A worldwide treaty banning aerosols 25 years ago averted a global catastrophe, New Zealand ozone layer scientists said today.
Niwa scientists played a major role in creating the Montreal Protocol, signed a quarter of a century ago this Sunday, and widely hailed as the world's most successful international environmental protection treaty which banned CFCs.
The agency today said that given New Zealand's location, world-class research scientists and instrumentation, its contribution to the treaty has been profound.
Niwa atmospheric scientist Dr Olaf Morgenstern, along with other international scientists, has run atmospheric models for a non-intervention, no-Montreal Protocol scenarios.
It shows that at the end of the 21st century the ozone layer is nearly completely wiped out, bringing widespread skin cancer and food shortages.