WASHINGTON -- Earth's protective but fragile ozone layer is beginning to recover, largely because of the phaseout since the 1980s of certain chemicals used in refrigerants and aerosol cans, a U.N. scientific panel reported Wednesday in a rare piece of good news about the health of the planet.
Scientists said the development demonstrates when the world comes together, it can counteract a brewing ecological crisis.
For the first time in 35 years, scientists confirmed a statistically significant and sustained increase in stratospheric ozone, which shields us from solar radiation that causes skin cancer, crop damage and other problems.
From 2000 to 2013, ozone levels went up 4 percent in the key mid-northern latitudes about 30 miles high, said NASA scientist Paul A. Newman. He co-led the every-four-years ozone assessment by 300 scientists, released at the United Nations.
"It's a victory for diplomacy and for science and for the fact that we were able to work together," said chemist Mario Molina. In 1974, Molina and F. Sherwood Rowland wrote a scientific study forecasting the ozone depletion problem. They won the 1995 Nobel Prize in chemistry for their work.
The ozone layer had thinned since the late 1970s. Man-made chlorofluorocarbons, called CFCs, released chlorine and bromine that destroyed ozone molecules high in the air. After scientists raised the alarm, countries around the world agreed to a treaty in 1987 that phased out CFCs. Levels of those chemicals between 30 and 50 miles up are decreasing.
The United Nations calculated in an earlier report that without the pact, by 2030 there would have been an extra 2 million skin-cancer cases a year around the world.
Paradoxically, heat-trapping greenhouse gases -- considered the major cause of global warming -- also are helping to rebuild the ozone layer, Newman said. The report said rising levels of carbon dioxide and other gases cool the upper stratosphere, and the cooler air increases the amount of ozone.
And in another trend, the chemicals that replaced CFCs contribute to global warming and are on the rise, said MIT atmospheric scientist Susan Solomon. They are expected to increase dramatically by 2050 and make "a big contribution" to global warming.
The ozone layer is far from healed. The ozone-eating chemicals lingering in the atmosphere create a yearly fall ozone hole above the extreme Southern Hemisphere, and the hole hasn't closed.
Also, the ozone layer is still about 6 percent thinner than in 1980, by Newman's calculations.
Ozone levels are "on the upswing, but it's not there yet," he said.
Paul Wapner, a professor of global environmental politics at American University, said the findings are "good news in an often dark landscape" and send a message of hope to world leaders meeting later this month in New York for a U.N. climate summit.
"The precedent is truly important because society is facing another serious global environmental problem, namely climate change," said Molina, a professor in San Diego and Mexico City. The 71-year-old scientist said he didn't think he would live to see the day that the ozone layer was rebuilding.
Earlier this week, the United Nations announced that atmospheric levels of the main greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide, surged to another record high in 2013. The increase from 2012 was the biggest jump in three decades.
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Online:
United Nations ozone program: http://ozone.unep.org/new--site/en/index.php
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