Record
ozone loss during 2006 over South Pole
2
October 2006
Ozone measurements made by ESA’s Envisat satellite have revealed the ozone
loss of 40 million tonnes on 2 October 2006 has exceeded the record ozone loss
of about 39 million tonnes for 2000.
Ozone loss is derived by measuring the area and the depth of the ozone hole. The
size of this year’s ozone hole is 28 million square km, nearly as large as the
record ozone hole extension during 2000, and the depth of the ozone hole is
around 100 Dobson Units, rivalling the record low ozone values in 1998. This
year’s record ozone loss was reached because these two measurements occurred
during the same time period. (A Dobson unit is a unit of measurement that
describes the thickness of the ozone layer in a column directly above the
location being measured.)
Such significant ozone loss
requires very low temperatures in the stratosphere combined with sunlight. This
year’s extreme loss of ozone can be explained by the temperatures above
Antarctica reaching the lowest recorded in the area since 1979," ESA
Atmospheric Engineer Claus Zehner said.
Ozone is a protective layer found
about 25 kilometres above us mostly in the stratospheric stratum of the
atmosphere that acts as a sunlight filter shielding life on Earth from harmful
ultraviolet rays. Over the last decade the ozone level has lowered by about 0,3%
per year on a global scale, increasing the risk of skin cancer, cataracts and
harm to marine life.
The
thinning of the ozone is caused by the presence of pollutants in the atmosphere
such as chlorine, originating from man-made pollutants like chlorofluorocarbons
(CFCs), which have still not vanished from the air despite being banned under
the Montreal Protocol (1987).
During the southern hemisphere
winter, the atmospheric mass above the Antarctic continent is kept cut off from
exchanges with mid-latitude air by prevailing winds known as the polar vortex.
This leads to very low temperatures, and in the cold and continuous darkness of
this season, polar stratospheric clouds are formed that contain chlorine.
As the polar spring arrives, the
combination of returning sunlight and the presence of polar stratospheric clouds
leads to splitting of chlorine compounds into highly ozone-reactive radicals
that break ozone down into individual oxygen molecules. A single molecule of
chlorine has the potential to break down thousands of molecules of ozone.
The ozone hole, first
recognised in 1985, typically persists until November or December, when the
winds surrounding the South Pole (polar vortex) weaken, and ozone-poor air
inside the vortex is mixed with ozone-rich air outside it.
Envisat, the largest Earth
observation satellite ever built, can localise ozone depletion and track its
changes, enabling the rapid estimation of UV radiation as well as providing
forecasting. The three atmospheric instruments aboard Envisat are the Scanning
Imaging Absorption Spectrometer for Atmospheric Cartography (SCIAMACHY), the
global ozone monitoring by occultation of stars (GOMOS) sensor and the Michelson
interferometer for passive atmospheric sounding (MIPAS).
In the
framework of GMES (Global Monitoring of the Environment and Security), ESA has
backed a project named TEMIS (Tropospheric Emission Monitoring Internet Service)
that provides operational ozone and UV radiation monitoring based on SCIAMACHY
and GOME-1 data. The ozone-monitoring data provided by these
instruments span a time period of 11 years, which will be extended by the
upcoming MetOp satellite series.
The first MetOp satellite in the
series of three is scheduled to be launched in 2006 and will assist climate
researchers in monitoring ozone levels and other atmospheric parameters. MetOp
– Europe’s first polar-orbiting satellite and a mission dedicated to
operational meteorology – will include a next-generation ozone-monitoring
instrument called GOME-2, intended to guarantee continuity of observation of
this vital environmental factor well into the following decades.
"Long-term measurements of
ozone levels are of key importance for being able to monitor the ozone’s
predicted recovery, which is currently estimated to take place by around
2060," Zehner said.
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