Study finds industrial feedstock emissions could delay ozone layer recovery
The Facts
- An international study found that ongoing emissions from ozone-depleting chemicals used as industrial feedstocks could delay recovery of the stratospheric ozone layer by several years.
- The study says these feedstock chemicals remained outside key international controls because they were used as raw materials in industrial processes and their emissions were assumed to be low.
- The researchers project full ozone layer recovery around 2073, compared with earlier projections of 2066.
- The study identifies persistent emissions of substances such as carbon tetrachloride and some chlorofluorocarbons used as feedstocks for products including refrigerants and plastics.
- Global measurements in the study indicate that roughly 3% to 4% of some feedstock chemicals escape into the atmosphere during production and processing.
- The study reports that global use of ozone-depleting substances as feedstocks increased after 2000 rather than declining.
Context
What are feedstock chemicals in this context?
They are ozone-depleting substances that are no longer widely used in products like refrigerators and foams but are still used as raw materials in industrial processes to make things such as modern refrigerants and plastics Swiss Federal Gouve…,Swiss Federal Gouve…,alphagalileo.org.
Why were these chemicals exempted under the Montreal Protocol?
Sources say the Montreal Protocol allowed their use as feedstocks because policymakers believed only a very small fraction would leak into the atmosphere during production and conversion into other chemicals EurekAlert!,Massachusetts Insti….
Why does a delay in ozone recovery matter?
The ozone layer helps shield Earth from harmful ultraviolet radiation, so a slower recovery could prolong exposure risks that the Montreal Protocol was designed to reduce kleinezeitung.at,EurekAlert!,Massachusetts Insti….
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