandate under the Clean Air Act to monitor 
ozone-depleting gases and stratospheric depletion of ozone. NOAA 
complies with this mandate by monitoring ozone via ground and 
satellite measurements. The NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory in 
Boulder, Colo., performs the ground-based monitoring. The Climate 
Prediction Center performs the satellite monitoring. 

To monitor the state of the ozone layer above Antarctica, visit: 

http://ozonewatch.gsfc.nasa.gov 

	
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