If we hadn't protected the ozone layer, we'd already face a 'scorched earth'

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The 1987 Montreal Protocol to phase out ozone-depleting gases - CFCs - may have helped to mitigate climate change by protecting plants from increased ultraviolet radiation, says a new Nature study that included an NZ author. Their modelling suggests that without the agreement, much less carbon (580 billion tonnes) would be held in plants and soils by the end of this century. The authors estimate that such a change could have meant extra carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which could have led to an additional warming of 0.5 to 1 degrees in global average surface temperature.

Journal/conference: Nature

Link to research (DOI): 10.1038/s41586-021-03737-3

Organisation/s: National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA), Lancaster University, UK; University of Exeter, UK; NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, USA; National Center for Atmospheric Research, USA; UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, UK

Funder: P.J.Y. was supported by the UK Engineering and Physical Science Research Council (grant EP/R01860X/1), the Natural Environment Research Council (grant NE/ R004927/1) and the Faculty of Science and Technology at Lancaster University. A.B.H. acknowledges funding from the UK Engineering and Physical Science Research Council (Fellowship EP/N030141/1) and the Natural Environment Research Council (grant NE/ P019951/1). C.H. acknowledges a UK National Capability grant given to the UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology. O.M. was supported by the NZ Government’s Strategic Science Investment Fund (SSIF) through the NIWA programme CACV. L.D.O. is supported by the NASA Modeling, Analysis, and Prediction programme. S.M. and R.R.G. are supported by the National Center for Atmospheric Research, which is a major facility sponsored by the US National Science Foundation under cooperative agreement number 1852977. We acknowledge the contribution of New Zealand’s national high-performance computing facilities to the results of this research, provided by the NZ eScience Infrastructure (NeSI) and funded jointly by NeSI’s collaborator institutions and through the NZ Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment’s Research Infrastructure Programme.

Media release

From: National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA)

Scientists reveal how landmark ban gave planet fighting chance

Without the global CFC ban we’d already be facing the reality of a “scorched earth”, according to researchers assessing the impact of the Montreal Protocol.

The new evidence reveals the planet’s critical ability to absorb carbon from the atmosphere could have been massively degraded sending global temperatures soaring if we still used ozone-destroying chemicals such as CFCs.

New modelling by the international team of scientists from New Zealand, the UK and the  US, published today in the top science journal Nature, paints a dramatic vision of a scorched planet Earth without the Montreal Protocol, what they call the “World Avoided”. This study draws a new stark link between two major environmental concerns – the hole in the ozone layer and global warming.

The research team, which includes NIWA atmospheric scientist Dr Olaf Morgenstern,  reveals that if ozone-destroying chemicals, which most notoriously include CFCs, had been left unchecked then their continued and increased use would have contributed to global air temperatures rising by an additional 2.5C by the end of this century.

The findings show that banning CFCs has protected the climate in two ways - curbing their greenhouse effect and, by protecting the ozone layer, shielding plants from damaging increases in ultraviolet radiation (UV). Critically, this has protected the plants’ ability to soak up and lock in carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and thus prevented a further acceleration of climate change.

The research team developed a new modelling framework, bringing together data on ozone depletion, plant damage by increased UV, the carbon cycle and climate change. Their novel modelling shows an alternative future of a planet where the use of CFCs continued to grow by  three per cent a year.

It  reveals:

  • Continued growth in CFCs would have led to a worldwide collapse in the ozone layer by the 2040s.
  • By 2100 there would have been 60 per cent less ozone above the tropics. This depletion above the tropics would have been worse than was ever observed in the hole that formed above the Antarctic.
  • By 2050 the strength of the UV from the Sun in mid-latitudes, which includes most of Europe including the UK, the United States and central Asia, and also (in the Southern Hemisphere) New Zealand, would be stronger than the present day tropics.

The depleted ozone layer would have seen the planet, and its vegetation, exposed to far more of the Sun’s UV.

Plants absorb carbon dioxide (CO2) through photosynthesis. Large increases in UV can restrict plant growth, damage their tissues, and impair their ability to undertake photosynthesis. This means the plants absorb less carbon.

Less carbon in vegetation also results in less carbon becoming locked into soils, which is what happens to a lot of plant matter after it dies. All of this would have happened on a global scale.

The researchers’ models show that in a world without the Montreal Protocol, signed in 1987, the amount of carbon absorbed by plants, trees and soils dramatically plummets over this century. With less carbon in plants and soils, more of it remains in the atmosphere as CO2.

Overall, by the end of this century without the Montreal Protocol CFC ban:

  • There would have been 580 billion tonnes less carbon stored in forests, other vegetation and soils.
  • There would be an additional 165-215 parts per million of CO2 in the atmosphere, depending on the future scenario of fossil fuel emissions. Compared to today’s 420 parts per million CO2, this is an additional 40-50%.
  • The huge amount of additional CO2 would have contributed to an additional 0.8°C of warming through its greenhouse effect.

Ozone depleting substances, such as CFCs, are also potent greenhouse gases and previous research has shown that their ban prevented their contribution to global warming through their greenhouse effect. By the end of this century, their greenhouse effect alone would have contributed an additional 1.7°C global warming. This is in addition to the newly quantified 0.8°C warming, coming from the extra CO2 that would have resulted from damaged vegetation, meaning that temperatures would have risen 2.5°C overall.

Dr Morgenstern says the Montreal Protocol has been one of the world’s most successful environmental agreements.

“Without the protocol human health would have been severely impacted and UV would be catastrophic for vegetation. Increased UV would have stopped plants being able to soak up so much carbon from the atmosphere which would have led to greater global warming.”

The Montreal Protocol is championed as an exemplar in environmental diplomacy. By agreeing a worldwide ban on ozone depleting substances, including CFCs, international leaders were able to save the planet’s ozone layer. Arguably there are lessons to be learnt here about global warming due to increasing greenhouse gases, although ozone-depleting substances were comparatively straightforward to phase out and replace, unlike carbon dioxide.

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