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- <text id=93TT1645>
- <title>
- May 10, 1993: Who Lost The Ozone?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 10, 1993 Ascent of a Woman: Hillary Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 56
- Who Lost the Ozone?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> How the world waited too long to rescue the shield that
- protects earth from the sun's dangerous UV rays
- </p>
- <p>By EUGENE LINDEN
- </p>
- <p> It is hailed as the greatest success yet in the defense
- of Planet Earth. Many a President and Prime Minister present
- themselves as the saviors of the ozone layer--the leaders who
- rescued the fragile atmospheric shield that protects all living
- things from the sun's dangerous ultraviolet rays. This
- airbrushed view of history starts in 1985, when scientists
- realized that an ozone hole had opened over the South Pole--the result of an atmospheric assault by man-made chemicals
- called chlorofluorocarbons, which are commonly used in
- refrigerators and air conditioners. Soon after this disturbing
- surprise, the diplomats of the world were at the negotiating
- table. By 1987 they had reached a preliminary agreement to phase
- out production of CFCs, and by 1990 they had set 2000 as the
- target year for a total ban. Now most countries expect to beat
- that deadline by many years because substitutes for CFCs are
- coming on line more rapidly than expected. The central player
- in the drama--the unwitting villain turned hero--was Du
- Pont, the American chemical company that invented CFCs,
- dominated global production and eventually led the way in
- developing substitutes. In 1990 the U.S. Environmental
- Protection Agency gave Du Pont an award for stratospheric ozone
- protection.
- </p>
- <p> There is only one problem with this fabled success story:
- the rescuers may have arrived too late. No matter how quickly
- manufacturers halt the production of CFCs, billions of pounds
- of the chemicals already produced will continue to seep into the
- atmosphere and rise inexorably to attack the ozone layer. Worse,
- measurement after measurement since the mid-1980s has shown that
- ozone loss has been greater and more rapid than scientists
- predicted. Last month in Science magazine, researchers disclosed
- new satellite readings showing that in 1992 the average
- concentration of ozone in the upper atmosphere around the globe
- was 2% to 3% lower than any previous reading and 1.5% below what
- computer models predicted. That news came just a week after the
- World Meteorological Organization reported that ozone levels
- over some northern parts of Europe and Canada fell as much as
- 20% this winter.
- </p>
- <p> The amount of CFCs in the atmosphere will keep rising
- until at least the year 2000; after that it may slowly fall, but
- ozone destruction will continue for several decades in the 21st
- century. Some optimistic scientists predict that the impact on
- the heavily populated middle latitudes will be tolerable: at
- worst, a 6% ozone loss during the summer months, which could
- cause a 12% increase in ultraviolet radiation. But these
- forecasts are based on the same computer models that have
- consistently underestimated the problem. Given the volatile and
- poorly understood chemistry of the upper atmosphere, no one can
- predict how severe the ozone depletion will be. Even a modest
- rise in the level of UV radiation could increase the risk of
- getting skin cancer or cataracts, damage crops and other plant
- life, and possibly affect climate patterns.
- </p>
- <p> Did the world really act as fast as possible to meet the
- threat? The answer, unfortunately, is no. The eventual rescue
- operation was the last chapter in a long saga of confusion,
- wishful thinking, indecision and delay. For nearly a decade
- before the 1987 ozone treaty, nations were warned of the danger
- but did nothing. In the U.S. those who had the power to take
- action instead engaged in self-delusion: the Reagan
- Administration at first dismissed the ozone threat as a non
- issue, while Du Pont and other manufacturers underestimated
- future sales of CFCs, making the hazard seem minimal.
- </p>
- <p> The story is more than a matter of historical interest;
- the world may pay dearly for the delay. What happened with
- ozone is a cautionary tale that is relevant to how countries
- deal with other global environmental issues, such as the
- scientific forecasts of global warming. So far, leaders have put
- off dealing with that danger, just as they did with the ozone
- problem.
- </p>
- <p> The alarm first sounded back in 1974, when Sherwood
- Rowland and Mario Molina of the University of California at
- Irvine warned about the destructive impact that CFCs could have
- on the atmosphere. Before banning these important industrial
- chemicals, however, scientists had to confirm that CFCs did in
- fact attack ozone and that society produced enough of the
- chemicals to create a problem. Within a few years, most
- scientists accepted that CFCs were a real threat, though
- uncertainties remained. In 1978 the U.S. banned the use of CFCs
- in aerosol sprays and began pushing for international controls.
- </p>
- <p> The election of Ronald Reagan, abruptly interrupted these
- American efforts. The EPA was taken over by a pro-business team
- that did not like regulations and distrusted international
- agreements. Anne Burford, who headed the EPA in the early 1980s,
- regarded ozone depletion as an unsubstantiated scare story. Many
- demoralized professionals resigned, leaving the agency with few
- people who had any background on the issue.
- </p>
- <p> Du Pont, which poured $15 million into developing
- substitutes during the late 1970s, all but halted its research
- shortly after Reagan's election because no further regulation
- was on the horizon. Earlier, Du Pont had publicly committed
- itself to stop production of CFCs if "reputable evidence" showed
- they posed a hazard to the ozone layer. The company, however,
- set a tough standard for what constituted "reputable evidence."
- Du Pont challenged Rowland at every turn in the 1970s, and he
- believes the company's aggressiveness sent a chilling message
- to other scientists in the field.
