Posted on 10/19/2023 12:55:56 PM PDT by Red Badger

Measurements from the Copernicus Sentinel-5P satellite show this year’s ozone hole over the Antarctic. Credit: Contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data (2023)/processed by DLR
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The Copernicus Sentinel-5P satellite has detected one of the largest ozone holes over Antarctica, possibly influenced by the 2022 Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai eruption. Despite historic damages, initiatives like the Montreal Protocol aim for global ozone layer recovery by 2050.
Measurements from the Copernicus Sentinel-5P satellite show that this year’s ozone hole over Antarctica is one of the biggest on record. The hole, which is what scientists call an ‘ozone depleting area,’ reached a size of 26 million sq km (10 million sq miles) on September 16, 2023. This is roughly three times the size of Brazil.
Ozone Hole Measurements The size of the ozone hole fluctuates on a regular basis. From August to October, the ozone hole increases in size – reaching a maximum between mid-September and mid-October. When temperatures high up in the stratosphere start to rise in the southern hemisphere, the ozone depletion slows, the polar vortex weakens and finally breaks down, and by the end of December, ozone levels return to normal.
Launched in October 2017, Copernicus Sentinel-5P – short for Sentinel-5 Precursor – is the first Copernicus satellite dedicated to monitoring our atmosphere. It is part of the fleet of Copernicus Sentinel missions that ESA develops for the European Union’s environmental monitoring program.
The satellite carries an advanced multispectral imaging spectrometer called Tropomi. It detects the unique fingerprints of atmospheric gases in different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum to image a wide range of pollutants more accurately and at a higher spatial resolution than ever before.
The Tropomi total ozone measurements are processed within the Sentinel-5P ground segment at the German Aerospace Center (DLR) using algorithms that has been developed by DLR and the Royal Belgium Institute for Space Aeronomy (BIRA-IASB).
This animation uses Sentinel-5P total ozone measurements and shows the evolution of the ozone hole over the South Pole from September 1 to September 29, 2023. The Tropomi total ozone measurements are processed within the Sentinel-5P ground segment at the German Aerospace Center (DLR) using algorithms that have been developed by DLR and the Royal Belgium Institute for Space Aeronomy (BIRA-IASB). Credit: Contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data (2023)/processed DLR
Diego Loyola, DLR senior scientist, commented, “The Sentinel-5P total ozone products have an accuracy at the percentage level compared with ground-based data and this allows us to closely monitor the ozone layer and its evolution. The Tropomi measurements are extending the global ozone data record of European satellite sensors covering almost three decades.” The Sentinel-5P total ozone column product is provided within three hours after measurement time to the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS). CAMS, which is implemented by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) on behalf of the European Union, includes these near-real-time Sentinel-5P ozone data in their data analysis and forecast system.
CAMS senior scientist Antje Inness, said, “Our operational ozone monitoring and forecasting service shows that the 2023 ozone hole got off to an early start and has grown rapidly since mid-August. It reached a size of over 26 million sq km on 16 September making it one of the biggest ozone holes on record. Tropomi ozone data are an important dataset for our ozone analysis.”
Factors Impacting the Ozone Hole’s Size The variability of the size of the ozone hole is largely determined by the strength of a strong wind band that flows around the Antarctic area. This strong wind band is a direct consequence of Earth’s rotation and the strong temperature differences between polar and moderate latitudes.
If the band of wind is strong, it acts like a barrier: air masses between polar and temperate latitudes can no longer be exchanged. The air masses then remain isolated over the polar latitudes and cool down during the winter.
Although it may be too early to discuss the reasons behind the current ozone concentrations, some researchers speculate that this year’s unusual ozone patterns could be associated with the eruption of the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai in January 2022.
VIDEOS AT LINK.....................
The status of the ongoing ozone hole is displayed here as a 3D-rendered animation. It shows the evolution of the ozone hole over the South Pole from July 1 to September 24, 2023. Credit: Contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data (2023)/processed by CAMS/ECMWF
Antje explains, “The eruption of the Hunga Tonga volcano in January 2022 injected a lot of water vapor into the stratosphere which only reached the south polar regions after the end of the 2022 ozone hole.
“The water vapor could have led to the heightened formation of polar stratospheric clouds, where chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) can react and accelerate ozone depletion. The presence of water vapor may also contribute to the cooling of the Antarctic stratosphere, further enhancing the formation of these polar stratospheric clouds and resulting in a more robust polar vortex.”
However, it’s important to note that the exact impact of the Hunga Tonga eruption on the Southern Hemisphere ozone hole is still a subject of ongoing research. This is due to the absence of previous instances where such substantial amounts of water vapor were injected into the stratosphere in modern observations.
