Ozone Depletion 🌐
Halogen catalytic destruction · Polar Vortex · PSCs · Why Antarctica? · CFCs/Halons/HCFCs · Vienna 1985 · Montreal 1987 (198 parties!) · Kigali 2016 · 2025 Ozone Hole — 5th smallest since 1992 · Recovery timeline 2040/2045/2066
Ozone — The Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde of Atmospheric Chemistry
💡 Ozone Is Earth’s Natural Sunscreen — 15–50 km Above Your Head
Imagine Earth wearing a sunscreen that absorbs 97–99% of the Sun’s most dangerous UV rays before they can reach life below. That’s the ozone layer. Now imagine someone slowly punching holes in that sunscreen — letting through beams of DNA-destroying radiation. That’s ozone depletion. The molecule causing this self-destruction isn’t new — it’s the same chlorine that humans put into refrigerators and aerosol sprays, thinking it was harmless because it didn’t react with anything near the surface. The cruel twist: it was precisely because CFCs were so stable and unreactive near the ground that they survived long enough to float all the way up to the stratosphere — where, under intense UV, they finally broke apart and began their one-atom-at-a-time campaign to destroy ozone.
✅ Good Ozone — Stratospheric
- Located in the stratosphere (15–35 km; max at 25 km)
- Absorbs 97–99% of UV-B and all UV-C radiation from the Sun
- Without it: skin cancer, cataracts, immune suppression, crop damage, marine food chain collapse
- Formed naturally: UV splits O₂ → 2O· → O· + O₂ → O₃
- Measured in Dobson Units (DU) — normal = ~300 DU globally
- Being destroyed by ODS → the ozone depletion problem
❌ Bad Ozone — Tropospheric
- Located in the troposphere (ground level to ~10 km)
- A secondary pollutant — forms from NOₓ + VOCs + sunlight
- Health effects: lung irritation, asthma triggers, chest pain
- Crop damage: reduces wheat yields significantly
- Key component of photochemical smog (LA-type smog)
- A greenhouse gas at ground level — contributes to global warming
- What it is: A unit that measures the total column of ozone above a point on Earth’s surface. Named after Gordon Dobson who developed the spectrophotometer to measure it in the 1920s.
- Definition: 1 DU = 0.01 mm of pure ozone at standard temperature and pressure. If all the ozone in a column above a point were compressed to STP, 300 DU = 3 mm of ozone
- Normal global average: ~300 DU
- Ozone hole threshold: Below 220 DU — the level at which ozone levels are so low as to constitute a “hole”
- Lowest ever recorded: 92 DU over South Pole (October 2006)
- 2025 minimum: 147 DU over South Pole (October 6, 2025) — well below the 220 DU threshold
- World Ozone Day: September 16 — the date the Montreal Protocol was signed in 1987
How Halogens Destroy Ozone — The Catalytic Murder
💡 Think of Chlorine as a Serial Murderer Who Never Gets Tired
A normal chemical reaction is like a person who commits one crime and is “used up.” But chlorine in the stratosphere is a catalyst — it destroys ozone and is regenerated unchanged to destroy another molecule. And another. And another. One chlorine atom can destroy up to 100,000 ozone molecules before it finally gets “caught” (converted to an inactive form). This is why CFCs are so dangerous — they don’t just add a little pollution, they unleash an army of immortal ozone killers. The most frightening part: CFCs emitted in the 1970s are still in the stratosphere, still releasing chlorine atoms, still destroying ozone today. Their atmospheric lifetime is 50–100+ years.
- In 1974, chemists F. Sherwood Rowland and Mario Molina at the University of California, Irvine published their groundbreaking theory: CFCs could reach the stratosphere and release chlorine atoms that destroy ozone
- Their hypothesis: CFCs are stable in the troposphere (no water to dissolve them, no UV to break them down), so they drift upward intact. In the stratosphere, intense UV radiation breaks them apart → free chlorine atoms
- Industry reaction: fierce denial — billions of dollars at stake in CFC products (refrigerators, aerosols, air conditioning)
- Scientific confirmation: 1985 — Joe Farman (British Antarctic Survey) published shocking observational data showing massive ozone loss over Antarctica — the “ozone hole”
- Rowland and Molina won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1995 — along with Paul Crutzen — for their work on atmospheric chemistry and ozone depletion
- Key quote from Rowland: “The work is going very well, but it looks like it might be the end of the world” (1973, while calculating CFC impacts)
CFC Released at Surface — Begins Its Journey
A CFC molecule (e.g., CCl₂F₂ — freon) is released from a refrigerator or aerosol spray. It doesn’t react with water or soil. It accumulates in the troposphere and slowly drifts upward over months to years.
