Australia's 'Black Summer' fires affected ozone layer: study

Australian bushfires in 2019 and 2020 were so bad they affected the hole in the ozone layer, researchers say
Australian bushfires in 2019 and 2020 were so bad they affected the hole in the ozone layer, researchers say.

Australia's catastrophic "Black Summer" bushfires significantly affected the hole in the Earth's ozone layer, according to a new report published Friday.

The report, which appeared in the Nature journal Scientific Reports, traced a link from the unprecedented smoke released by the fires to the ozone hole above Antarctica.

The fires, which burned through 5.8 million hectares of Australia's east in late 2019 and early 2020, were so intense they caused dozens of smoke-infused pyrocumulonimbus clouds to form.

Pyrocumulonimbus clouds, referred to as the "fire-breathing dragon of clouds" by NASA, are so powerful they can affect the local weather, causing fire tornadoes and lightning storms.

During the "Black Summer", these clouds shot more smoke high into the atmosphere than the previous record, set by the 2017 North American wildfires.

Around New Year 2019, uncontrolled fires along Australia's east coast caused a pyrocumulonimbus event that stretched on for days.

The result was "millions of metric tons of smoke and associated gases being injected into the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere", according to researchers from the University of Exeter and the University of Manchester.

A build-up of smoke particles, in turn, caused the to warm to levels not seen since the eruption of Mount Pinatubo in 1991, they found.

Because of this stratospheric warming, the fires also prolonged the Antarctic ozone hole, which appears above Antarctica each spring and "reached record levels in observations in 2020".

Ozone gains threatened

The hole was first created by human pollution—particularly the chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) that were once emitted from many refrigerators—but in recent decades, global cooperation has given the ozone layer a chance to repair.

The Montreal Protocol, signed in 1987 and since ratified by 195 countries, sharply reduced the amount of CFCs in the atmosphere, and the was expected to fully recover by 2060, according to United Nations modeling.

However, the researchers warn that because will increase the frequency and intensity of bushfires, similar events—in which pyrocumulonimbus clouds shoot smoke high into the stratosphere—will become more likely.

Professor James Haywood told AFP that climate change could "absolutely" stymie the gains made by the Montreal Protocol.

"Our suggest an increase in frequency and intensity of wildfires in the future under global warming. This may lead to more events like that in 2020, which could in turn lead to more ," he said.

"So the considerable efforts that we've put in protecting the could be thwarted by global warming."

More information: Lilly Damany-Pearce, Australian wildfires cause the largest stratospheric warming since Pinatubo and extends the lifetime of the Antarctic ozone hole, Scientific Reports (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-15794-3. www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-15794-3

Journal information: Nature , Scientific Reports

© 2022 AFP

Citation: Australia's 'Black Summer' fires affected ozone layer: study (2022, August 25) retrieved 26 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2022-08-australia-black-summer-affected-ozone.html
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