Science

Ozone hole over Antarctica larger than usual, scientists say

The Southern Hemisphere ozone hole is larger than usual and already surpasses the size of Antarctica, scientists say.

European Union agency says hole has grown considerably in past week

A group of chinstrap penguins walks on an iceberg floating near Lemaire Channel, Antarctica, in February 2020. EU scientists said Thursday that the Southern Hemisphere ozone hole has grown larger than Antarctica. (Ueslei Macelino/Reuters)

Scientists say the Southern Hemisphere ozone hole is larger than usual and already surpasses the size of Antarctica.

The European Union's Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service said Thursday that the ozone hole, which appears every year during the Southern Hemisphere spring, has grown considerably in the past week following an average start.

"Forecasts show that this year's hole has evolved into a rather larger than usual one," said Vincent-Henri Peuch, who heads the EU's satellite monitoring service.

"We are looking at a quite big and potentially also deep ozone hole," he said.

Atmospheric ozone absorbs ultraviolet light coming from the sun. Its absence means more of this high-energy radiation reaches Earth, where it can harm living cells.

Peuch noted that last year's ozone hole also started out unremarkably, but then turned into one of the longest-lasting ones on record.

The Montreal Protocol, signed in 1987, led to a ban on a group of chemicals called halocarbons that were blamed for exacerbating the annual ozone hole.

Experts say it's likely to take until the 2060s for ozone-depleting substances to be completely phased out.

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