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The ozone layer is on the mend

July 1, 2016

The hole in the ozone layer over the Antarctic has begun to shrink, signaling good news for the environment, researchers say. The study attributes the development on the phasing out of CFC pollutants.

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Ozonloch über der Antarktis Grafik
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/DLR

Antarctica's ozone hole finally is starting to heal, a new study has found. Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology reported that the hole had shrunk by 4 million square kilometers (1.5 million square miles) since 2000.

"It's a big surprise," said lead author Susan Solomon, an atmospheric chemist at the MIT in an interview with Science magazine. "I didn't think it would be this early."

Whatever happened to the hole in the ozone layer?

The study attributed the ozone's recovery to the decline of atmospheric chlorine originating from chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), which were once commonly used in dry cleaning, refrigerators, hairspray and other aerosols. Most of the world banned the use of CFCs by signing on to the Montreal Protocol in 1987.

A shield against harmful UV rays

In the 1970s, scientists suggested that Earth's ozone layer - between 10 to 50 kilometers (about 6 to 30 miles) above ground in the stratosphere - was thinning because of CFCs breaking down into chlorine that attacked ozone.

Ozone is a combination of three oxygen atoms; high in the atmosphere, it shields Earth from cancer-causing ultraviolet rays. The hole won't be completely closed until mid-century.

Infografik Ozonschicht Englisch

jar/msh (AFP, AP)