UV Breaks the CFC — Free Chlorine Born
CCl₂F₂ + UV → CCl·F₂ + Cl· — Intense UV radiation in the stratosphere breaks the carbon-chlorine bond, releasing a free, highly reactive chlorine radical (Cl·). This is the moment of no return.
Chlorine Attacks Ozone
Cl· + O₃ → ClO· + O₂ — The chlorine radical rips an oxygen atom from ozone, forming chlorine monoxide (ClO·) and normal oxygen (O₂). One ozone molecule destroyed. But ClO· is still reactive.
Chlorine Is Regenerated — Ready to Kill Again
ClO· + O· → Cl· + O₂ — ClO reacts with another free oxygen atom, regenerating the original Cl· radical and releasing O₂. The chlorine atom is completely unchanged and free to attack another ozone molecule. This catalytic cycle repeats up to 100,000 times.
Bromine Does the Same — And Is Even More Efficient
Bromine from halons (fire extinguisher chemicals) is 40–50 times more effective at destroying ozone per atom than chlorine. The same catalytic cycle operates: Br· + O₃ → BrO· + O₂ → Br· + O₂. Combined ClO + BrO cycles are especially destructive.
- The catalytic chain combines to give the net reaction:
O₃ + O· → 2O₂(catalysed by Cl· or Br·) - This reaction converts ozone (O₃) + free oxygen (O·) into normal oxygen (O₂) — using chlorine as a catalyst that is regenerated
- Without human-made halogen compounds, this reaction occurs at a very slow natural rate, balanced by ozone production
- With CFCs/halons flooding the stratosphere with chlorine and bromine, ozone is destroyed much faster than it can be produced → net depletion
Polar Vortex — The Conveyor Belt That Concentrates Ozone Killers
💡 The Polar Vortex Is Like a Pressure Cooker Lid Over Antarctica
In winter, a powerful circular wind system forms around the South Pole in the stratosphere — the polar vortex. It spins so fast and so consistently that it acts like a wall or “lid”, preventing air from outside mixing in. Any chlorine or bromine released from ODS in the stratosphere gets trapped inside this spinning lid. Month after month of Antarctic winter, halogens accumulate — with nowhere to go. The polar vortex doesn’t directly destroy ozone; it’s the transportation and concentration system that gathers all the ozone-destroying chemicals in one place, at extreme cold, and holds them there until spring. When the spring sun finally arrives and illuminates this chlorine-saturated air mass — the catalytic chain reaction explodes.
- What it is: A large area of low pressure and cold air surrounding both poles, strongest in the stratosphere. A persistent cyclonic circulation that forms in winter.
- Location: Upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (8–50 km altitude at polar regions)
- Winter formation: Polar vortex strengthens in winter as temperature contrast between polar and temperate regions increases → polar jet stream speeds up → creates a tight circular barrier around the pole
- Southern Hemisphere stronger: Antarctic polar vortex is stronger and more stable than Arctic because Antarctica has no major mountain ranges or large land masses at mid-latitudes to disturb the flow (unlike the Northern Hemisphere with Himalayas, Rockies, etc.)
- Role in ozone depletion: Isolates Antarctic stratospheric air from lower latitudes for ~5 months (May–October) → ODS-derived halogens accumulate → extreme cold inside vortex allows PSCs to form → perfect storm for ozone destruction
- Collapse in spring: As spring sunlight heats the polar stratosphere, the temperature contrast decreases → polar vortex weakens and breaks down → ozone-depleted air from Antarctica mixes with mid-latitude air → ozone “hole” spreads temporarily to southern South America, Australia, and southern Africa (historically)
- Tropospheric polar vortex: When the stratospheric polar vortex weakens, it can push cold Arctic air into lower latitudes — causing sudden cold waves in USA, Europe, India (Kashmir) — this is separate from the ozone story but UPSC sometimes tests both
Polar Stratospheric Clouds (PSCs) — The Missing Link
💡 PSCs Are Like Chemistry Labs Floating in the Sky — Where Inactive Chlorine Gets “Activated”
After CFCs are broken down by UV, the chlorine atoms don’t immediately go on a rampage. Some chlorine gets “caught” and stored in relatively inactive forms — chlorine nitrate (ClONO₂) and hydrogen chloride (HCl). These are like chemical “prisons” holding chlorine under arrest. But then come the Polar Stratospheric Clouds. Their surfaces act as chemistry laboratories where these prison compounds react with each other and get converted into the highly reactive form — Cl₂ (molecular chlorine) and HOCl. When spring sunlight hits, these molecules are instantly photolysed back into free Cl· radicals — now fully armed and ready to destroy ozone in massive quantities. The PSC surface essentially “releases the prisoners” all at once.
