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Cooling Tactic Could
Damage Ozone Layer
April 25, 2008
A much-discussed idea to offset global warming by injecting sulfate
particles into the stratosphere would have a drastic impact on Earth's
protective ozone layer, new research concludes. The study, led by Simone
Tilmes of the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), warns
that such an approach might delay the recovery of the Antarctic ozone
hole by decades and cause significant ozone loss over the Arctic.
Simone
Tilmes
The study will be published Thursday in Science Express. It was funded
by the National Science Foundation, which is NCAR's principal sponsor,
as well as by NASA and European funding agencies.
"Our research indicates that trying to artificially cool off the planet
could have perilous side effects," Tilmes says. "While climate
change is a major threat, more research is required before society
attempts global geoengineering solutions."
In recent years, climate scientists have studied "geoengineering"
proposals to cool the planet and mitigate the most severe impacts of
global warming. Such plans could be in addition to efforts to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions. One of the most- discussed ideas, analyzed by
Nobel laureate Paul Crutzen and other researchers, would be to regularly
inject large amounts of Sun-blocking sulfate particles into the
stratosphere. The goal would be to cool Earth's surface, much as sulfur
particles from major volcanic eruptions in the past have resulted in
reduced surface temperatures.
Sulfates and ozone
Since major volcanic eruptions
temporarily thin the ozone layer in the stratosphere, Tilmes and her
colleagues looked into the potential impact of geoengineering plans on
ozone over the poles. Sulfates from volcanoes provide a surface on which
chlorine gases in the cold polar lower stratosphere can become activated
and cause chemical reactions that intensify the destruction of ozone
molecules, although the sulfates themselves do not directly destroy
ozone.
A
proposal to cool the climate with sulfate particles in the atmosphere
would further damage the ozone layer, a study concludes.
The new study concluded that, over the next few decades, hypothetical
artificial injections of sulfates likely would destroy between about
one-fourth to three-fourths of the ozone layer above the Arctic. This
would affect a large part of the Northern Hemisphere because of
atmospheric circulation patterns. The impacts would likely be somewhat
less during the second half of this century because of international
agreements that have essentially banned the production of
ozone-depleting chemicals.
The sulfates would also delay the expected recovery of the ozone hole
over the Antarctic by about 30 to 70 years, or until at least the last
decade of this century, the authors conclude.
Recovery of the ozone hole has been a major goal of policymakers
worldwide. Nations agreed in 1987 to a landmark accord, known as the
Montreal protocol, to restrict the production of industrial chemicals,
known as CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons), that cause ozone-destroying
chemical reactions. The ozone layer is critical for life on Earth
because it blocks dangerous ultraviolet radiation from the Sun.
"This study highlights another connection between global warming and
ozone depletion," says co-author Ross Salawitch of the University of
Maryland. "These traditionally had been thought of as separate problems
but are now increasingly recognized to be coupled in subtle, yet
profoundly important, manners."
This
sunset over northern Sweden in winter 1992 has a red tinge due to the
presence of sulphate aerosol particles that were injected into the
stratosphere by Mt. Pinatubo in June 1991. Also visible are polar
stratospheric clouds, called mother-of-pearl, that consist of ice
particles.
Ozone impacts
To determine the relationship between sulfates and ozone loss, the
authors used a combination of measurements and computer simulations.
They then estimated future ozone loss by looking at two geoengineering
schemes--one that would use volcanic- sized sulfates and a second that
would use much smaller injections.
The study found that injections of small particles, over the next 20
years, could reduce the ozone layer by 100 to 230 Dobson Units. This
would represent a significant loss of ozone because the average
thickness of the ozone layer in the Northern Hemisphere is 300 to 450
Dobson Units. (A Dobson Unit is equivalent to the number of ozone
molecules that would create a layer 0.01 millimeters thick under
conditions at Earth's surface).
With large particles, the Arctic loss would range from 70 to 150 Dobson
Units. In each case, the larger figure is correlated with colder
winters.
The ozone loss would drop in the later part of the century to about 60
to 150 Dobson Units, depending on the size of the sulfates and the
severity of winters.
In the Antarctic, most of the ozone is already depleted and the sulfate
injections would not significantly reduce the thickness of the ozone
layer. Instead, they would significantly delay the recovery of the ozone
hole.
The authors caution that the actual impacts on ozone could be somewhat
different than estimated if atmospheric changes led to unusually warm or
cold polar winters. They also warn that a geoengineering project could
lead to even more severe ozone loss if a major volcanic eruption took
place at the same time.
"Clearly much more research needs to be conducted to determine the full
implications of geoengineering before we may seriously consider the
injection of sulfate aerosols into the stratosphere," says co-author
Rolf Müller of the Jülich Research Center in Germany. |