by Arlos » Sun May 21, 2006 11:52 am
Absolutely untrue. We know exactly what causes the ozone destruction, and we even know how it does it, which is a moderately different process than what causes global warming. There is no natural process of ozone destruction to the scale that would even come close to producing a hole. None had ever existed before the introduction of Chlorinated Fluorocarbons.
Global warming is caused by various emissions containing carbon (whether in the form of particulate carbon from coal burning, CO2 from ocars, etc. etc.) that bind with the oxygen in the atmosphere (unless they already are CO2). Carbon Dioxide will pass inbound rays from the sun, but not the re-emitted infrared energy coming from the ground. Thus, since the earth cannot radiate away as much heat, it gets trapped and the earth warms up. Now, areas of ice and snow will reflect most of the energy of the Sun's rays back out, rather than absorbing it, and those reflections, since they're at a different wavelength, can pass out through the CO2. However, the warmer the earth gets, the less snow and ice there is, which means more energy gets absorbed, making it even warmer... It's an accelerating process. That's not to say there aren't natural cycles of warmer/colder, but even given that, humans are DEFINITELY impacting the speed at which it occurs, even should we not be the entire cause.
Now, as for ozone destruction. Chlorinated Fluorocarbons (aka CFCs) are pretty amazing chemicals. Lots of unique properties, and were thought to be basically inert and safe. The problem is, no one thought about what happens when those gasses rise up high enough to reach the ozone layer, where they're subject to being hit by significant levels of UV rays. What happens there is that UV ray tags the CFC, and knocks the Chlorine atom off of the CFC molecule. Chlorine is a very reactive element, and the bonds holding together O3 (ozone) are rather weak. So, Chlorine runs into an O3 and strips off one of the oxygens, resulting in ClO and O2. Now, however, it turns out that the bonds holding ClO together are MUCH weaker than the bonds that would bind 2 Oxygens together in an O2. So, should ClO run into a free O or even another ClO, the oxygens strip off the Chlorine, bond together, and the Chlorine atom is then free to break down another ozone molecule. Since Chlorine is an element, it never breaks down itself either, and whatever natural process there is to get rid of it is a slow one.
So, while both situations involve human-made gases being released into the atmosphere, the fundamental underlying processes are quite different. I have never seen, anywhere, any scientest, ever, suggest that the Ozone hole had any sort of natural origin. (maybe a CFC-producing company could trot out a paid shill to claim that, but I'd trust that as much as I did the MDs trotted out by Tobacco companies that claimed cigarettes were not a cancer risk.) Global warming is a more complex issue, and I do know there are scientists who attribute it to natural causes. Such scientists are a very small minority compared to those who believe the causes to be at least primarily man-made, but they do exist. However, I don't think nearly ANY scientist would argue that, even if the underlying cause is natural, that human beings and our waste products aren't having a significant impact on accelerating the process. Which, ultimately, may be just as bad. If life & the planetary ecology evolved based on cycles taking a certain amount of time, thus giving life a chance to adjust, if it should happen in half or 1/4 the normal time, who knows what will happen?
-Arlos