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Antarctic Ozone Hole in 2025 Ranks Fifth Smallest Since 1992

Scientists credit Montreal Protocol controls for the improvement, with recovery to 1980s levels projected in the late 2060s.

Overview

  • The hole averaged about 7.23 million square miles from Sept. 7 to Oct. 13, with a one-day peak of 8.83 million square miles on Sept. 9.
  • It began breaking up nearly three weeks earlier than the past decade’s average, indicating a shorter depletion season.
  • Using the full satellite record back to 1979, this year ranks as the 14th smallest over 46 years of observations.
  • Direct measurements over the South Pole showed a minimum of 147 Dobson Units on Oct. 6, compared with the record low of 92 in 2006.
  • NOAA and NASA report ozone‑depleting substances have fallen by about one‑third since around 2000, and a weaker August polar vortex likely helped limit this year’s depletion.