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 Appeared in CNN.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The rate of destruction of the protective ozone layer
in the upper reaches of the atmosphere is slowing, and scientists say it
mirrors a decline in the use of certain man-made chemicals.
Using NASA satellite observations, the scientists say the rate of the
ozone layer depletion matches the drop in chlorofluorocarbons, used in
refrigeration and air conditioning. The 1987 Montreal Protocols, ratified
by more than 170 countries, requires that CFCs be phased out of production
and use in developing countries by 2010. Industrialized nations stopped
using them in 1996.
Scientists said that it will take decades to repair the damage to the
ozone layer, which helps protect the Earth from ultraviolet radiation from
the sun.
"Ozone is still decreasing but just not as fast," said Mike Newchurch,
associate professor at the University of Alabama and lead scientist on the
study. "We are still decades away from total ozone recovery."

July 30, 2003.
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