- </p>
- <p> One of the crucial questions for policymakers was whether
- CFCs would remain in the atmosphere for a long time. Asked
- today when it was proved that CFCs could hang around for many
- decades, Du Pont scientists readily acknowledge that the issue
- was largely put to rest in the '70s. As late as 1982, however,
- a Du Pont scientist was still arguing in print that CFCs were
- short-lived.
- </p>
- <p> In what turned out to be a masterstroke of lobbying, Du
- Pont took the lead in organizing the Alliance for Responsible
- CFC Policy in 1980. It was an unusual trade organization, since
- it brought together both producers and users of a product,
- groups that usually have opposing agendas. The manufacturers
- realized that representatives from small American businesses
- spread through every congressional district would have far more
- impact on lawmakers than a few giant chemical companies. "I
- remember a parade of CFC users coming through," says U.S.
- Senator John H. Chafee of Rhode Island, "telling me what I was
- going to do to their refrigeration business if they were denied
- these marvelous CFCs." Partly because of the alliance's
- lobbying, support for additional U.S. limits on production dried
- up in Congress.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the antiregulatory mood, there is little doubt
- that the U.S. and other governments would have taken action if
- policymakers had received unambiguous scientific signals on the
- dangers of CFCs. But soon after the Reagan Administration came
- into power, some scientists began to question how serious the
- problem would be. One section of a 1983 National Academy of
- Sciences update on ozone suggested that if CFC production
- remained flat, total ozone loss might not be as severe as
- previously expected.
- </p>
- <p> Du Pont and the alliance immediately seized on the
- no-growth scenario. Influential atmospheric specialists, such
- as Robert Watson, who recently moved to the White House staff
- from NASA, were persuaded that the CFC industry would not be
- expanding. Watson recalls that Du Pont spokesmen appeared at
- meeting after meeting arguing that the CFC market was "mature."
- With these reassurances, some scientists felt less immediate
- need for further regulations.
- </p>
- <p> The industry vociferously countered opponents' suggestions
- that the CFC market was, in fact, growing. When Ralph Cicerone,
- an atmospheric chemist at U.C. Irvine, gave a talk at Columbia
- University in 1984, his assertion that the CFC market was
- expanding drew what he remembers as a heated "personal attack"
- from Du Pont manager Donald Strobach, who served as science
- adviser to the alliance. Cicerone had data from the EPA and the
- Rand Corp., but Strobach said that his figures were
- scandalously wrong and that Cicerone was being irresponsible.
- </p>
- <p> Actually, Cicerone was correct. After a sharp drop in
- world production during the deep recession of 1982, output
- resumed a climb that had begun in the late 1970s. In March 1983
- the Chemical Marketing Reporter predicted 4% to 5% growth each
- year in CFCs through 1987. Actual production outpaced
- predictions: output increased roughly 7% a year.
- </p>
- <p> Du Pont officials insist they did not know the market for
- CFCs was going to grow until 1986. In March of that year,
- frustrated EPA officials arranged a showdown that participant
- Alan Miller, then an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense
- Council, described as "analysts at the O.K. Corral," and
- confronted the industry with three independently produced
- studies showing that without regulation, CFC production would
- grow. Says F. Anthony Vogelsberg, a Du Pont environmental
- manager: "You have to understand what we were looking at. If you
- smoothed the data between 1980 and 1983, you had a flat market..." Du Pont argued that the market in the developed world was
- mature, but it is farfetched to suggest that the world's largest
- manufacturer of CFCs did not realize there was tremendous
- untapped demand for refrigeration among the huge populations in
- the developing world. Moreover, the market for CFC113 (used to
- clean electronic circuit boards) was exploding.
- </p>
- <p> The dispute over the potential of the CFC business
- eventually hurt Du Pont's credibility. Watson, who earlier
- believed industry assertions, now says bitterly, "We listened
- when they said this was a mature business, but we now know that
- they were stating lies."
- </p>
- <p> In September 1986 Du Pont suddenly broke ranks with other
- manufacturers and reversed its position. It admitted that the
- CFC market was growing and acknowledged the need for
- international controls on production. At about this time, the
- chemical giant resumed its research into CFC substitutes. Once
- the company changed its mind, it moved quickly. In 1988 Du Pont
- pledged to get out of the business by 2000. But humanity may pay
- a price for the years of delay; between 1978 and 1988, nearly
- 19 billion lbs. of CFCs were produced worldwide.
- </p>
- <p> At a time when environmental policymakers are being
- accused of wasting resources on exaggerated threats, such as
- dioxin contamination, the ozone story shows what can happen when
- the world underestimates problems. It also underscores the
- difficulty of imposing environmental regulations that clash with
- economic interests, especially in the face of scientific
- uncertainty. If policymakers wait until there is unarguable
- evidence of danger before they act, it may be too late to
- prevent serious environmental damage.
- </p>
- <p> This dilemma is now being faced on a related issue, that
- of carbon dioxide emissions and the global warming they could
- cause. Even though scientists are still debating how bad the
- warming trend might be, President Clinton has pledged that the
- U.S. will draw up a plan to get emissions of carbon dioxide and
- other greenhouse gases back to 1990 levels by the year 2000. But
- will the plan, which may be opposed by utilities, automakers
- and a host of other business interests, make it through
- Congress? Corporate forces have already come up with their own
- version of the CFC alliance, called the Global Climate
- Coalition. One of the founding members: Du Pont.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-