Since 1 January 1989, the signatories of the Montreal Protocol have curbed their production and consumption of CFCl3, CF2Cl2, and other ozone-depleting substances (ODS). The Antarctic ozone hole continues to form every year and let harmful radiation reach the surface. In some years, ozone levels also drop alarmingly in the Arctic. Even so, observations suggest Earth’s beleaguered ozone layer is beginning to recover. According to a new study, the protocol is also providing the polar regions with some protection from another threat: climate change. Olaf Morgenstern of Cambridge University and his colleagues have simulated what Earth’s climate would be like in 2025 if levels of ODS had continued to rise unchecked since 1989. Ozone depletion affects circulation and climate in the stratosphere and, through coupling, in the atmosphere closer to Earth’s surface. The Cambridge model predicts an annual mean warming of around 1 K...
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1 September 2008
September 01 2008
Citation
Charles Day; The Montreal protocol mitigates climate change. Physics Today 1 September 2008; 61 (9): 22. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2982111
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