- Formation temperature: Below −78°C (195 K) — extreme cold found only in polar winter stratospheres
- Altitude: 15–25 km in the stratosphere (inside the polar vortex)
- Composition:
- Type I: Nitric acid (HNO₃) + water ice droplets (Nitric Acid Trihydrate/NAT). Form slightly above ice frost point (~−78°C). The ozone-depletion relevant type.
- Type II: Pure water ice crystals. Form only below −85°C. Also called nacreous clouds / mother-of-pearl clouds — strikingly beautiful iridescent colours!
- Role in ozone depletion:
- PSC surfaces catalyse heterogeneous reactions that convert inactive chlorine reservoirs (ClONO₂, HCl) into reactive forms (Cl₂, HOCl)
- When spring UV light hits Cl₂ → 2Cl· → massive simultaneous activation → ozone destruction explodes
- PSCs also remove HNO₃ from the stratosphere (via sedimentation) — this prevents chlorine from being “deactivated” again, prolonging ozone destruction
- Why PSCs matter so much: Gas-phase chemistry alone (without PSCs) would cause only 5–10% ozone depletion. PSC-aided reactions can cause 60%+ ozone depletion — explaining the extreme Antarctic ozone hole
- Antarctica advantage: PSCs form for ~5 months over Antarctica during winter. Over the Arctic, PSCs form for only 10–60 days in most winters → smaller, less consistent ozone hole over the Arctic
Why the Ozone Hole Forms Over Antarctica (Not the Arctic)
Polar Vortex — Extreme & Stable
PSCs — Form for 5 Months
Spring Sunlight — The Trigger
- Arctic: Weaker polar vortex (Himalayas, Rockies disrupt Northern Hemisphere circulation) → more mixing with mid-latitude air → PSCs form for fewer days → less ozone depletion. Arctic sometimes has “ozone depletion events” but never a full “ozone hole” like Antarctica.
- Antarctica: Strongest polar vortex → most isolated stratospheric air → longest PSC formation → most severe ozone hole. Ozone hole is an annual spring feature.
- Both hemispheres: Have the same amount of ODS-derived chlorine in the stratosphere (CFCs are emitted mainly from the Northern Hemisphere but global mixing means both poles get exposed to similar chlorine levels). The difference in ozone hole severity is due to meteorological conditions, NOT amount of chlorine.
Ozone Depleting Substances (ODS) — The Accused
🧊 CFCs (Chlorofluorocarbons)
Most notorious ODS. Used in refrigerators (freon), air conditioners, aerosol sprays (deodorants, hairspray), foam blowing. Chlorine ODP (Ozone Depletion Potential) very high. Phased out 1996 in developed, 2010 in developing nations. Atmospheric lifetime: 50–100+ years.
🔥 Halons
Used in fire extinguishers (ships, aircraft). Contain bromine — 40–50× more effective at destroying ozone per atom than chlorine. Extremely high ODP. Phase-out: 1994 in developed, 2010 in developing (with exceptions). Banned in India after 2001 (with essential-use exemptions).
🔄 HCFCs (Hydrochlorofluorocarbons)
Created as interim CFC replacements. Still deplete ozone but less than CFCs (lower ODP). Also potent greenhouse gases. Being phased out under Montreal. India allowed until 2040 (developing country schedule). Cooling sector transition challenge.
🌾 Methyl Bromide (CH₃Br)
Used as agricultural fumigant (kills soil pests). High bromine ODP. Phase-out in developed nations: 2005. Developing nations: 2015 (India). Partial natural sources also exist. Still allowed for critical agricultural uses in some cases.
🧪 Carbon Tetrachloride (CCl₄)
Formerly used in fire extinguishers, dry cleaning, chemical synthesis. High ODP. Phase-out: 1996 in developed, 2010 in developing. Found to still be leaking into atmosphere despite phase-out — mystery sources being investigated.
🔧 Methyl Chloroform (CH₃CCl₃)
Industrial solvent used for cleaning metal parts, circuit boards. Moderate ODP. Phase-out: 1996 in developed, 2015 in developing. Atmospheric lifetime relatively short (~6 years) compared to CFCs.
