Ozone Layer Showing 'Signs of Recovery', UN Says: by Roger Harrabin
Ozone Layer Showing 'Signs of Recovery', UN Says: by Roger Harrabin
Ozone Layer Showing 'Signs of Recovery', UN Says: by Roger Harrabin
of recovery', UN says
By Roger HarrabinBBC environment analyst
11 September 2014
The ozone layer that shields the earth from cancercausing ultraviolet rays is showing early signs of thickening
after years of depletion, a UN study says. The ozone hole that
appears annually over Antarctica has also stopped growing
bigger every year. The report says it will take a decade
before the hole starts to shrink.
Scientists say the recovery is entirely due to political
determination to phase out the man-made CFC gases
destroying ozone.
The study was published by researchers from the World
Meteorological Organization (WMO) and the UN Environment
Programme (UNEP).
"International action on the ozone layer is a major
environmental success story... This should encourage us to
display the same level of urgency and unity to tackle the
even greater challenge of tackling climate change," said
WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud.
Dr Ken Jucks from the US space agency Nasa told BBC
News that humans "have started to do the right thing in
order to convert the atmosphere back towards what it was
before the industrial revolution started".
Scientists cannot be absolutely certain yet that the
hole will heal itself. Prof David Vaughan from the British
Antarctic Survey (BAS) said that test results from his
organisation would throw extra light on the WMO's findings.
Icebergs drift in the sea in Cierva Cove, on the coast of
the Antarctic Peninsula in Antarctica. The largest hole in the
ozone layer appears over Antarctica
"We have to be a bit cautious, but this does look on
the face of it like some very good news," he told BBC News.
"Our own data from the Antarctic will take a few weeks to