The Ozone Problem is Back – And Worse Than Ever
James Anderson, the winner of a Smithsonian American Ingenuity Award, has discovered the alarming link between climate change and ozone loss
- By Sharon Begley
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Anderson decided to tackle one piece of that puzzle: the formation of cirrus clouds. Clouds, of course, are made of water vapor. On summertime flights to measure water vapor starting in 2001, Anderson’s team kept getting “deadly boring” results, the same 4.5 to 5 parts per million of water in the stratosphere. In 2005 and 2007, however, flights over Florida and then Oklahoma found “to our shock and surprise,” Anderson says, that thunderstorms were injecting water molecules as high as 12 miles into the stratosphere, reaching the ozone layer. It wasn’t a rare event, either: About half the flights found the high-altitude water. As Anderson and his colleagues wrote with the usual academic understatement in Science last summer, “What proved surprising is the remarkable altitude to which large concentrations of water vapor are observed to penetrate.”
“I went to NASA and said we have a big problem here,” says Anderson. Go away, the agency told him; we’ve moved on, now that the world had solved the ozone problem by phasing out CFC production.
Anderson persisted (again) and began writing more and more insistent letters up the NASA chain of command. He finally got a sympathetic hearing from Ken Jucks, manager for the agency’s Upper Atmosphere Research Program. Together, they wrested enough financial support for Anderson to keep his team together and analyze what the raw data from the flights were trying to tell him.
What happens is that the strong thunderstorms—those about 30 miles across—create powerful updrafts, essentially gaseous elevators that carry warm, humid air miles into the atmosphere. Usually, the gaseous elevator stops short of the stratosphere. But if a storm is strong enough, the updraft can blast through the boundary between the lower atmosphere and the stratosphere, reaching the latter and spreading 60 miles or more in all directions and remaining there for days. The concentration of water in the stratosphere more than triples.
The more water, the more ozone loss, through a sequence that begins with the fact that as the air rises, it cools. (To test this, put your hand against the window of an airplane the next time you fly.) The water vapor condenses out as liquid water, much as the steam from your shower turns liquid when it hits a cold bathroom mirror. Condensation releases heat. That raises the temperature of the surrounding air, which contains CFCs left over from the days before they were banned.
The heat alters CFC molecules in such a way as to make them more reactive; specifically, sunlight breaks apart the chlorine molecules in CFCs, producing ClO, the same free radical whose detection by Anderson’s team provided the final proof that CFCs destroy ozone over Antarctica. That free radical, Anderson’s latest work showed, is also—thanks to powerful thunderstorms—chomping its way through the ozone layer over the U.S.
As a result, ozone is depleted 100 times faster in an area affected by thunderstorms than in an area that is not. About 13 to 21 percent of the ozone is destroyed after four days, with losses of 4 to 6 percent over the next few days. All told, 25 to 30 percent of the ozone over a 60- by 60-mile area could be destroyed, with the effect persisting for weeks. Sunlight eventually replenishes the molecule, converting ordinary oxygen into it; one big remaining question is whether ozone destruction or replenishment will come out ahead. The region the storm-tossed water reaches, 9 to 12 miles up, contains about 20 percent of the ozone column in the summer over the U.S.
“The system reacts much more quickly than we expected,” says Anderson. “We don’t know how long that lasts, but it may be many days or weeks.” If the intensity and frequency of powerful summertime thunderstorms increased as a result of climate change, he and his colleagues wrote, then “decreases in ozone and associated increases in UV dosage would also be irreversible”—at least until there are no more manmade chlorine or other ozone-eating chemicals in the atmosphere.
In 80 years or so, CFCs from the air conditioner in your 1965 Mustang, the spray cans that were part of your morning grooming and every other source will have finally dissipated, eliminating the threat to ozone. Accordingly, that means we’ll have to hang on for another eight decades with possibly more people dying from skin cancer and more crops wilting under the intense UV rays.
To be sure, the idea of ozone-killing storms is not a slam-dunk at this point. The weakest link in the chain of evidence is whether climate change is indeed bringing more powerful and more frequent thunderstorms. “We haven’t a clue whether that’s happening,” says MIT’s Emanuel, “but Jim’s work shows that we better pay attention to the connection” between climate change and thunderstorms.
Anderson acknowledges the uncertainty—“we can’t write down a precise equation between carbon dioxide and storms”—but is convinced the link is there, partly because rising levels of greenhouse gases have already been accompanied by weird rainfall patterns: Since the late 1950s, the percentage of rainfall coming in deluges has increased some 70 percent in the Northeast and 30 percent in the Midwest, for instance. Climate scientist James Hansen believes Anderson is right: “What we call ‘moist convection’ will penetrate higher into the atmosphere as the climate becomes warmer,” he says.
Anderson’s work brings the science of ozone loss full circle. Years before some scientists suspected that chlorine from CFCs attacked stratospheric ozone, others warned that supersonic aircraft such as the now-retired Concorde could deplete the ozone layer because its exhaust left water molecules in the stratosphere. Jim Anderson showed that something much more common—the thunderstorms that characterize American summers as reliably as watermelon and hot dogs—can provide the ozone-destroying water. “We thought we’d solved the problem of ozone depletion,” says Anderson, “but we haven’t. If anything, it could be made much worse than we thought by climate change.”
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Comments (7)
There has been no global warming in 16 years, so by what mechanism can CO2 cause climate change without an intermediate warming step? The story is just more blind alarmism, Anderson wants to ride the funding gravy train by telling us the sky is falling.
Posted by John Boles on January 4,2013 | 04:39 PM
Might it be helpful to try using commercial high altitude jets with Ozone generators using liquid oxygen as the oxygen source? It would work with air, but the concentration of ozone produced would be lower.
Posted by Leon L. Lewis on December 17,2012 | 08:38 PM
You can't ignore the natural cycles that have occurred over the years, that would be shortsighted, but to ignore the alteration of natural cycles by introduction of new components into the cycles is even more shortsighted. The chemistry has been altered, energy level inputs, sinks, and pathways have been altered, therefore the cycle has been altered. Water in the stratosphere above high intensity storms may very well be normal occurrence, but the interaction with added chemical components changes the cycle. I fail to see how global warming qualifies as an industry.
Posted by JP on December 14,2012 | 03:28 AM
With all the liars that infest the "global warming" industry, any thing related is also suspect. The earth has warmed and cooled many times. No human intervention needed. The planets position relative to the sun accounts for just about all climate changes.
Posted by John Galt on December 10,2012 | 09:59 PM
Here we go again about the Ozone. It is a tried and true scentific fact that the Ozone has been thinning and thickening all by it's self for millions of years. This man or what ever needs to find a life. He needs to get out more.
Posted by William gordon on December 10,2012 | 09:02 PM
Our Country and other Nations needs to start taking this more seriously. Hurricane Sandy is just the start of the evil of Ozone problems producing severe storms and flooding. Look at all Japan & Chinas storms. Things won't get better until we do something.
Posted by AB on December 2,2012 | 08:58 PM
The amount of heat released during condensation and the heat that the free radicals experience all day long because of sunlight. It is difficult for me to understand how the former heats up the free radicals to such an extent so as to become reactive again which the sunlight can't? Anybody pl explain
Posted by SAMRAT ROY on November 26,2012 | 06:03 AM