- HFCs (Hydrofluorocarbons) were developed as CFC/HCFC replacements. They do NOT deplete ozone (no chlorine or bromine).
- But they are extremely potent greenhouse gases — Global Warming Potential (GWP) up to 14,800 times CO₂
- Usage is booming in cooling (ACs, refrigerators) — especially in fast-developing nations like India and China
- Without action, HFC emissions could add 0.5°C of warming by 2100
- The Kigali Amendment (2016) to the Montreal Protocol addresses HFCs — phase them down by 80%+ over next 30 years
- This is why HFCs are the key topic connecting ozone protection to climate change
| ODS | Key Uses | Key Halogen | Phase-out (Developing) | UPSC Angle |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CFCs (CFC-11, CFC-12) | Refrigerants, aerosols, foam blowing | Chlorine | 2010 | Most notorious; Rowland-Molina 1974; “Freon” |
| Halons (Halon-1301) | Fire extinguishers | Bromine (40-50× more potent than Cl) | 2010 | India banned after 2001 (essential use only) |
| HCFCs | CFC replacement; refrigerants, ACs | Chlorine (lower ODP) | 2040 | India’s cooling sector; HCFC still in transition |
| Methyl Bromide | Agricultural fumigant | Bromine | 2015 (India) | Critical use exemptions still granted |
| Carbon Tetrachloride | Fire ext., dry cleaning, chemicals | Chlorine | 2010 | Mystery ongoing emissions despite ban |
| HFCs | CFC/HCFC replacement; cooling | None (no ozone depletion) | India: 85% cut by 2047 | Kigali Amendment 2016; high GWP (up to 14,800× CO₂) |
The Treaty Framework — Vienna, Montreal & Kigali
Rowland-Molina Hypothesis Published
UC Irvine scientists publish paper in Nature linking CFCs to stratospheric ozone depletion. Industry denies. Scientific debate begins. US bans CFC aerosols in 1978.
Vienna Convention — The Framework Treaty
First international treaty on ozone layer. Framework only — no binding controls. Commits nations to research, cooperation, data exchange. Same year: Joe Farman publishes discovery of Antarctic ozone hole. Convention ratified by 116 nations. India ratified: 18 March 1991. Also 1985: Vienna Convention marks ozone as the first environmental problem recognized before it became a disaster.
Montreal Protocol — The Binding Treaty 🏆
Signed: 16 September 1987 (→ World Ozone Day). Ratified by: 198 parties (197 states + EU) — FIRST UNIVERSALLY RATIFIED TREATY in UN history. Entered into force: 1 January 1989. Controls: Binds all countries to phase-out schedules for ODS. Mechanism: Multilateral Fund (MLF) — developed countries fund developing countries’ transition. Result so far: >99% of controlled ODS production phased out globally. Called by Kofi Annan: “Perhaps the single most successful international agreement to date”.
Multiple Amendments Strengthen Montreal Protocol
London (1990), Copenhagen (1992), Vienna (1995), Montreal (1997), Beijing (1999) amendments progressively tightened controls, added new ODS, and moved up phase-out deadlines. Science kept improving; protocol kept adapting.
Nobel Prize Chemistry — Rowland, Molina, Crutzen
For discovering the catalytic mechanisms of ozone depletion and the role of halogens. Vindication after 21 years of industry opposition.
Kigali Amendment — Expanding to Climate Key
Agreed: October 2016, Kigali, Rwanda. Expanded Montreal Protocol to phase down HFCs (hydrofluorocarbons). Why: HFCs don’t deplete ozone but are potent greenhouse gases (GWP up to 14,800× CO₂). Impact: Ratified by 164 parties (as of 2024). Expected to prevent up to 0.5°C of warming by 2100. India’s commitment: Cut HFCs by 85% from 2024–26 baseline by 2047. India ratified: September 2021.
COP 13/MOP 36 — Latest Montreal Protocol Meeting
Decisions on: HFC-23 emissions reporting; VSLS (Very Short-Lived Substances) control; feedstocks regulation; enhanced regional atmospheric monitoring; preventing import of energy-inefficient cooling products.