ESA’s mission manager for Copernicus Sentinel-5P, Claus Zehner, adds, “The Sentinel-5P total ozone columns provide an accurate means to monitor ozone hole occurrences from space. Ozone hole phenomena cannot be used in a straightforward manner for monitoring global ozone changes as they are determined by the strength of regional wind fields that flow around polar areas.”
In the 1980s, scientists discovered a gaping hole in Earth’s ozone layer, caused by humanmade chemicals. But thanks to the historical Montreal Protocol, the world came together to take bold action to save our planet. Decades later, we can see the steady recovery of the ozone hole. How did we do it? And what does space have to do with it? Join us as we explore the journey of the ozone hole, from its alarming discovery to the incredible strides made to fix it, and how satellites are helping us track its recovery. Credit: ESA – European Space Agency
Effects and Remedies of Ozone Depletion
In the 1970s and 1980s, the widespread use of damaging chlorofluorocarbons in products such as refrigerators and aerosol tins damaged ozone high up in our atmosphere – which led to a hole in the ozone layer above Antarctica.
In response to this, the Montreal Protocol was created in 1987 to protect the ozone layer by phasing out the production and consumption of these harmful substances, which is leading to a recovery of the ozone layer.
Claus concludes, “Based on the Montreal Protocol and the decrease of anthropogenic ozone-depleting substances, scientists currently predict that the global ozone layer will reach its normal state again by around 2050.”
ESA has been involved in monitoring ozone for many years. Launched in October 2017, Copernicus Sentinel-5P satellite is the first Copernicus satellite dedicated to monitoring our atmosphere. With its state-of-the-art instrument, Tropomi, it is able to detect atmospheric gases to image air pollutants more accurately and at a higher spatial resolution than ever before from space.
The Western World has spent $Billions to turn from the chemicals and materials that those “experts” kept saying were the cause of ozone holes... that were going to kill life as we knew it...
Fast forward - and less than a year ago, there was much talk about how there was no hole in the ozone...
and here we are today - being told there is the largest hole ever in the ozone layer... and now it is possibly linked to a volcano??? Not mankind? BUT - mankind (aka the Western world) has to carry out some kind of accords/agreements to further toss money into that massive hole that was NATURALLY caused.
There sure are a lot of really stupid and gullible people on this planet...
Dupont's patent on Freon was running out, so they had to find a way to outlaw generic Freon and get a monopolistic patent on a new proprietary one.
NASA “common knowledge that a rocket launch (as in for a satellite) did more damage to the ozone than a year’s worth of worldwide CFC emissions”
bkmk
no no no Obviously Jan 6th Protest!
you laugh, but the left is just stupid enough to propose something like that!
“Was about to ask how long it has been since we were warned about the Ozone Hole?”
It’s been quite awhile. I’m guessing that they wanted to bring this one out again because people aren’t buying the rest of their bullshit anymore.
Back in the 80’s the usual suspects said the ozone hole was going to kill us all by now.
Run in circles! Scream and shout!
“ Since we got rid of CFCs 30+ years ago, it obviously wasn’t that..................... ”
Same as the current global warming green house gas carbon narrative.
They are an apocalyptic totalitarian-minded cult.
There’s always something to kill us all if we don’t do the crazy things they say to do - and they will use force to make us do it.
Ozone hole?
What’s next - acid rain? Alar apples? A new Ice Age? Swine flu?
Eliminate all stoves and cooking. You will get your weekly Gummi worms.
That would be buzz-killingly stentorian except you have no idea how truly epic polar bear farts are.
Typical progressive response to sarcastic comments about the banning of hair spray 30 years ago - “Yeah, but think how bad it would be hadn’t that been done!”
“Since we got rid of CFCs 30+ years ago, it obviously wasn’t that”
Yes a $3000 fix for my car’s air conditioner when I had no money in 1988. And now the ozone hole is bigger? see my tagline ....
I was about to say methane gas from armadillos and chubracabras.
I miss my freon.
That was exactly what the whole ozone scare was about. I remember reading somewhere that one of the largest "ozone holes" ever measured was in the 1930s, before Freon was in widespread use.
Bingo, and it took FR almost 60 posts to get there (sigh). Then, when the patent on the more toxic HCFC ran out, guess what the OSHA and EPA did? After all, Dupont had a newly patented refrigerant!
I actually put the date of the new ban on my calendar in advance. It's that predictable. Foreign manufacturers ought to dump the ban on the original Freon and tell the State Department to pack sand. It was a much cheaper and more benign chemistry.
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