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10 March 2025

Study Confirms Antarctic Ozone Hole Is Healing Due to Global CFC Reductions

A new MIT-led study provides strong statistical evidence that the Antarctic ozone hole is recovering, primarily due to global efforts to reduce ozone-depleting substances.

While previous research had suggested signs of ozone recovery, this study is the first to confirm, with 95% confidence, that the improvement is driven by the decline in chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) rather than other factors such as natural weather variations or greenhouse gas emissions.

“There’s been a lot of qualitative evidence showing that the Antarctic ozone hole is getting better. This is really the first study that has quantified confidence in the recovery of the ozone hole,” said Susan Solomon, lead author and professor at MIT. “The conclusion is, with 95 percent confidence, it is recovering. Which is awesome. And it shows we can actually solve environmental problems.”

The research, published in Nature, was conducted by MIT graduate student Peidong Wang, along with Solomon, MIT Research Scientist Kane Stone, and collaborators from multiple institutions.

The Role of CFCs and the Montreal Protocol

The ozone layer in the Earth's stratosphere acts as a protective shield against harmful ultraviolet radiation. In 1985, scientists discovered a seasonal "hole" in the ozone layer over Antarctica, which opened during the austral spring. This depletion was linked to increased risks of skin cancer and other health issues.

Solomon's earlier research in 1986 confirmed that CFCs - then widely used in refrigeration, air conditioning, insulation, and aerosol products - were breaking down ozone in the stratosphere. This discovery led to the Montreal Protocol in 1987, an international agreement to phase out the production of ozone-depleting substances.

By 2016, signs of ozone recovery were becoming evident, particularly in September when the hole typically forms. However, scientists were uncertain whether the improvement was due to declining CFCs or natural weather fluctuations, such as El Niño and the polar vortex.

“While detecting a statistically significant increase in ozone is relatively straightforward, attributing these changes to specific forcings is more challenging,” said Wang.

New Statistical Approach Confirms Recovery

To isolate the impact of CFC reductions, the MIT team applied a technique known as "fingerprinting," developed by Nobel Prize-winning physicist Klaus Hasselmann. This method helps separate human-caused influences from natural climate variability.

The researchers ran multiple atmospheric simulations with different starting conditions - some assuming no increase in greenhouse gases or CFCs, while others included only greenhouse gas changes or only reductions in ozone-depleting substances. These simulations revealed a distinct pattern of ozone recovery linked to declining CFCs.

When the researchers compared this fingerprint to satellite data from 2005 onward, they found an increasingly clear match. By 2018, the correlation was strong enough to confirm with 95% confidence that the ozone recovery was mainly driven by the reduction of ozone-depleting substances.

“After 15 years of observational records, we see this signal to noise with 95 percent confidence, suggesting there’s only a very small chance that the observed pattern similarity can be explained by variability noise,” Wang said.

Future Outlook

If the current trend continues, Solomon expects that by around 2035, there could be years with no detectable ozone depletion over Antarctica. Eventually, the ozone hole could close permanently.

“Some of you will see the ozone hole go away completely in your lifetimes,” Solomon said. “And people did that.”

The study was supported by the National Science Foundation and NASA.

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