Ozone Recovery — 2024 & 2025 Latest Data Current Affairs
- Released on World Ozone Day (September 16, 2024) marking the 40th anniversary of the Vienna Convention
- Depth of 2024 ozone hole: Below the 1990–2020 average — a positive indicator
- Maximum Ozone Mass Deficit (OMD): 46.1 million tonnes on September 29, 2024
- Smaller than the relatively large holes between 2020–2023
- Onset was slow; delayed ozone depletion observed through September; relatively rapid recovery after peak deficit reached
- WMO: “This persistent later onset has been identified as a robust indication of initial recovery of the Antarctic ozone hole”
- ODS levels in Antarctic stratosphere have declined by about ⅓ since peaking around year 2000
- 5th smallest ozone hole since 1992 (the year Montreal Protocol controls began to take effect) — confirmed by NOAA and NASA
- Peak period (Sep 7 – Oct 13, 2025): Average area 18.71 million sq km
- Minimum ozone over South Pole: 147 Dobson Units (October 6, 2025) — well below 220 DU threshold but better than worst years
- Ozone hole ended (closed): December 1, 2025 — earliest closure since 2019
- Also 14th smallest in the full 46-year satellite record (since 1979)
- Lowest ever: 92 DU (October 2006). For comparison, 2025’s 147 DU shows significant recovery.
- NOAA scientist Stephen Montzka: “This year’s hole would have been more than 1 million square miles larger if there was still as much chlorine in the stratosphere as 25 years ago”
- Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) confirmed 2025 hole as smallest in 5 years
- Expected to prevent 443 million skin cancer cases and 63 million cataract cases for people born in the US alone (by 2100)
- The “World Avoided” scenario: Without Montreal Protocol, by 2065, 67% of ozone would have been destroyed. Earth would have been largely uninhabitable for non-cancer-shielded humans. Scientists call this the most important global health intervention ever.
- ODS phase-out also helped climate: Since ODS are also greenhouse gases, phasing them out prevented significant additional warming beyond CO₂
- Kigali Amendment additionally expected to prevent 0.5°C warming by 2100 — more than most other climate agreements currently in force
⭐ Complete Ozone Depletion Cheat Sheet
- Ozone layer: stratosphere, 15–35 km | Absorbs: UV-B and UV-C
- Dobson Units: Normal = 300 DU | Ozone hole threshold = <220 DU | Lowest ever = 92 DU (Oct 2006) | 2025 minimum = 147 DU
- Discoverers: Rowland + Molina (1974), UC Irvine | Nobel Prize Chemistry 1995 | Hypothesis: CFCs → chlorine → ozone destruction
- Ozone hole discovery: Joe Farman, British Antarctic Survey, 1985
- Catalytic destruction: 1 Cl atom destroys up to 100,000 O₃ molecules | Cl· + O₃ → ClO· + O₂ → Cl· (regenerated)
- Bromine (from halons): 40–50× more effective per atom than chlorine
- Why Antarctica: Polar Vortex (isolation) + PSCs (chlorine activation) + Spring Sunlight (trigger)
- Polar Vortex: Southern stronger than Northern (no mountains disrupting SH circulation)
- PSCs: Form below −78°C | Type I: HNO₃ + water | Type II: pure ice crystals = nacreous/mother-of-pearl clouds
- PSC role: Convert inactive Cl reservoirs (ClONO₂, HCl) to reactive Cl₂ → UV activates → 60%+ ozone destruction
- ODS: CFCs (refrigerants) · Halons (fire ext.) · HCFCs (interim replacement) · Methyl Bromide (fumigant) · Carbon tetrachloride · Methyl chloroform
- HFCs: NOT ODS, but GWP up to 14,800× CO₂ → addressed by Kigali Amendment
- Vienna Convention: 1985 | Framework only | India ratified: 18 March 1991 | 40th anniversary: 2025
- Montreal Protocol: Signed 16 Sept 1987 (→ World Ozone Day) | 198 parties | First universally ratified UN treaty | In force: 1 Jan 1989 | MLF: developed funds developing nations
- Kigali Amendment: October 2016, Rwanda | HFC phase-down | 164 parties ratified (2024) | 0.5°C warming prevented by 2100
- India + Kigali: Ratified September 2021 | India cuts HFCs 85% by 2047 (from 2024-26 baseline)
- Recovery: 2040 (rest of world) | 2045 (Arctic) | 2066 (Antarctica)
- 2024 ozone hole: Below 1990-2020 average | Max OMD: 46.1 million tonnes (Sep 29)
- 2025 ozone hole: 5th smallest since 1992 | Peak area: 18.71 million sq km | Closed: December 1, 2025 (earliest since 2019)
- Montreal’s legacy: >99% ODS phased out | Would have prevented “443 million skin cancers” | “World Avoided” scenario


