GENEVA -- The Antarctic ozone hole has swelled this month to one of its biggest sizes on record, U.N. and U.S. scientists say, insisting that the Earth-shielding ozone layer remains on track to long-term recovery but residents of the southern hemisphere should be on watch for high UV levels in the weeks ahead.
The, in a regular bulletin released Thursday, said the Antarctic ozone hole often faces seasonal and year-to-year variations, but says the expansion this year shows "we need to remain vigilant."
The Geneva-based U.N. agency pointed to NASA data on Oct. 2 showing the hole had reached 28.2 million square kilometres (10.9 million square miles) -- larger than the size of Russia and Canada put together. It was the largest recorded on that date, and the hole has remained at a record size on the dates since, WMO said.
According to NASA, the record largest ozone hole dates to Sept. 9, 2000, when it was 29.9 million square kilometres.
Paul Newman, chief scientist for earth sciences at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, said prolonged wintertime conditions in the Antarctic region were persisting longer than usual, and that unusually weak vertical energy flows were among major contributors to the exceptionally large hole.
The stratospheric ozone layer, which sits some 25 kilometres (18 miles) high and protects against harmful UV rays, is different from the ground level ozone that is a harmful pollutant. The ozone layer had been thinning since the late 1970s because man-made chlorofluorocarbons often used as refrigerants and aerosol cans released chlorine and bromine that destroyed ozone molecules high in the air.
A widely hailed international accord in 1987 to phase out use of ozone-depleting chemicals has underpinned hopes for recovery of stratospheric ozone worldwide by 2070. WMO and NASA say the hole had been levelling off and even shrinking a bit, and hope this year's one-off expansion of the ozone hole will have little to no impact on the overall trend toward that goal.
"There is no need for undue alarm because we are on a course to recovery, but we have not observed it yet," said WMO scientist Geir Braathen, who wrote the bulletin. "CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons), they have a long life in the atmosphere ... many, many decades. It takes a long time for these molecules to get out of the atmosphere."
"We are suffering now from the sins of the past," he added.
NASA's Newman said the particularly strong El Nino this year was "the first thing that comes to your mind" but added there was no evidence yet of any connection between that and the larger ozone hole, and scientists will need time to explore the possible causes. He also said NASA model simulations have generally turned up very little effect on the Antarctic ozone hole from climate change and an increase in heat-trapping greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
As for the human impact, Newman said: "The worry is the persistence of low ozone and the continued rising of the sun will contribute to a higher UV index" in the southern hemisphere. He said patterns suggest that the ozone hole will remain large through November, and the inhabitants of the region should monitor ultraviolet conditions, which in excess can foster health trouble like cataracts, sunburn and even skin cancer.
"If I lived down there, I would keep an eye on the UV forecast," he said.