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Researchers trace mysterious CFCs to China

May 23, 2019

Foam insulation factories in China are responsible for a mysterious increase in CFC production, according to a new study. The gases, which damage the Earth's ozone layer, were supposed to be phased out by 2010.

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A man walks through smog in Baoding, in Hebei province, in this 2013 file photo.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Imaginechina

Australian and international investigators believe that a region in northeastern China is producing ozone-layer-destroying chemicals in breach of a global agreement to phase out so-called CFCs.

A study published in the science journal Nature on Wednesday traced a mysterious rise in emissions of the chlorofluorocarbon gas CFC-11 to the area around Shandong and Hebei provinces.

According to the study, this area near Beijing is responsible for at least 40 to 60% of the global rise in CFC-11 emissions since 2013. CFC-11 emissions were around 7,000 tons per year higher between 2014 and 2017 than 2008-2012, the scientists said.

Videostill from NASA showing a representation of the Ozone hole over Antarctica
The ozone hole has been recoveringImage: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/Katy Mersmann

"CFCs are the main culprit in depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer, which protects us from the sun's ultra-violet radiation," said lead author Matt Rigby, an atmospheric chemist at the University of Bristol.

"This research identifies the major source region for new CFC-11 emissions as eastern mainland China, likely due to the new production of insulating foams used in buildings, which is not permitted under the Montreal Protocol," said Paul Fraser, one of the paper's authors.

"Increased emissions of CFC-11 are of concern because it is a powerful ozone-depleting chemical. If emissions do not decline, it will delay the recovery of the Antarctic ozone hole, possibly for decades," he added.

Read more: Healing the ozone layer: a ray of hope for planet Earth?

Closing the ozone hole

In 1985, scientists discovered a hole in the ozone layer that protects the Earth's surface from harmful ultraviolet radiation above the Antarctic, which led to the Montreal Protocol of 1987.

That deal agreed that the chemicals, used as a coolant in refrigerators and to make plastic foam and other products, would be phased out by 2010.

The concentration of CFC-11 gas in the atmosphere has declined significantly since the mid-1990s, though researchers have noticed a slowdown in that decline since then.

A report last year by the UK-based non-profit Environmental Investigation Agency said it had collected evidence from 18 companies in 10 Chinese provinces that showed use of CFC-11 is "widespread and pervasive" in factories that make insulation foam for buildings.

bk/se (AFP, dpa)